Waiting On Blood Tests To Return

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dirtybuck

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HDL, liver, Lipid profile, etc. and testosterone. Will tell all the results of my blood tests when I get them...nothing serious, but one thing Dr says: BILL NEEDS TO LOSE WEIGHT (250 right now...heaviest I've ever been)!!

I've noticed quite a few of you on here mention "the gym" and workouts. Who can help get me on a decent program? Willing to listen to all and every suggestion, idea, technique, etc.

Thanks!
 
I'm with Tommy Boy!

But seriously, I was up to 230 several years ago and it really slowed me down. My partner needed to lose weight too. We got bikes and radically changed our diet. It was mostly portion control but with more emphasis than usual on eating healthy things with very little fat.

Dieting is not 420 friendly but we managed with healthy snack items and again practiced portion control, if not a bit more loosely than at regular meals ;-)

We joined a gym but my partner has had two back surgeries and the last one didn't provide a whole lot of relief. He couldn't use the gym. So why didn't I go by myself? Sigh, I don't want to get into relationship issues . . .

But I did get down to about 187 or so. Never could get to 185 and stay there, but I sure felt lighter on my feet. I'm back in the 205 range again but holding. With all the work ahead of me this summer, that will surely help me to drop some pounds.

I'd join a gym if I had a mentor. I liked weight lifting in high school PE and would have done that all year if I had the choice. If you can find a buddy (maybe on Craig's List and not necessarily the cruisiest corner of it) that is your best bet for the gym scenario.

Good luck and keep us posted.

Ralph
 
It's not so much how much you eat, but what you eat. My BP has been creeping up lately, so we bought a bunch of those Green Giant special vegtable packs. Healty Weight, Immunity Builder, etc. It's enough for one serving and will fill you up. Great for lunch.
Instead of Ice Cream I have a few teaspoons of Cottage Cheese.
No more fried foods, just about all of our meat is now being done on the grill.
Skinless chicken breasts and fish like Salmon replace steaks and hambuger.
And replace soft drinks with bottled water.
Kept up, the weight comes off quite easily.
 
I had all that blood-draw stuff done Monday (except they didn't do the PSA that I wanted). Doc didn't tell me the numbers, other than to say that they're about the same as always (which means marginally bad), but she did fuss about lack of exercise. She suggested I get a membership at the local aquatic center, stop by there after work when the afternoon crowd is gone ... I told her I doubt I can get in at 4 AM.

I have an exercycle in front of the TV .. but I seldom watch TV, so there's that.
 
Beware of all dairy products. Humans, they say, are not intended to ingest milk and milk produts after a certain age. Cow's milk is designed to (and does) get a calf up to a weight of 200 lbs. (90kg) within 2 years.

Lotsa green vegetables (not peas which is a starsh). Try a dressing of 1 tablespoon vinegar, 1 tablespoon lemon juice and two tablespoons decent salad oil. Works on salads too. Try balsamic vinegar as well. For a truly refreshing dressing use equal parts lemon juice to salad oil. For more veggie ideas try the name of the veggie on the web follwed by "a la greque." which is lemon, vinegar, oil dressing and served at room temperature.


The Fit For Life diet advocates eating everything, but not at the same meal. Have a meat, a salad and a green vegetable at one meal. At another one have starch, a salad and a green vegetable. Makes for better digestion and fewer posions/toxins in one's system. Butter is a fat, and can be used sparingly woth either "meal plan"

Beware of artificial ("diet") sweetneners. These all break down to VERY HIGHLY TOXIC substances.

Beware of fake butters. Hydrogenated oils are very unhealty. Use oil instead, preferable olive oil which is low or devoid of trans-fats. If it's liquid at room temperature (70*F to 80*F, being 20*C to 25*C) it will surely be a liquid at body temp (98.6*F or 37*F). Other (solid) fats are basially evil and murder on one's areteries. Children do need them for brain development, however.

Overall you may want to find a Mediterranean-diet cookbook. This is said to be one of the healthiest ways of eating, overall. It's low fat, high fiber and stays away from rdiuclous American diet trendiness.

And as suggested get some physical excercise, but not wrist to mouth. :-) They say its that one extra pound (1/2 kilo) we gain a year that robs us of our slenerness.

Now to go take my own advice.............

I guess I need to put a note in my wallet that if I ever need to be opened up for emergency surgery, wouldja please do a tummy tuck while you are at it? *LOL*
 
oh and start the day with fruit (I mean in the kithcen!).
Carbs first thing tends to make one hungrier all day. It really works.

Fruits should be eaten alone, and a two to three hour wait afterwards for the next food intake.

Fruits are the nearly perfect food with high water, natural sugars and fiber. The body pushes it throught he digestive system very quickly in that it doesn't need much processing. Having other foods with friut tends to rush them along partially undigested; You'll get cramps, flatulence ,etc. etc. etc. So if you had a really bad diet and the fruits (and salads and veggies) helps....well er ...uh...clean you out, its NOT the fruits and veggies to blame, if the reults are nto agreeable its their immediate cleansing effect.

Basically one's diet should be colorful (fruits and veggies), not all beige (carbs)and brown (meats).

If "starving" at tea time (4:00pm) have a tea and an apple. Apples are natural appetite supressants.
 
note in wallet:

in my case will be: Please shake the feathers in my head, they're all clumped together.
Toggles, your advice is great, just one little disagreement. The "milk ain't good for you" argument got tossed over board fairly recently. Still lots of folks out there who believe it, but some very well designed studies have shown otherwise. Many folks in the Mediterranean are lactose intolerant, just like many Celts can't handle wheat glutin...Oatmeal...it's what's for breakfast. And guess where the major dairy research was originally conducted? It sure wasn't Minnesota. Or the Netherlands.
If you can't digest it, milk is way bad for you. If you can, our digestive systems never lose that ability. And yes, it surely is an ideal growth food...hmm, is that why we're called mammals?
One of my closest friends is married to a kidney and liver specialist. She keeps very up to date on this stuff and her advice is very similar to some of your points: No trans fats, keep synthetic "foods" to an absolute minimum. Butter, eggs and fatty fish are really good for you, coffee and tea, too. Extra Virgin Olive Oil is good, chemically processed oils and stuff like Crisco super bad. Walnut oil, sesame oil, etc., good; corn oil good, margarine worse than bad: She won't let their kids even touch the stuff. Slab the butter on thick, fine. Three eggs for breakfast, no ho-ho. "Buttered" popcorn at the movies? I don't think so...
She's not too crazy about alcohol, but hey - she's a liver doctor, duh.
The funny thing about my metabolism is: I can work hard and lose weight or I can diet and lose weight. But if I do both together (the typical "correct" weight loss diet), my body goes into starvation mode immediately...and every calorie gets turned over twice, the fat cells saved and the muscle cells burned. Never mind the science and the "that ain't possibles"...that's the way it is.
Personally, I think it's silly to expect creatures of the Savannah to not gain weight.
 
For me it's been a combination of working out and Weight Watchers. After becoming single after 11 years, I was in the gym five days a week working out my anger. My body was changing, but I still was not losing weight.

In October of last year I joined Weight Watchers. So far I've gone from 243 lbs. to 217 and still losing. I enjoy going to the meetings once a week; and after the first week, once I got used to the program, it became second nature to me. It really is more of a system that teaches you how to eat, as opposed to a diet.

Also, for those whose schedule does not permit attending a meeting, you can do the entire program online.

Ron
 
And here is my current picture after having lost 70 lbs. I feel great!!. It is portion control, plenty of salads and vegetables, only small amount of carbs and fats.

Ross

6-13-2008-08-40-5--westyslantfront.jpg
 
I have to add support for Weight Watchers. My friend has lost over 160 lbs! It's taken about 4 years but she's 5 lbs from her goal weight now but a completely different person - active, fit, out hiking and walking. She swears by WW and their point system - the results say it all.
 
Thomasortega

Sammy must have twitched her nose!

(Wouldn't it be fab if you could lose it in a twinkling of an eye?)
 
I am a type 2 diabetic so I really have to be careful. Someone prepares meals for me, watching portions. A modest portion of meat, small amount of pasta, and plenty of vegetables.
Breakfast are whole wheat waffles with sugar free maple syrup.
Plenty of salads, sugar free, and whole wheat. Portion control is very important. I do go to local gym 3 days a week. It took
1 1/2 years to lose 70 lbs and the results are in the previously posted picture above. I have gone from a 46 inch waist to a 36.
Plenty of fun buying new clothes but have to do it slowly.

Ross
 

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