Sunday, July 31, 2016

Quick Reveal

And the answer is...

Essentially flat, down on average less than a pound. But very stable.  Too many other things to do this glorious morning to spend any more time on this. 

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Day 30 of Whole 30

For all practical purposes I've made it.  This week was not so organized and planned, but it worked out.  So just today to get through - and if I want a drink (of alcohol) this evening, I'll just go ahead.  There isn't anything official about this.  I'm declaring victory as I sit here.

Tomorrow will be the big reveal on weight. I will have all of the past month's numbers to look at, so it doesn't matter if tomorrow morning happens to be a "high" day - I'll have the trend.  But I've felt bloated on this diet, so I'm bracing myself for the possibility I've actually gained weight in the past month.

I've got other numbers and records to look at as well, to see how that has varied over the past month compared to before. I do a quick "body check" most mornings on my way in to work - recording how my various parts such as knees and back and head feel at that moment.  My impression is not much has changed - my knee is based more on exercise than anything internal, and my headaches persist - but I'll actually look at the data to see if there is any change. Ditto with the sleep data the fitbit records. I don't feel like its been any different - but I'll check to be sure. I'll also look at overall activity levels recorded by the fitbit.  A confounding factor in looking at these other areas is I know I fell off the supplemental vitamin bandwagon completely in the last month, so I changed more than one thing at a time, very poor experimental design.  Life is messy, an opportunity lost, so sue me.

I wrote last week about my habits and my cravings.  Still true. I have forcibly restrained and thus interrupted certain bad food habits.  Subjectively, I still feel cravings and urges towards sweets, so I'm not sure I've tamed the sugar beast.  I've used fruit - especially cherries - as a fairly satisfying alternative to feed that beast.  In Atkins-world, sugar is sugar, and fruit is not encouraged for that reason.  But the amount of sugar from even a binge on sweet watermelon is still less than a pint of premium ice cream, so I'll think about the viability of keeping a fruit sugar indulgence going as an diversion from actual sweets.  This would require accepting that I need these indulgences, and having the discipline (once the rules are gone) to not just do both: put blueberries on top of my ice cream.

One odd effect from this diet changed something I didn't really care about changing. I love coffee.  I am sufficiently addicted that I will get a headache if I don't have it.  It's a bit of an obsession - my sailboat, for example, has at least 3 different ways to make coffee on board.  One of the items in my travel kit is a few packets of Starbucks instant coffee for emergencies.  I have been a 6-8 cup a day person (counting cups, that's 3-4 mugs a day) for years.  I found, in the last month, I didn't want that much.  After my first mug of coffee, I would pour the second, and find I wasn't drinking it. I'd fill my thermos with coffee for work and bring it home without touching it all day.  I did have an after-lunch slump which drove me to Starbucks some afternoons (iced green tea, I'm not a fan of their coffee), but I had those afternoon slumps even with the coffee.  I've never thought my caffeine consumption was a problem, so I wasn't trying to cut back.  Perhaps eating a more substantial breakfast obviated the desire for the richness I get from my usually very good freshly ground coffee I make at home.

The big thing on this regime has been the planning, preparation, and cooking.  I really have devoted quite a large amount of energy and time to this.  I find, during the week, cooking in the evening is really a challenge, not something I want to do.  I did do a little bit of weeknight dinner cooking, but mostly it was heating leftovers.  On the other hand, I found cooking in the morning something I could work into the routine.  I've got more time in the morning since we're now done (forever!) with the off-to-school scramble with the shot-clock counting down.  I have been filling that time with surfing the news and social media on the ipad. I generally have more mental and physical energy in the morning - after that first mug of coffee has done its thing, at least.  So not only did I put down the ipad and cook breakfasts, I even did some dinner prep in the mornings before work.  And fixed my lunch to take with me.  Every evening I would think through what the food would be the next day, and what I had to do.  Sometimes, I would do a little prep after eating my leftovers and before going to bed, but not much.  Something like moving food from the freezer to the fridge to defrost, or cleaning the kitchen, was about all I was up to.  (Generally, I am content to let dishes sit on the counter overnight and clean up in the morning.)

Last night was the one night of the whole month that left me totally unprepared with no food in the house and no plan.  (I had planned to go for run down on the mall after work but the temperature was hotter than forecast at 92 degrees so I blew it off.)  I headed to Whole Foods and got stuff for dinner and today's breakfast - dinner was their roast chicken with guacamole and tomatoes so no cooking was required.  I still haven't decided for sure on breakfast and lunch and dinner for today - the plan is to be at the boat, so I've got to do prep and get going.

Tomorrow, I'll have my big reveal and decide where I go from here.  Stay tuned.

Saturday, July 23, 2016

The Whole 30 Homestretch

I've plugged along on the Whole 30. Now I'm weary of cooking, and bored with my choices.  The Whole 30 guys basically say, when folks say they are bored, "You have not nearly exhausted the spectrum of allowed foods!  Google some recipes! Go on Instagram! Get some inspiration!"  The weariness is a bit harder to cope with, but I will probably just go ahead and clean my kitchen and get going.

What have I been eating? Breakfast, cooked at home, even before going to work. This is very unusual for me - eating in the car has been my thing. But almost every breakfast is some form of cooked vegetables (sauteed greens and onions, sauteed mushrooms and onions, sauteed spinach and mushrooms and onions...) and fried or scrambled eggs.  I cook a batch of the veggies at once, then re-heat and fry the eggs before work.  On weekends, I grill meat outside and then eat leftovers all week. Lunch at work is my grilled meat, cafeteria "fresh" greens and either my homemade salad dressing or their olive oil and vinegar splashed on top.

The only restaurant food I've eaten is Chipotle.  I confess, I did not examine their ingredient lists on the web in detail because I made the decision I was going to eat there, and I didn't want to regret it. So a salad with lettuce, meat, tomatoes and guacamole I've done twice, when I had boxed myself in a corner and it was either that or not eat at all for hours.  I've also bought some prepared foods from the food bars at Whole Foods, where I believe I can trust their ingredient lists. It is surprising to me how many of even their salad dressings and sauces list sugar or honey as an ingredient, which scratches it off my list.

Everything else I prepare at home, mostly from scratch.  I usually do big batches, so there are leftovers. I've treated myself to a couple of new kitchen tools, one of my motivators. I love gadgets, and I figure reducing barriers to cooking will result in eating well.  So I have a new spiralizer, and a lemon squeezer.  Since its zucchini season, lots of uses for the adjustable spiralizer.  I strive for awesome in eating, but frankly that is a lot of work.

I very much miss dairy, cheese and butter and creme fraiche.  In an effort to get that rich smooth mouth-feel, I tried to make mayonnaise this week. I was using the hand blender, and it was going well and then suddenly broke. I've never had a mayonnaise break before, but it was a mess and a couple of efforts to salvage it failed.  I'm going to try again, maybe in the food processor, which I've always used before.  While missing butter, I have been cooking with olive oil and coconut oil, but I also bought a tub of (organic) lard, which I like for sauteed greens for breakfast.

I miss sweets, of course.  I have been using fruit as my treat.  After over-indulging in fruit at first, I'm keeping it down to two servings a day.  Peaches are great, and also cherries. Those are like candy to me, with my taste buds probably more sensitive to sweet than before.  Even though apples are not yet in season locally, a very special treat is to slice an apple (I have a 12-slice gadget that works really well) and dip the slices in almond butter.  One amusing thing we're told to expect on the Whole 30 is to dream of food - and I did!  I woke up one morning remember some creamy chocolate delight, and some disappointment with myself that I went off plan. It was a relief to realize it was not real, and no need to feel guilty.

I miss alcohol!  I love the taste of beer. I like fancy cocktails. I like the way they make me feel.  I'm a one drink a night kind of person, but I really enjoy it.  Sparkling water with a wedge of lime is cute, but doesn't do the trick.
I turned my fridge into a white board. It helps to remind myself what is there.

I think I can buck up, get busy, and cook enough this weekend to carry my through next Saturday, just to see this through.  Frankly, I'm not finding fabulous results and outcomes so far.  I'm not looking at my weight (though its hard to avoid all numbers, as my internet-connected scale propagates that number through different apps, such as my fitbit.  I had to manually go and break a bunch of links to keep it from myself.)  It's clear from the way my pants fit I'm not losing huge amounts of weight, which of course I secretly hoped for. It will be interesting to also look at body composition and see if my fat percent has changed any.  I can track my blood sugar at home, and it is roughly the same - I've been on-and-off again in the "pre-diabetic" range, one of the reasons I eat low carb.  I don't have a blood pressure problem and so no change there.  My energy is fine - though I spend more of it focused on food.  I am back at the gym and also running, after slacking off through my vacation and its aftermath.  Other aches and pains seem unchanged.

So why bother with one more week?  There are two stated goals of the Whole 30:  detox from all kinds of potential food sensitivities, and change food habits.  I don't think I have the kinds of food sensitivities they are talking about, so the detox is not something I needed, so no surprise I'm not seeing an effect.  But the habit thing is working.  I really was on a sweet-tooth kick before vacation.  I had ice cream nearly every day, and we're not talking a single tiny exquisite scoop, either. Clearly I've stepped away from that.  I have subbed fruit and nuts, though I haven't broken the concept of my evening sweet treat as a necessary thing.  I'm cooking more, and eating better.  In particular, I was on a real food truck habit for work lunches, and the off-limits aspect has helped.  But the greens from the salad bar at work are not very good, and splashed on poor quality olive oil and red wine vinegar is bland, so I may need to up my game on the lunch front this week.  I can make salad dressing at home, and acquire some better greens to use (though I can't buy in advance for the whole week).

One last note - my Foodist friend, Darya Rose, observes that food is better in San Francisco than New York City, which she attributes to better ingredients.  In New York, fancy cooking takes center stage instead.  It probably means it would be worth it for me to keep a farmer's market habit.

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

NY Times explains DIY Diet Buddy

Combined support with semi-anonymity. Plus Instagram. 


(I need to double check link works)




Sunday, July 10, 2016

Shopping with a List

My list for the farmer's market:  zucchini and peaches.  I bought: zucchini, peaches, eggplant, swiss chard.

My list for Whole Foods:  apples and steak.  I bought: apples, steak, hamburgers, ground lamb, ground pork, cherries, guacamole, lemon juice, lime juice, onions, sweet potatoes, dinner rolls, walnuts, and lunch.  At least this saved another trip the next day.

This is day 11 of 30 on the Whole 30.  According to the Whole 30 folks, most folks who drop out do so on day 11 or 12.  I think I'm set for today, but I need to be sure I've got the work week covered properly.

Monday, July 4, 2016

The Past and the Future

Since I technically (for about 3 days) made my goal weight last year, I've been contemplating what I want to do now.  How do I want to eat for the rest of my life? How much do I care about my weight? I've got a whole parallel running internal dialogue on fitness and activity, but for this post I'm mostly focused on food, eating, and weight.

Partly why I'm doing the Whole 30 is to try out a different way of eating. Because it is for a short period, it's possible to really think about what I'm eating and how it makes me feel.  It's very similar to the way I have been trying to eat for the past many years, but with some differences.  It's easiest to describe by what not to eat: no grains, no dairy, no legumes, no added sugar or any form of sweeteners, no alcohol. What's left are meat, fish, eggs, vegetables (including root vegetables like sweet and white potatoes), fruit, and nuts.  For the thirty days, no using these ingredients creatively to try to re-create treats - no baking with almond flour - because the diet tries to do two things: detox your body, and break eating habits while creating a new cooking habit.  Pretty close to every packaged food will have something not allowed - even my low-carb bottled salad dressings which have zero carbs per serving have some form of sugar as an added ingredient on the label, and thus are not allowed.  Cooking is the only possible way through.  Luckily, it's summer, and vegetables and fruit are good and plentiful.

So I'm doing this, for a month, and then I'll add stuff back.  I don't believe I have any actual food allergies nor even intolerances - no problems with gluten or lactose.  But this diet will help me know it for sure, when I add things back.  (I do have a health challenge of bizarre migraines, and perhaps there is a relationship to food. This restricted diet should help figure it out.)  My idealized diet I've conceptualized would include dairy, for richness, and legumes, for more plant-based proteins. I like meat, but I think the environmental toll of meat production, and animal welfare issues, mean I should eat less meat, if I can do so healthfully.  And by healthfully,  I mean without gaining weight.  The ideal diet would also include ice cream, alcohol, and chocolate, but in small exquisitely perfect tiny portions.  I haven't shown I'm able to do restrain myself that way, yet.

So far, I feel like I'm eating a lot, including a lot of fruit, and I'm getting the hunger pangs that I think sugar (even fruit sugar) drives.  So I may moderate the fruit a bit.  In addition, I've been eating sweet potatoes, something I haven't done much of ever. I quite like them.  I've been afraid to eat white potatoes.

Let's put some historical perspective on where my weight is now, six months after seeing my goal.  First the long view.
I consider anything below the red line to be a victory. I've shown I can keep from doing the big rebound - but only if I pay attention.  We can zoom in on the story since I started focusing on this, and blogging about it, in 2010.

One single big loss, and relatively stable weight with an intermittent focus for a few years, then a big push to get down to the blue goal.  But last year and this year definitely tell the classic weight loss rebound story.

People who say "diets don't work" would crow at seeing this classic rebound.  I think the longer history and context gives that point the lie - I have spent many years lower than my top weight. And my current weight is far from stable - in the last seven days alone, it has varied by five whole pounds.  I don't think my blue-line goal is actually realistic for me to maintain - I think I'd need to work too hard, more than I am willing to work.  I've set a goal at 140 pounds, ten pounds below the red line and five pounds below today.  I have found there is a difference in how I look and feel at that weight versus how I was at the red line, enough of a difference for my vanity to want that improvement.  My theory is I can actively manage myself down to that weight and stay there for a while, and eventually my body will realize it likes it and homeostasis will kick in and keep me there.

The Whole 30 goals do not include weight loss, though they say most people do lose weight during the thirty days.  They are so adament on the point that it's not about weight loss that the rules include a veto on weighing yourself during the period.  I have a problem with not collecting data, but I concede the point about not focusing on it.  Since I have a wi-fi scale that automatically records my weight, I've decided to step on it every day, but block my view of the number.  The history will be there waiting for me when the thirty days are up.  I don't have huge expectations - the decrease in sugar is likely to result in water loss, but so far I'm eating so much sweet fruit I might not even see that.  But of course I have hopes for a big reduction.
A 3x5 card over the numbers is enough to block my view.

The working week resumes tomorrow, with a bunch of stressors to be added to tending to my three patients.  I've got a fridge full of compliant leftovers, because cooking is not something I generally do during the week.  Blogging is also likely to suffer.  I am taking pictures of my meals, often, so there may be some food porn posted here, just as record keeping.

I long for a bit of routine, which the coming week should bring.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Twenty-eight more to go

Just a quick boring log of Day Two.

Up early with a restless dog.  Chicken sausages with blueberries for breakfast, then a nice run in Bethesda - just over three miles.  Very slow intervals. I had a migraine after running, while going to the farmers market, where I got peaches and small cabbages. Very hungry for lunch - leftovers from yesterday, chicken with zuchini, more blueberries.  A longer dog walk, then off to see my mother.

Starving when I came home, so snack of almonds and blueberries, inadvertently shared with the dog. Still hungry, so more leftovers - steak and sweet potatoes in coconut cream. I simply could not stay awake, dozing on the couch during the final Prairie Home Companion. But the craving, the urge, for a sweet dessert was very strong.  Then another dog walk, and a bedtime snack of peaches and blueberries.

Going to read, and lights out soon. Feeling full, and like the fruit was a sweet.

Friday, July 1, 2016

July = Whole30?

Today could be the first day of my Whole30.  I have not got a firm commitment in my mind, and think I'm jumping the gun on my other family members who were thinking of it.  But today was compliant, so maybe I should go for it.  I don't have a firm plan, but its similar enough to how I eat (or how I think I eat, not the same thing) that I should be able to jump into it.

I've been really wracked by sugar demons. At an out-of-town conference, I hit up the plentiful snacks pretty often.  But I knew as I took the food, and felt as I reached for more, it was making me feel like crap.  Still I reached for it.  I gave myself some minimal kudos for making the strong connection to the crappy feeling. It wasn't enough to deter from the immediate gratification of the chocolate chunk cookie, but maybe next time.

The Whole30 book I just read said cravings only last for 3-4 minutes so you only need to distract yourself.  This is not my experience.  Ice cream is my biggest craving. I will spend quite some time - make a special cross-town trip-- to satisfy my ice cream craving.  Last night after seeing my mother I stopped at a very convenient and very good frozen yogurt place, and really enjoyed it.

But I'm Whole30 now, and so there is no question I will not stop again this month.

Breakfast was chicken sausage with guacamole and salsa from Whole Foods.  Lunch was grilled (by me) chicken from the freezer with sauteed onions and zuchini. Dinner was a rib eye steak, accompanied by sweet potatoes cooked in coconut milk with a hint of cumin and a squeeze of lime.  Dairy in all its forms is off the menu, but that coconut milk sauce was really creamy.

I was really tired, but decided I needed to have left overs to make it through tomorrow.