The end of day two and the middle of day three… End of week 1 already looks to be in sight! | |
Morning weight: 365lbs. (on Day 3) | |
I am down “6/8”. As in, 6lbs down from yesterday and 8lbs down from my fasting start weight: 373lbs (morning of Day 1). Obviously, a 6lbs weight loss in a single day and 8lbs over two days is not sustainable. It was mostly stomach content (digesting solid foods) and some water weight. Most adults hold between 7lbs and 15lbs of stomach content, so the first few days of any “cleansing” diet will be mostly the elimination of that content. Most fruit juice and veggie juice diets tend to be “cleansing” diets by default. So, the loss was expected and no big deal. Losses of 1/2lb to 1-1/2 lbs per day tend to be more realistic (from my experience). Managing the fasting to stay near the bottom end of that range (.5lb / day) is where the “art” of fasting comes into play. Most of that “art” is listening to your body tell you what it wants / needs. | |
Yesterday I walked the dog (30 minutes) and went for a swim (60 minutes, Breast Stroke. 44 lengths X 25 yards == 1,100 yards. 18 laps == 1/2 mile. 1 lap == 2 lengths.) The swim felt much more difficult than normal because I felt like I ran out of energy about 45 minutes through. After that it (swimming) was just a gut check to finish the time. Anyway, I got it done. | |
I was very tired for most of yesterday, but the flip side of that was I felt I got a good night’s sleep. My FitBit (FB) doesn’t really agree with that assessment, but whatever. | |
I have a FitBit Blaze. It’s my second FitBit. The first was a hand-me-down belt attachment, which I only used for a couple of months. I didn’t feel it was accurate and it was difficult to remember to keep moving it between clothes. My latest (the Blaze) is a wrist-watch style and was a present from my daughter (Rebecca) for Christmas 2017. So, I’m about halfway through my second year of wearing it. I got it more as a Heart Rate (HR) tracker, but it is only of limited use in that regard. | |
My Blaze is VERY accurate on providing my current heart rate. Since I suffer from Atrial Fibrillation (AFib), this is important for me to marry up with my sensations of palpitations. This allows me to exercise cautiously. The problem I have with the Blaze is it actually doesn’t record your heart rate by the minute. I downloaded and reviewed my HR for the first couple of months and found the information was recorded at set intervals which have nothing to do with AFib or exercise. I don’t remember (this was Jan / Feb of 2018) anymore what the interval (5m, 10m or 15m) was, but I remember being dissatisfied enough to stop downloading the tracking. I don’t expect 60 second per minute tracking, but this seems to me to be periodic “snapshotting”, not tracking. As a person who also suffers (a bit) from Obsessive / Compulsive Disorder (OCD) and from years of practicing “you can’t manage what you don’t measure”, you can kind of guess at my initial level of frustration. LoL. | |
My second “issue” with the Blaze is that it doesn’t “stay” on what it’s set to do. I swim. The Blaze doesn’t “track” swimming. This means I have to tell it I’m “working out” to get it to track my HR an calorie effort while swimming. Fair enough. The Blaze doesn’t support swimming and it says so in the documentation and on the company web site. The site says the Blaze is “water resistant”, which means okay for heavy sweat and a quick shower, but not bathing or swimming. In fact, over this last 20 months I’ve used it while swimming for over 150 hours and never had a single problem. Well, almost none. Remember the “staying” mentioned above? Randomly, when water brushes against the Blaze it turns off or pauses the tracking. The result is I am forced to pause between pool lengths to check if it is still tracking. Yeah, that’s annoying. I guess that’s what you have to live with to enjoy touchscreen activation. | |
This is my first wrist-based HR monitor and other than the two bits mentioned above I REALLY like my Blaze and I would definitely recommend anyone looking into buying a HR monitor consider FitBit’s line of products. Having said that, I don’t think I will replace it when it finally dies. One, the Blaze is no longer offered by FitBit. Two, I feel their products are inordinately expensive. The regular cost was $150. My daughter got it as at a closeout price of $99. Maybe it’s just the dinosaur in me, but I can’t see paying $100-$150 for a watch with a pedometer and a HR tracker – particularly if the tracker doesn’t really “track”. In fairness to FitBit, their newer models DO “track” swimming as an exercise, but since I don’t own one of the newer models, I can’t speak to how they do it or how functional it is when doing the tracking. But, if you are in the market for a good Heart Rate monitor, I guess you’ll get what you pay for. | |
Well, those are my thoughts about Day 2… I hope I haven’t bored you all too much and you’ll come back for (and enjoy) some of these longer posts. | |
. | |
On This Day In: | |
2021 | To Trust Providence |
Exactly | |
2020 | I Am Learning |
Plus Plus | |
2019 | Day 2: All Things Considered |
The Path To Reward | |
2018 | Ryan, McConnell & The Republican Controlled Congress |
The Proud Dad | |
Day 35: Five(5) Weeks Completed! | |
2017 | Serving Is Proving Harder Than Winning For #DumbDonald |
2016 | Come Again… |
2015 | At Five |
2014 | Touching The Past |
The Supreme Question | |
2013 | Children Will Judge |
2012 | Liar, n. |
2011 | Freedom To Doubt |
Day 2: All Things Considered
August 31, 2019 by kmabarrett
Good Luck!