Wow, has it been that long?

I guess I’ve been down for the count for a while…hubby has been gone and I have been with the kids for a couple of weeks myself, and I think in the process the ole exercise and motivation wagon, hit a bump, knocked me off, ran over me then backed up and ran over me again to make sure I was down and out for the count.  I just feel like I have lost control where that is concerned.

However , when  I got on the scale this morning, it said 234.1 which is great, if you ask me as I am so very shy of losing my first 10 pounds.  Now, I’m NOT saying I am just going to rest on my laurels because I didn’t gain…just the opposite really…it motivated me to pick up and get going again :)

So, below, I updated my weightloss ticker using the same one posted a while ago.   Didn’t figure it would make any sense to put another one right above it lol

Hope all is well with all my other buddies….if anyone else has fallen, get up! 

Wednesday Weigh In

Yay!  I'm a loser...again!!



I did it

I walked today, despite myself lol  I did WATP High Calorie Burn 2 miles :)  I normally walk at 730 or 8 am, but today I forced myself to walk at 11:30….I guess I guilted myself into doing it!

Wanted to share

Yesterday, my March issue of TOPS News came.  In it, was an article about sticking to your goal and I thought it was SO fitting to this part of my life right now, that I thought it was “blogworthy”  (Taken from mj-ryan.com)

Top 12 Ways to Keep Your Resolution 

 1. Make it Nonnegotiable

Promise yourself that you are absolutely going to do it. When you do it, where you do it, how you do it can, and most likely will, change according to circumstances. But that you will do it is not open for consideration. Call it a vow, a promise, a pledge, a commitment. Whatever you name it, making it choiceless is a tool for overcoming backsliding after your initial enthusiasm fades. You don’t negotiate with yourself about brushing your teeth. You just do it. I bet you usually honor your commitments to other people too. Treat yourself equally well. Make your resolution a nonnegotiable commitment in your life.

2. Make it Actionable
Is your goal concrete enough? Many of us fail because we haven’t turned it into something to actually do. Yesterday, a client said he was going to focus more on himself and his family and less on his job. “How are you going to put that into action?” I asked. There was silence on the other end of the phone. Here are some resolutions I’ve recently heard: to have more energy…to learn to relax…to learn to make decisions. There’s nothing wrong with these desires. But they must be translated into actions. Actions tell you HOW you’re going to do something—I’m going to go to bed earlier and exercise 30 minutes daily to have more energy; I’m going to spend ½ hour a day relaxing with my feet up on the couch; I’m going to make a decision about the vacation by Friday. To succeed you must know what actions you’re going to take.

3. Come Up with Solutions for Your Usual Excuses
What is your usual litany of excuses and rationalizations? One way to think about this is to ask yourself what has gotten in your way in the past when you’ve tried to do this resolution or any other. Forgetting? No time? Losing interest? Not knowing how to begin? And what are the rationalizations you give yourself when you gave up in the past? It doesn’t matter? It’s not that bad? It’s too hard? Instead of just hoping it will be different this time, write down your typical excuses and rationalizations and create strategies in advance for dealing with them. That way you won’t get stopped in your tracks and lose forward momentum when they arise. And yes, they will! Because of the way our brains are hardwired, we have a strong tendency to repeat behavior over and over.

4. Use Procrastination to Your Advantage
Business coach Mike R. Jay claims that 60% of the population is “pressure prompted,” as it’s called on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. It’s a preference, usually labeled as procrastination, to take in information for as long as possible before being forced into action by some external deadline. The other 40% of us are “early-starters,” who prefer to get the ball rolling and avoid pressure. If you fall into the pressure-prompted majority, find a deadline that will help you get into motion—a reunion, a vacation, a wedding, a performance. One would-be diet-and- exerciser finally got off the starting line when he got the lead in a local production of The Full Monty, which required him to parade around in a g-string in three month’s time. A woman finished her Ph.D. thesis that had been languishing for years when she got a job that required its completion. To work most effectively, the deadline must be real and come from the outside. Pressure-prompters tend to blow off self-created ones.

5. Schedule It In
Before Jan. 2004, I never exercised a day in my life. Since then, I have kept my resolution to exercise 30 minutes a day about 80 percent of the time. How did I do it? Put into my day planner and treated it as an appointment with a client. Otherwise it’s too easy to schedule all my time away with things I enjoy more (which is everything). Want to write every day? Block it out on your calendar. Want to start looking for a date on Match.com? Schedule it. Make a specific, time-bound appointment with yourself and you’ll be much more likely to do it.

6. Do it Daily
Someone asked the Dalai Lama to describe in one word the secret to living a healthy life. His answer? “Routines.” Bad habits imprison us; good ones bring us closer to our heart’s desire. The more you make what you want part of your everyday life, the more it will become so routine that soon you won’t even have to think about it. If you want to have more work/life balance, for instance, find a way to do a little something each day: leave the office ½ hour earlier, take a walk with the family after dinner, read a novel before bed.

7. Monitor Your Behavior
Research shows that when you monitor your behavior in writing, you’re more likely to do better. That’s because monitoring is a key to self-regulation, the capacity to do what it is you say you want. Monitoring can take the form of a food diary, counting the number of times you keep your temper in a day, logging the successes you’ve had with not worrying, etc. You also monitor yourself when you put your full attention on something—not eating and watching TV at the same time, for instance.

8. Focus on the Horizon
Take a tip from high performance athletes. Look at how far you’ve come, not how much you have left to do. Scientists call this the horizon effect. It creates encouragement—“I’ve done twice as much as a week ago!” and builds determination—“I’ve made it this far; I might as well keep going.” Focus on the ten pounds you did lose; the closet you managed to clean; the $1,000 debt you’ve wiped out; the evening you carved out for yourself. Don’t forget to ask yourself how you’ve accomplished the task so far, so you can mine your success for ideas on how to keep going.

9. Take It One Choice At a Time
When we think about changing something in ourselves, it can feel overwhelming. But in truth, our entire lives are constructed of the minute-by-minute choices we’re making, many of which we’re not even aware of. As Gary Zukav reminds us, “An unconscious choice is a reaction…A conscious choice is a response.” Bring your choices to consciousness. If you’re having trouble sticking to your resolution, for a day, try this practice: when you’re doing the bad old thing, stop and say, “I’m choosing to: eat this Twinkie, not work out, stay at the office to finish this project, blow up, look at my email rather than clean my desk, etc. Do you like yourself when you make this choice? You can choose differently, moment to moment. The next day, make the positive choice visible to yourself: I’m choosing to throw this catalog away rather than go on a spending spree; I’m choosing to take a few calming breaths before speaking; I’m choosing to get my taxes done today rather than wait till April 14th. The more you focus on the positive choice you can make this very day, without worrying about forever, the more you will live yourself into the new habit.

10. Find Someone Who’s Doing What You Want and Imitate Them
I have a friend who wants to lose weight. When we’re together she says, “I’m going to watch what you eat and follow suit.” When I set out to become more kind, grateful, and generous, I made a study of people I knew who had those qualities and tried to do as they did. It can be useful to read books or listen to tapes. But when it comes to changing human behavior, there’s nothing that beats good old-fashioned role models. Babies learn by imitation; why shouldn’t adults? Who do you know that is good at what you want to learn? What do they do that you don’t? The more you intentionally watch those who are living the habit you desire, the more you have to draw on when you are by yourself. Watch and learn—and don’t be afraid to ask questions: How do you get all of your work done and still have time for your family? Teach me your dating secrets. What makes you able to take risks? Most people love to teach if given the opportunity.

11. Teach It to Someone Else
A great way to really cement a new habit is to become a mentor. I was reminded of this the other day when a client of mine, who’d come to me to learn patience, said, “You’d be so proud of me, M.J. I was helping an employee of mine be more successful and I found your words coming out of my mouth about understanding when it’s time to push and when it’s time to hold back. I realized how much I’ve learned about patience, and my teaching reinforced the merits for me.” One crucial tip to make this as effective as possible—whatever you suggest to someone else, practice yourself. In other words, be sure to take your own advice on the topic. It’s a way to really walk the walk.

12. Treat Yourself Kindly
“Anything you know you forget. It’s all about getting confused and getting unconfused.” That’s a piece of wisdom from Buddhist teacher Sylvia Boorstein to remind us that we’re only human. We’re doing the best we can. We will mess up or forget. When we do, our task is to hold ourselves in love. You and I are human beings dealing with the challenges of growth. When we treat ourselves with kindness, we don’t collapse into shame or guilt, but can try again with greater wisdom for having faltered.

I do not want to walk today

It’s 9am, a time when I am normally done walking, but today, I just don’t want to.  I mean, I do, but I don’t, I should, but I just need that kick to get my shoes on, dvd out and JUST DO IT.  But still, I don’t want to.  Anyone else ever feel like that?

I’ve “scheduled” myself for 2 miles today, and doing it will put my ticker over 20 miles so I really should. Hmmmm, what to do, what to do?  LOL

I went out yesterday to find some 2 lb weights with NO luck…our store said something about no one having them in the region right now due to change in manufacturer or some odd shit. (military exchange service overseas, please do not suggest I go to walmart or target or I will strangle you.  Ok, not really…..but I am overseas.)  Perhaps I will try to procure them “locally”…or maybe just use my 3 pounders and continue to kill my arms lol

Anyway, nice to get sidetracked huh? Where and what was the thought I wanted to convey…oh ya….

So, anyway, I went to the bookstore for a magazine, something other than that piece of crap Oxygen magazine that I bought the other day and will NEVER buy again because it’s  just a glossy magazine sized ad for fat burning super secret diet solutions with 2 articles in it……. and I picked up Shape instead. 

I used to buy Shape a long time ago, then for a while, it turned into too much makeup this, pretty pretty that, so I stopped buying it…but I thumbed through it and was happy to see that it seemed normal so I got it. 

Then, I wandered around and saw a book called “Converstions with the fat girl” by Liz Palmer.  Intrigued by it, I picked it up, read the back and made my purchases. Shape Magazine and Fat girl book.

So, while sitting on my couch last night, in that time of Seinfeld re-runs and the kids and husband to bed, (you know, the only time my house is quiet with 4 kids!) I picked up Fat Girl and thumbed through that.  There was a section of questions for guided book club discussion, and a snippet from the author about going on in search of a box of Lucky Charms…and buying a Shape magazine, and how it inspired her book.  Now, HOW ironic is that, that I was buying a Shape magazine and found THAT book.  Kind of neat I thought.

Anyway, I still don’t want to walk but I probably will because chances are I won’t this weekend….and I KNOW I won’t Saturday because I am going to go scrapbook with some new friends….which, if you are a crafter, included lots of sitting on our butts and eating. 

 There will be chocolate, so I must be prepared lol

Tape Tales

So, inspired by rebecca94 and her post about body measurements, I did mine today.  Not like last night as planned by the hubster, the night was just too hectic and it didn’t get done. 

I followed these tips on how to do my own and this is what I came up with.  Yikes! 

 Here we go……

Bust 46″  Chest 39″ 

 Waist 44″  Hips 52.5″  Midway 53.5″ 

 Thighs 29″ (my freakin’ waist used to be that size! ugh!)

Knees 20.25″  Calves 18.75″ 

Upper Arm 16″  Forearm 12.25″

 Todays exercise was the 1 mile Express with Stretchie…and I SCORED a deal on some new DVD’s too, check it out! 

Wednesday Weigh in

 So….today was weigh in day for me….I lost!  Not a ton, but a loss, so I am happy with that.  I’ve put away my scale until I need it again next week, to remove the temptation of jumping on it every time I see it.  I decided to add a ticker here in the post that reflects the first goal I’m working towards…..my first 10% 


Exercise this morning was WATP “Walk & Kick”. I really like this one because I can do it in my socks AND I feel like a bad-ass after all that punching and kicking. 

 It’s also great stress reliever :)

The damn truth

Way back when, a long time ago, I was in the military.  AND I was 145 pounds….and on the weight program.  I often tell my husband that I wish I was as “fat” as I was then, now.

Then last week, the following cartoon appeared in our paper.  Amazing that it came out the same time I decided to start working again on losing weight…ironic huh?

thinfat2.jpg

Updated my pics

Ok, so I got brave too and uploaded some pics of myself.  Like a lot of other people, I don’t like to see pics of myself and try to avoid the camera.  My profile pic was taken on Christmas Eve…hubby pointed the camera at me and I told him to go ahead and take it “if he must” ugh.  I feel sad when I look at that, to think of how I let myself go like that.

I am trying to get the courage up to have hubby take a pic of me “biggest loser” style with shorts and sport tank bra.  I really, really need to see what he sees from his view.

Tomorrow morning is my weigh in day, we’ll see what happens.  I try to not get on the scale, but when I see it, I’m drawn to it and I cheat-sneak a peek.  

Tuesday ramblings….

This morning, I did the WATP “Get Up and Get Started” one mile and used 3 pound weights.  (it’s all I had because I can’t find my other “ball”)  It’s a pretty good workout for being just a mile and the weights were enough for me to say to myself “if she keeps this up much longer, I will die” lol.  I might try to find some 2 lb weights to use instead maybe to see how that goes….

I’m finding that I am really enjoying doing WW this time around.  Since they have reworked the points system , I don’t seem to be as hungry like I was before….but then too, before I would eat a bunch of FF Pringles too, just because I could and two points worth of them doesn’t go nearly as far as say, a boiled egg, takes me through the day you know?  It helps too that I’m in a location where I don’t constantly see the fat free good foods blasted to me over the tv commercials, and driving to get the stuff like that is too far, and locally where I live, you aren’t bombarded with tons and tons of premade crap either.  For the most part really, the only fat free item I really use is Mayo…. anyway…. 

I know a lot of people think WW is spendy, but what I did was sign up for their free online trial a while back and bought some books through their online shop, then cancelled. (I’ve since renewed though because I like the recipe builder a LOT)  I did go to a meeting or two last year for the updated material too, then, of course, quit. (more on this in a bit)  I have since found a journal that I like a LOT that holds a whole year of your food logs, instead of having a couple of little ww journals laying around.

So, about quitting… each time I have begun to lose weight, I have always had a “here I go again” look about it, like there was a definate time frame for getting the job done.  For the first time, I really feel like I’m in this for the long haul….like it’s just the way it’s going to be and that’s it.  The old Nike slogan just keeps coming to mind “just do it”….  there are a lot of things that brought me to this point, but I’ll write about them on another day…

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