Tuesday, August 23, 2016

The Trap ... Unhealthy Trying to Be Healthy


For anyone who has been on a weight loss journey, it is not surprising to hear that the road is terrifying.  It contains mountains to surpass, potholes to dig ourselves out of, curves that throw of us off track, and straightaways that can loll us into wrong thinking and false security.  And, we occasionally reach that valley of relaxation and accomplishment.  While we can celebrate our accomplishment, and indeed we should, we can’t stay in the valley of relaxation and get too comfortable.   We need to forever be diligent in our thinking and our actions.   It is indeed a lifelong  journey!

When first starting my journey, I must say that it truly felt and worked quite seamlessly and easily.  I was on a very structured plan… a  plan that I did not need to really “think” about.  It was outlined specifically for me, and all I had to do was muster up my resolve to stay the course.   I thought obtaining that resolve would be the hardest part, but in reality, it turned out to be the easiest part of my journey.  My resolve came quickly, as I saw the pounds melt away on a weekly basis.  I believe I lost 5 pounds the first week, and subsequent  weeks lost between 1 to 3 pounds weekly.  The key word is “lost.”   As long as I lost weekly, my resolve was good to go!!!!  That’s why the resolve was the easiest part.

As with every journey, you cannot stay in one place forever;   as it is with my diet plan.  At this point, I will not refer again to my “diet plan.”  I actually early in this journey stopped using the word “diet.”  If I learned anything early on, it is that it is so much more than a “diet.”  It is a “wellness” journey.  My wellness journey!  Not staying in one place forever,  I soon found was the hardest and most challenging part of this process.

Since I had had great success with my Phase 1 journey, I was so reluctant to move to Phase 2 of my journey.  Phase  1 was so very structured, no “thinking” on my part, just “doing.”  Now I found myself in the first curve of the road;   the curve of trying to ease my way into Phase 2.  This phase required me to  branch out a bit, and to start introducing certain food groups back into a healthy balance.   This was so scary, since I saw a lot of those foods as the very ones that caused issues with me in the past.  What I had to learn was that it wasn’t the food group that was the issue …  it was the volume and the balance of that food group.   One of my favorite stories with regard to balance and what I could and could not eat,  was when I asked my health educator if I could have garbanzo beans on my salad.  His reply, “Sharon, it was not the garbanzo beans that brought you to me in the first place.”   How true!!!   That is now my mantra when deciding about a food group, the amount of said food group, and the balance it has in my overall diet, “It was not the garbanzo beans…”

If I have learned anything through this journey, I would have to say the biggest revelation is the uniqueness of the human body.  What it does and doesn’t do is mind boggling.   All of our lives we have been taught and told to eat less and exercise more.  I’d like someone to name one, just one “diet plan” or “weight loss program” that in most of the literature, that doesn’t  first tell you the “miracle” of their product or program, and then the disclaimer will read something to the effect of “exercise needed to compliment the program.”   I particularly love the belly fat ads about taking a pill that will reduce belly fat, and their comment during the commercial, that “if your belly fat decrease is too drastic, to only take one of the pills daily.”  Well, sign me up!!!  I only need to swallow two and maybe just one pill, and my belly fat will just melt away.   If you believe that one, I’ve got a nice piece of swamp land in South Carolina that I’d like to sell you!!!!  

The body doesn’t respond to pills, wraps, 20 day exercise fads … it responds to a daily dose of healthy, balanced eating, coupled with healthy cardio and weight training, good sleep habits, and reduction and management of daily stress.   Oh, it will respond to pills, wraps, fads, initially;  but it cannot sustain a healthy level without a balanced healthy lifestyle.   But, the key to this healthy lifestyle is to realize that even when doing everything correctly, food, exercise, sleep, the body will still at different times show the agony of a “gain” on the scale.  I call this the scale being a brat!!!!!!  

This leads me to the highest mountain on my journey.  I am a scalephobe.   I believe the technical term, at least per Google, is gravitaphobia.   It has tempered a great deal, but I look forward to when this is resolved  once and for all.   My lifestyle is extremely healthy now, with what I believe, is a fairly balanced eating style and exercise habits.  But even with these habits, the scale on a weekly basis goes down 2 pounds, up 1.5, down .75, up 2.   It is a roller coaster!!   With what appears to be no rhyme or reason! I do know that stress, lack of sleep, hormone changes can all make the scale do different things.  Recently while on vacation in Saratoga Springs, NY, I got up each morning at 7:00 a.m. to get on the treadmill, I ate lean proteins, whole grains, fruits, vegetables, my protein shakes.  I had one Bloody Mary and 10, yes I counted them, 10 pretzel crisps!   It is a picnic area, full of vendors with specialty foods.   So  many folks picnicking around me ate junk for 5 solid days and consumed liquor quite happily.   Was the scale a brat upon my return?  Of course, it was.  Gained 1.5 pounds!!!!!   My first thought was that I should have eaten and drank like everyone else picnicking at Saratoga Race Course. But then I thought, no the scale would have been a bigger brat, and I probably would have gained 3 pounds!!!  So, I allowed myself to be disappointed for that one evening, the entire time telling myself, that I did everything I was supposed to do, I couldn’t have done any better, so no need to beat myself up. The scale will do what the scale wants to do.  All I need to do is stay focused on eating healthy, exercising appropriately, sleeping well, and managing my stress.  Everything else will fall into place.

I titled this, “The Trap … Unhealthy Trying To Be Healthy.”   This title comes naturally to me, because I can say this was my lifestyle for the first several months into Phase 2.  Since I had been told for most of my years to “eat less, exercise more” I found that what I usually did as a solution to the scale being a brat, was to adjust my food intake, calorie intake, and to exercise even more!   When I first started into Phase 2 and added whole grains back into my diet, the scale would go up a bit.  I immediately thought “those dreaded carbs.”  So I would take them out of my food plan, and of course, the scale would go back down.   I would stay there a week or two, and then add them back in … the scale would inch back up … out they would go again.  My health educator preached, and a bit harshly at times, that the body has to get used to what you are using to fuel it.   Until it gets used to what  you are introducing back into it, the scale will show a reaction of a plus or a minus.  How many times did he say to “stay the course?”   Too many for me to count, and so many that I led him to complete frustration with me.   I was eating the incorrect balance of lean proteins, whole grains, veggies and fruits.  My fruits and veggies were astounding at 10 to 12 servings per day, along with two lean proteins.  But I often had no healthy whole grain carbs in my diet, and while they weren’t in my diet, I was exercising in great intensity 5 to 6 days per week.  I was not fueling my body.  I was the picture of being Unhealthy Trying To Be Healthy!!!!    
Thankfully and blessedly, my health educator refused to give up on me.  We worked together to formulate a healthy plan.  It was not just about eating the correct balance, but in my case it was even more of the head game to get my mind where it needed to be with the scale, and its associated ups and downs.   My mountain to climb.  I would say that I’m about three-fourths the way to the peak now.   I am staying the course, and I’m talking to myself daily about remaining  calm about the journey.   My reaction to the latest scale “brattiness”  after vacation validated my improvement.

For a “wellness program”, my wellness program, I know that it is forever.  It is not a destination, it is a journey.  It is never over, it is for always and forever.  There is a not a before and after, but a before and always!   I wake up every morning, and I know that I need to make the same commitment for the new day that I have made for the days before.  Each day is a new commitment to a healthy day.  Our health educator uses the term “eating with intention.”  That makes so much sense.  We don’t eat for flavor, for fun, for social activity. We eat to fuel our bodies. These beautiful God given bodies.  These temples given to us to preserve and treat with respect.   My wellness program. 

For anyone that can’t understand these journeys, I would pray for their empathy for those of us embarking and well on our way.   It is riddled with obstacles, but the accomplishment at the end is indescribable with joy and gratitude for a healthy body, mind, and soul.  
I close with this Max Lucado quote, “God never said that the journey would be easy. But he did say that the arrival would be worthwhile.”