Adjusted Reality

“Reality can be beaten with enough imagination.” – Mark Twain

Tag: navel gazing Page 26 of 29

Cool Runnings

So I swear it’s been at least two days since I posted.  The last few days before vacation are just DRAAAAGGGGIIIINNNGGGG along.  So even though I rarely post on Thursdays, I figure I might as well give it a go.

I ROCKED MY 6 MILE TEMPO RUN!!!!

I want to shout this from the mountain tops.  This is a HUGE breakthrough for me speed-wise.  I shattered my previous 10k record by over THREE minutes (my best 10k is 56:54 and I ran 6 miles in 53:36 yesterday – I know not QUITE a 10k so it’s probably less than 3 minutes better but DON’T RAIN ON MY PARADE, ok?).  And normally I have trouble keeping my pace under 10 minute miles when I hit 6 miles and above.  So I’m incredibly thrilled.

However, unlike last week, this was a freaking test of my mettle.  So many points, I wanted to slow down.  The first 5k I slogged through ok but mile 4, it seemed like the treadmill just forgot to add distance at some points.  Mile 5 I just kept repeating to myself that I could do anything for 1.4 miles (and somehow tricked myself that at .6 miles to go I had to start INCREASING the speed, and not decreasing).  Mile 6 I just repeated to myself that it was the last mile and I wasn’t quitting now and somehow got through the speed increases up to 8.0 again and BAM!  Another tempo in the books.  And actually, I started a little faster so I knocked my pace down by 1 second – 8:56 miles.

It’s really coming into focus how mental running is.  I mean, not so much on those nice, easy, enjoy the weather runs.   Those are just lovely.  I miss those, but it’s fun to dive into something completely different.  I’m realizing my body is capable of so much more than my mind gives it credit for, if I’m able to push through some mild discomfort and doubt and fear.  I’m always scared I won’t be able to duplicate my effort or improve on it.  For these crazy runs, so fucking what?  The more miles I can pile on under 9 minute pace, the better.  The only thing I can do is get my ass on the treadmill when I’m supposed to, push the buttons to make it go the speed it’s supposed to, and work through my mental running demons a step at a time.

Next week is a recovery week at 4 miles, but the week after is 8 miles.  What happened to 7?  This is going to be brutal.  But ya know what?  I can do anything for 2 more miles.  And if I can do 8 miles at that pace, why can’t I do 13.1 close to it, right?  I get a warmup on Saturday of 8 miles at 9:40 pace.  After the rest of this training, that’s going to feel like skipping through the park (or I can hope).  I am going to run that one outside so that will bring challenges of its own, but I’m looking forward to it.

That, a weigh in on Tuesday of 153.0, and the fact that I’m sitting here munching on a bag of raw california stir fry (broccoli, carrots, and pea pods) the way I used to mow through a bag of chips 3 years ago?  It’s been a pretty awesome week healthy-wise.

Your reward for making it to the bottom of the post?

Happy Thursday. May it finish swiftly and without incident so we can go about getting our Fridays on.

5 Random Things – Braindead Edition

Since I haven’t been pulled in one way or another with a post to write today, I think I’m going to pull out a 5 random things day and hope y’all will forgive me.

1.  I rocked the sprints Monday.  I actually ran them at 1:57 per 400m because that’s the closest I could do via the treadmill.  7.7.  Is it odd that my EASIST days are my sprints?  Today, I’m going to tackle a 6 mile tempo and feeling really nervous even though I rocked the 5 miler.  Can I add a mile and still maintain my pace?  We shall see.

2.  It seems that the closer to Christmas you get, the more CRAP FOOD is around.  And by crap I mean so-yummy-but-bad-for-you.  So far, some gourmet popcorn, a few rum balls, and a small tin of homemade Christmas cookies have made it into the fortress of casa de Quix and Zliten.   I’ve decided it’s not the end of the world.  Yesterday I had a cookie and a rum ball while the rest of my food was totally rockin’ (protien bar, homemade chili, the rest of the bag of carrots, super veggie homemade chicken noodle soup, blackberries, and a laughing cow, melba toast, and turkey summer sausage).

Today, I had half a tiny piece of cake for desert with lunch, and I will probably allow one tiny cookie after a healthy dinner.  I think the key is not to try to stoically deny myself, but definitely limit myself.  I think denying myself now will backfire once next month hits and the mileage goes up.  THAT is when I will need the most resolve, when I actually feel the hunger and my body crying out to feed it sugar.   But who knows, maybe training this way will cut out the desire to stand in front of the freezer and shovel in chocolate chips and make me crave more sane things like whole cows and 1 lb bags of veggies.

3.  I’m trying to look forward to Holiday break, but today I’m in limbo because I don’t know what day it starts.  I was originally going to be off starting Friday (minus Christmas Eve – they are not giving it to us off, but typically send us home at lunch…I live 5 minutes away from work so I’ll come in for 3 hours and save the time off for a full day, thank you very much).  However, I have a deliverable that MIGHT be due 12/22 or it might be delayed until next year.  If it’s not delayed, I’ll work 12/21 and 12/22 at least half days.

Hopefully I’ll know within the next day or 2 so I can really and truly look forward to a certain date!  One of the things I love about vacation is the anticipation counting down the days before and the “last day of school” feeling when you walk out of the building on the last day (I’ve been known to do that toe-tap jiggy thing before on my way out).  I’m really looking forward to some quality time off without traveling or obligations – just FUN TIMES.  Well, we might do a night stay somewhere, but nothing crazy.

4.  I’ve been doing a lot of navel gazing lately so I’m going to spare you a 2009 wrap up (this week at least), but I have started to think about what’s next.  The half marathon and marathon for sure.  Finishing what I started during NaNo and getting myself on a consistent schedule with my fiction/memoir/whatever writing.  Then there are the unknowns… should I give myself a year off really pushing weight loss and maintain and work on my running and my head?  I think it’s about time to start figuring out what’s next career-wise.  Do I want to stay here and gun for a promotion?  Do I want to stick my toes in somewhere else?  Back to school?  I do know it’s time to at least coast towards a path.  I’m 30 – no longer a spring chicken.  I have lingered in lower-middle management long enough.

And what do I want to do with this blog?  I love my lovely gaggle of wonderful people that comment here, but I feel like I’m doing something wrong because sometimes I feel like the dorky kid with the glasses and the braces that gets picked last for teams.  I’d love to have a bit larger exposure on the interwebs simply because I am a closet fame whore, but I just haven’t figured that one out yet.  And I’m not sure the level of effort I am willing to put forth to make it happen.  And I’m not sure even WHY I want this, as this place just started as a soapbox for me to shout on.  Maybe it’s that I feel like it’s not worth as much not shouting AT anyone.

Yeah, ok, expect a 2009 wrap up and 2010 resolution post coming up.  There is obviously more for me to say here.  We’ll just call this Navel Gazing December.

5.  I hope to wrap up all that navel gazing soon, and will be taking things a little lighter during the next 2 weeks.  What that means is I have a bunch of recipe posts I’ve been meaning to do.  I’ve even got a fashion-y one planned.  I think I’m going to try and join in MizFit’s virtual talent show.  So what am I saying?  Expect some fluff starting next week through the end of the year, and if you get super awesome well-thought-out posts, be happy!  Because this one is so well thought out and intelligible.  MMmmmhmmm.

I guess that about wraps up my world.  Off to finish out the day, knock out my tempo (cross your fingers I don’t die at that pace), clean more of my messy house (love when my parents want to drop by randomly on a Friday), make some dinner, pack my lunch for tomorrow, and fall down tired and zonk out!  At least tomorrow = happy fun white elephant party and Friday should be pretty mellow.

How is your week going?  Got any ideas for posts for me so it’s not all recipes all the time?  Crazy questions or stories I should tell?  Wanna tell me how to become one of the popular kids?

Will Vienna Wait For Me?

Just wanted to first give huge thanks for the comments and advice on Wednesday’s post.  I appreciate the advice.  It kinda hit me this morning when I weighed myself and the scale fluctuated each time I got on it (like, some weights made me go woohoo and then some made me go aaaaack, that much).  Does it REALLY matter what I weigh?  If my running keeps progressing nicely?  If all my clothes either continue to fit or get too big on me?  Maybe it ISN’T denial to not weigh myself often.

Same with the eating.  I was reading over my posts over the last few months and the biggest theme is “I’m eating in a way which would rationally and numerically make me lose weight, and I’m not *grrrrr*”.  Counting calories worked for me for so long and then it just DIDN’T.  I think I eeked out the last 15 lbs while skating the thin line between extreme diet mode and starvation mode, and it’s not a comfortable place to be.  I’m tired of it.  Thinking about it sends me into a temper tantrum.

So my inclination is to say fuck it.  No, my inclination is to scream FUCK IT from the highest mountain top I can find.  If the scale isn’t going to provide me with any useful feedback (apparently I weigh something between 153.0 and 159.0 this morning, heh), then fuck it.  It’s not worth my time.  If calorie counting isn’t providing me with any useful feedback, fuck it.  Apparently I maintain no matter whether I eat an average of 1400 and burn 3k calories per week or eat an average of 1900 and burn less.  Maddening.

I stopped calorie counting a few weeks ago, and I went back to it last week for a few days.  It just got under my skin.  Usually it’s no biggie, but it just pissed me off for some reason.  So I stopped again.  Right now, I’m just trying to trust my body to nourish itself properly.  And oddly enough, it’s working.  My size 6 super low rise jeans still fit.  I am enough of a big girl to go into the kitchen, serve myself healthy food I made, and stop when I’m full.  After 3 years, my eat watch is pretty much fixed.  It doesn’t take math to make me stop eating anymore, as long as I really pay attention.  Am I eating out of boredom?  Am I eating because I’m grumpy?  Am I eating because it’s there and I want to finish it?  If the answer is no and I’m hungry and I really truly want it, then it’s a valid reason.

Same with workouts.  It used to be fear motivating me, that I was going to get fat again if I didn’t work out.  Now… well, I guess it’s fear too but a different, better fear.  I am afraid of losing fitness progress.  I’m afraid of not being prepared for my next race.  I’m terrified of going back to being a wuss.  I am horrified at the idea of a 5k ever being a big deal.  I knew very early on that I’d have to move away from workouts simply for weight loss or I wouldn’t stick with it.  I am everlastingly thankful for running and races in that vein.  I can’t see a time when I won’t be actively pursuing getting harder, better, faster, stronger.

The problem is – that same thinking food-wise goes down a scary path that’s dangerous to follow.  I don’t want to go there.  So I need to come up with a good way to motivate myself.  This is where I need the most help.  I need to sit down and come up with goals that don’t go against my core values of how this healthy journey should be.  I refuse to avoid food groups.  I am a runner, I need my carbs.  Even some simple carbs.  My body has ALWAYS run on a carby tank.  I shut down creatively and functionally when I restrict them (even after months).  I refuse to have to avoid eating at parties and restaurants.  Zliten and I cook lunches and dinners together, so there is only so far I can take meals.  However, I’ve definitely made strides on what I eat outside mealtimes and will continue.  Next step is convincing myself fruit is a viable desert instead of chocolate.  Did it last night!

Even with all this strong talk, I’m terrified.  Giving up caring about the scale means I run the risk of gaining.  Giving up calorie counting means I run the risk of gaining.  Trusting myself after 3 years of triple checks and balances put in place to keep me safe in my little padded weight loss room?  Scary.  My track record is not very good – this is the longest I’ve ever kept weight off and I’m half convinced it’s only because I’m trying to lose.  If history repeats itself, I’ll be 300 lbs by next year.  I mean, my head is completely different and I’ve gone through so much mental shit and dealt with a lot of things over the last 3 years, but with the training wheels coming off and trusting myself to balance on my own?  Still frightened.

And then, there is that horrible fear that this is the best I’ll ever be.  That I’m not good enough right now, and this is the closest I’ll ever get.  Stupid brain!  I am a damn fine looking woman.  At my current weight.  I might not have that long lean look I covet, I might own some clothes that aren’t terribly flattering or from age 14 that don’t fit or whatever.  And maybe the solution instead of longing to be thin enough that everything looks good on me is to give away anything in my closet that doesn’t make me feel fabulous.

Maybe the lesson that I’ve been fighting here is not how to power past a plateau, but to learn how to accept myself here.  To come to terms that I don’t have to be perfect to be done.  That maybe it’s time to wrap up this year of beating my head against the proverbial weight loss wall and have a kinder, gentler 2010.  Where 153-155 is good enough.  Where all that matters is I have enough fuel in my tank to push through my long (and increasingly longer) runs.  Where I continue to work on eliminating the fat and building more muscle for the sake of sport.

It’s like planning a project here at work.  No matter what, things change, dates change, hell, sometimes the whole thing changes.  Three years ago, I just wanted to not be so fat.  Two years ago, I wanted to get down to my college weight of 170.  A year ago, I picked 135 as it seemed like a good idea.  Never in a million years did I have any idea that I’d be training for my second half marathon and have my sights on a full one.  Never did I think that I’d be rocking size 6s and smalls.

Maybe it’s not giving up to be the weight I am now.    I mean, it’s kinda nice to not have to buy a new wardrobe each season because nothing fits.  It would be nice to feel as if I’m there.  I know it’s just a head shift.  But it’s frightening to allow myself to feel good, to feel accomplished, to feel done.  Because that stupid voice in the back of my head keeps telling me that’s quitter talk.

I have some more thinking to do.  Perhaps I even have some experimenting to do.  But something just keeps telling me there is a lesson here that I’m not letting through.  Maybe I just need to realize that Vienna waits for me, and I just need to make the decision to go there.  I don’t want to look back on this time of my life as the period where I was amazing, but I didn’t give myself credit for it.  If I’m so damn smart, why am I so afraid?  I can’t be everything I want to be before my time (thought I want to so very badly).  I’ve got my passion and pride (in spades) – and my crazy side is saying only fools are satisfied.

Oh, Billy Joel.  Are you telling me that I can take my phone off the hook for 2010 and disappear from my crazy for a while?  It’s alright?  I can afford to lose a year or two to the pursuit of something besides a perfect figure?  Will Vienna still wait for me?

Less navel gazing next week.   Have a lovely weekend!

Chasing my Shannon…

I have to have this conversation with myself once every few months lately, so you get to get in on this one.  Lucky you.

1995 - right before I quit gymnastics

So it’s been another 2 months since the wedding, and just like every vacation this year, I was able to quickly drop the “bloat weight”, and then seeing the scale go down starts to get me excited.  If I can drop the 3-5 lbs to get me right back around that 153-154 that I’ve been hovering at, maybe this is the time.  Maybe this is finally that month where my body is going to start cooperating and we’ll see some low low 150’s, and then that magical day I’ve been dreaming of – when I step on the scale and see 149.something.  And I’m not leaning on the counter.

And every time, I am doing great, I see a low 153, maybe even a 152, and then I GET STUCK.  Here I am now, bouncing around in the low/mid 150s.  Where I have been since about April.  To give reference and numbers because I love that stuff, I am 5’5″ and 150 is the tippy top of normal range for me via BMI.  However, when I was a serious gymnast at age 14ish, I was only about 30 lbs lighter and I was a muscle beast.  The only difference in my body now (besides the extra weight which I am convinced is ALL in my tummy) is I’m a D cup instead of a B, which all in all, ain’t so bad.  My

1997 - Diving Senior Year (what is my penchant for sports wearing almost nothing?)

back then go-to size was 7.  My now go-to size is 8 (which we all know is bigger because average sizes are bigger but still).  I have once again become a muscle beast.  I am a capable athlete.  While I wouldn’t dream of being able to do a straddle press to a handstand, girlfriend back then wouldn’t dream of being able to run 13 miles.

So why isn’t that enough?  Why is it absolutely imperative that I get down to some number that I’ve set for myself?  What wonders is life going to hold 20 lbs from now?  I’ve already had the reality check that life still sometimes SUCKS some days even when you are a healthy weight and for all intents and purposes financially comfortable.  Removing those two worries from life does not guarantee happily ever after.  Will I be able to run faster?  Probably a little but I highly doubt I’ll be rocking 5 minute marathon miles.  Will I finally love and accept my body wholly and completely and nary once look in the mirror ever and go, “ugh, that stomach is NOT hawt” and suck in my cheeks and wish my face looked more like that?  Probably not.  At about 120 and 10% body fat at 14 (you couldn’t pinch an inch anywhere, I had a 6-pack, the only fat in my body was in my boobs), I was still not thin enough as a gymnast compared to my 80 lb teammates.  But without doing something drastic, it just wasn’t going any lower.

Fall 2007 - Yes, that is me, not Violet turning into a blueberry. 30 lbs down, believe it or not

It’s not that I don’t appreciate where I’m at.  I’m not discounting the work I put in to lose 110+ lbs.  I appreciate how life changing and wonderful that is.  The thing is – I got the ball rolling Sept 2007 with a 8 lb loss that month, and never stopped losing each week EVER until about a year later.  So while it was effort, I already had the inertia.  I knew in my head that it was going to be hard to get going again so I just kept doing it.  I was very right.

I also don’t discount the work I put in within the last 20 lbs lost going from huffing and puffing through a 5k at around 11-12 minute miles, to now cutting that time to 8:30 miles and being able to go over 4x that distance.  My body looks and feels and handles completely differently in the last year.  Clothes that fit last winter 10-15 lbs ago hang off me.  Every pair of pants I own fits, even the “skinny jeans” I bought myself this spring that didn’t quite work when I weighed a few lbs less.

Jan 2008 -200. Starting to feel strong.

But the scale just keeps taunting me.  I’ve tried eating less, I’ve tried eating more, I’ve tried intuitive eating, I’ve tried strict calorie counting, I’ve tried rest weeks, I’ve tried everything that doesn’t involve giving up food groups or foods of one color, ie, things that to me feel like sane, reasonable eating I can do for the rest of my life.  I’ve posted a week of my intake, and the comments were somewhere between “yum” and “I’m getting hungry just reading, eat more”.  Sadly, the best progress weight-wise I seem to make are rest weeks from the gym where I barely do any working out and I restrict my calories down super low (1300).  When I start working out more and thus eating more (even if the calories I take in are way less than the extra calories expended), I go back to 154.

July 2008 -175 - muscles starting to peek out...

It’s to the point where I need to make a decision – spend the few months between the next half marathon and when I start marathon training going back to baby workouts and a 1200 calorie diet to see if I can take off the last 20, or just take a stand and say this is it.  I don’t know what else there is.  My thyroid and all other tests came out fine.  The numbers show I should be making progress.  I’ve just resigned myself to the fact that I cannot eat as much as any of you out there and lose weight.

Jan 2009 - 160 - First mini in public that wasn't a costume since college!

Option one sounds painful (I am so addicted to exercise I actually don’t feel right in the head after rest weeks), but so does option two, because it feels like giving up.  I still have a dress I can’t fit in.  I’m still “overweight” BMI-wise.  My tummy still poofs out all funny under the belly button.  I still have something I’m pursuing in my head and I’m not there yet.  It’s not just a number.  I just want to get to that point in my life where I don’t get up every morning wishing I was smaller.   The sad thing is I have never been there, so I can’t say when it will be.  I have always been the Merry Lou Retton in a world of Shannon Millers.  Stocky, muscular, and powerful looking at our best.  But you gotta wonder, did she ever just wish she had that typical, emaciated gymnast body?  My theory is that at some weight, I have to lose the “stockiness” about me and just look badass.   But how far do I have to go to do it?

June 2009 - Around 155, right before starting my half marathon

It’s just part of my insatiable mega-manic personality.  I always thought the line, “somehow I feel like I was destined to be more” seemed cheesy, because don’t we ALL feel destined to be more?  I’m trying to think of a way to say this that doesn’t make me sound like a horrible, self-deprecating person, but every day that I am not extraordinary, I am a failure to myself.  Can I add to that “in a good way”?  Like, the drive in me to be more, do more, be something amazing pulls me along by the nose.

That’s the quirk that had me in the gym 4-7 hours per day 6 days a week, or got me mostly straight As in school, or had me working 100 hour weeks without prodding, or now that has me working towards running 26.2 miles.  It hit me recently that no, not everyone feels “destined for more”.  Some people are just continent to be themselves and live their lives and are genuinely happy.  Sometimes I really am jealous of them.  Most times, I cannot imagine not having this crazy drive to do and to be more.

Oct 2009 - 155ish - getting married and looking pretty hawt doing it

But I have this crazy bail button that keeps me from completely fulfilling my evil genius tendencies.  I cannot give myself over completely to the crazy.  Too close to the flames and I start feeling the burn.  Once I start getting too far gone I pull the crazy-chute.  I quit gymnastics and spent the last 2 years of high school being normal (if you can call normal honor roll, various clubs and activities, varsity diving, and two part time jobs).  I quit the crazy job and now work a 40 hour week unless I am required to work more.  NaNoWriMo made me throw a tantrum and I haven’t opened up the document since.

That’s one reason I’m trying to take the running at a safe and sane pace – I want to continue for a long time.  The 3 runs a week program is feeding both my mega-crazy side (I am positively shredded after each workout) and my eject button side (I never run 2 days in a row), and the time commitment is less insane than last time.  So that is mucho bueno.

And the most recent - still around 155 - about to Turkey Trot!

So in summary – I’m just feeling a little bummed about what the scale is saying to me, realizing it’s the last month of 2009, where I was damn sure I was going to find my goal weight and stick with it because I was impossibly close.  I have surely found A WEIGHT to stick with, but not the one I was hoping for.  I just need to figure out what to do without triggering the crazy – if 1200 calories is good then 1000 calories is better and 750 calories IS BEST and fainting while running means I’m working hard, right?  (I’m not there at all, believe me, but I acknowledge that I can get stupid focused to the point of losing my perspective sometimes.)  I also don’t want to trigger my eject – the fuck it, I am done with this healthy living bullshit, I am going to do something completely different.  I don’t want to go back to stuffing my face and not leaving my apartment unless forced.

Thank you for allowing me to lay on the proverbial couch here and vent.  Now, I wanna hear from you.  What’s working for you right now?  How do you know (or will you know) that you’re at your proper and happy weight?  Has there been a time in your life where you were utterly and completely satisfied?  Any advice?  Since I am broke and can’t afford a nutritionist, life coach, head shrinker, or the like, I turn to you – internetties!

Rainbows and sunshine next post, I promise!

Obvious Answer = Right, Probably != Truth

Let me first of all shout from the mountain tops that I am not a role model.  I never started this blog to be, I will not hide my flaws, and although I honestly hesitated posting this, I want to be honest about the fact that I’m freaking human. My go-to, healthy, fill-me-up snack is processed turkey pepperoni, beef jerky, or salted pistachios.  Some gals indulge and have “a glass or two of wine a week”, I indulge and have a glass or two of whiskey a week.  By glass I mean one the size of a bottle.  Split into servings through an evening (damn my Rusky heritage and alcohol tolerance!).  I curse in front of my parents (usually after they curse in front of me, so there!).  There are some days I eat way too much and I unabashedly do not feel remorse.  I swig mouthwash out of the bottle.  Some days, I don’t shower if I don’t feel stinky (though always a shower if I worked out before I attend work again).

These are things that I can easily put under the umbrella of “little indulgences that make life worth living” if not just little quirks about me.  Sure a night of drinking whiskey isn’t directly going to help me to my goals – but knowing that I still CAN makes me be happy with being healthy most of the time.  I can still look snazzy and love myself even if some days my hair is standing on end, and I am a little hippified.

The one thing that it gets harder and harder to justify – smoking.

Yes, that right.  To any new readers, let me come out and say that even though I run half marathons and am hell bent on going for a marathon next year, I am social smoker, and really have no plans to quit.  I picked up smoking way too many years ago to admit to, and at my height of smoking, I’d have a smoke (or two depending on traffic) on the way to work, I’d have two at break, two or three at lunch, two at another break, one or two on the way home, one after dinner, and then at least one an hour until I went to sleep.  If I was drinking, lost in deep working thought at my home office, or doing a bit of both at the same time, that was probably a few an hour.

Now, many days out of the week, I don’t smoke at all.   No desire.  Occasionally, after a nice lunch with friends or Zliten, we’ll continue the conversation outside with a smoke.  Very, very occasionally, I’ll feel that crazy itch that first feels like “feed me more” and then I realize is “smoke me” after dinner.  I no longer bring cigarettes to work or carry them in my purse.  I don’t smoke AT ALL when I’m ill.  The rub is that when the whiskey comes out, so do the smokes.  And the more of one I have, the more of the other I have.

” But you run!”  People say to me all the time.  “You’re like, crazy health girl!” they say.  “How have you not quit smoking yet?”

Easy.  I’ve taken this task on as I’ve taken every other task on.  I didn’t start running with the idea that I was going to do a marathon.  I just wanted to make it around the track 4 times without walking (or dying), and then added quarters and halfs of miles as I felt strong enough to grow out my comfort zone.  I didn’t go from cheeseburgers to organic broccoli, I cut down my portions and made it easy on myself by eating mostly packaged foods. Then I added more veggies.  Then I started trying to cut down on the unhealthy stuff and add healthy stuff in it’s place.  If I would have started on the dietary regiment I am CURRENTLY on that is most days super natural (not supernatural, although that would be cool) and feels good – I would have THROWN STUFF ON THE GROUND.  Go on, click it.  We have been throwing stuff on the ground at work all this week.

I wanted to cut down smoking, so I first eliminated those morning cigs – I didn’t care for them much anyway.  I realized that two smokes at a break was overkill, it was just to fill time, so I cut down to one.  We stopped smoking inside when we moved so there went the mindless computer smoking.  When I got a new car, it was a non-smoking car.  I stopped smoking altogether on work breaks.  I just found places where I was just smoking because everyone else was, or where I really didn’t want one, and eliminated it.  However, it’s just not something I’m mentally ready to let go of yet completely.  Last spring, I tested whether a half marathoner could still socially smoke.  And I was fine.  Next year, I’m going to probably test the same thing with a marathon.  I’m pretty sure I’ll finish as well.

Now how do you go about being a moron like me?

-Quit smoking 3 days before a long race (at least a day before a short race).  Any more, you run the risk of too much phlegm.  Ya know, your lungs actually fully healing.  Any less, you can feel it in your lungs when you dig way, way deep at the end to sprint to the finish.

-Do not smoke the day before a long run.  Do not smoke after dark (or not at all) the day before a hard training run (tempo/sprints/etc).

-The best way to (miserably) force an easy pace?  Party the night before.  That always quells my desire to go fast.  Not recommended.

-Make sure to plan any weeknight drinky fests the day before cross training.  Or more accurately, plan cross training on the days after drinkyfests.

-If you mess up, go do your planned workout anyway.  Slog through it.  Feel the misery.  That right there is total motivation NOT to do it again.

-The one time this sucks is when at the end of half training (when it’s pretty much impossible to do the long runs Friday mornings before work) and cool fun party things happen Friday night and I have a long run planned Saturday, I just have to be an adult and stay home.  I haven’t done a 12 mile run hungover with American Spirits breath and I don’t plan to.

Why this is on my brain?  Well, I don’t smoke while sick.  So I haven’t since Sunday.  Then it got COLD, so I’ve been boycotting cigs until it’s been warmer.  I’m on day 6, and in reality, that’s almost 1 whole week.  It would be smart of me to not smoke anymore – right?  Well – I don’t wanna.  I’ve met some of the coolest people, had some of the most awesome conversations over smokes, and in San Diego, I might never have actually seen the sun if I wasn’t required to leave the building to imbibe nicotine.  I enjoy it with a drink like someone might enjoy cognac and a cigar, except a lot more low brow.  Most of my good friends also either smoke socially or all the time, so I’m not alone, outside, huddled sucking down a cig.  That would definitely make it easier.

What I am going to do is make a concerted effort to take things down another notch.  I’m figuring out what that is right now.  It might be allot myself a certain amount per week (say, 1/2 pack) and when they’re gone, they’re gone (aka, calorie counting). Or, ban them at any time when I do not have an alcoholic beverage in my hand.  Before that made me drink more (I love loopholes), but now with my training and calorie counting, I think it might work.  Or maybe I should really bite the bullet and just suffer through the next few weeks.  But I really don’t wanna.  Throw it on the ground indeed.

If nothing else, let me put this out there.  You do not have to quit smoking to lose weight/get fit/start being healthier.  Work on cutting down, sure.  You might take longer to make fitness gains.  But I know that one thing that kept me from really trying this whole healthy living thing was the fact that I thought I’d have to give up drinking, smoking, eating fried cheese – anything “fun”.  And sure, it’s better for you if you do.  But you can start without giving up ANYTHING completely, and see where it takes you.

So let’s make this a “Fess Up Friday”.  What’s your healthy living kryptonite?  What do you KNOW you should give up, no questions about it, but are just not ready to let go of yet?

p.s.  This is the one and only post you may go to the comments and tell me to quit.  My mom has been nagging me for years, and I’ll tell you right now, it doesn’t do any good.  I do things in my own time.  Just how I am.

Random nonsensical pictures from fukung.  Because I love me some fukung.  Potentially not safe for work, the fukung is.  Also potentially not safe for eyes.  But still, <3

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