The following is the 4th monthly (120 days) update on my attempt to lose weight and get healthier. Again, it’s a longer post than my “normal” daily post, so if your not “into” reading about “another person’s” diet (again!), I’ll understand if you stop here and come back another day. You’ve been warned!! Here goes… | |
(As in previous posts:) On September 16, 2019, I switched from my 18 days of “juice / blend” fasting / diet to an Intermittent Time Fasting (ITF) “Diet / Lifestyle”. My starting weight on 29 August, for the juice / blending fast was: 373lbs. My starting weight for the ITF was: 356lbs. My current weight (this morning) was: 318lbs. Basically, I’ve lost 55lbs from the end of August, 38lbs from the start of the ITF and 11lbs in the last 30 days. | |
The observant among you may (again) notice in the above chart I had seven(7) days where my calories-in exceeded my calories-out… This is double (per month) than I did in each of the first two months, so definitely off the wagon for the X-mas season / holidays. In the first three months, I was blowing my calories about once per week. This month it was almost twice and it wasn’t “based” on my “one-meal-all-you-can-eat” day. Again, it’s not a diet, per se, as much as it’s a lifestyle, so I’m happy to have been able to lose weight while eating and not working out. It seems, sometimes “life” just happens and I go with it. | |
As mentioned in my prior monthly updates, when I switched to the ITF, I also began using my FitBit (FB) to begin tracking my food and gauging my calories-in versus my calories-out. I’m not sure why, but the FB has set my calories-out “objective” at 3,800. The on-line BMR calculator I use said my initial BMR was roughly 2,370 calories. At my current weight (318lbs), my BMR is 2,239 – about 50 fewer calories lower / less than the prior month and 130 from the starting calories. This means I have to burn an additional measure of 1,550 calories during my waking hours to reach the FB objective. In any case, FB is showing my daily calories out for the last 30 days at 3,940 (about 230 calories less than prior month). By this reckoning, I am exceeding the FB calories (3,800) by 140 per day and my BMR by almost 1,700. Multiply this by 7 days in a week and we get 11,900 – which works out to about 3.4lbs per week of weight loss. My actual weight loss for the last 30 days is about 11lbs. Divided by 30 days and multiplied by 7 days is 2.57lbs per week of “actual” loss. So, the FitBit is either scoring my calories-out to high or I’m not inputting the calories-in correctly. I feel I am diligent about the input, but I may be underestimating the portions and therefore the difference still isn’t as great as the charts suggest. It is also still possible the difference is in both cals-in and cals-out. Finally, it may just be my body is not burning the calories at the “normal” rate (meaning my calories burned is lower than the heart beat is suggesting it should be because of my AFib). Basically, I’m saying the actual weight loss is about 1 pound less than what would be predicted by the FitBit calories burned… (Still, 11lbs in a month is pretty good!) | |
Anyway, the chart below shows I still have a calorie deficit of about 1,000 calories per day. That times seven(7) days is 7,000 calories. Divided by 3,500 calories (1 pound of human body fat) equals to 2 pounds of loss per week. My actual weight loss over the last eight weeks is 20lbs. Divided by nine(9) is 2.22lbs per week. This is roughly the same average weight loss per week as recorded at the end of four and eight weeks. Over the last 2 weeks I’ve lost 7lbs (3.5lbs per week) and over the last month (as mentioned above) 11lbs (2.5lbs per week). Again, the numbers are more reflective of weight fluctuation (gain and loss) due to the holidays than from progressive weight loss due to MITF. | |
The goal of my long-term weight loss is (remains) to drop 1.5 to 2 pounds per week. In theory, this will prevent the two worst parts of extreme weight loss: a permanent (and excessive) drop in BMR (which makes it easier to regain lost weight) and a large amount of floppy / saggy skin (pure vanity). It looks like I’m continuing my promising start from the first two months. | |
Equally important: how does it feel? So-so. I was very good in November and December in my daily jogging. I haven’t been very good since my 90-day update. Sometimes life got in the way and sometimes (most times), I was just “tired” (lazy). Is it noticeable? Yes. I’m not getting “fatter” in my normal areas (legs and hips), but I do seem to be getting a “little” bigger there. More importantly, I seem to be losing my chest and shoulder muscles and retaining – if not increasing – my stomach fat. My shirts “feel” looser, but they don’t really look looser. It’s hard psychologically to see the scale go down, but not see a bigger drop in clothes and photos. I have a nagging feeling I’m losing muscle and bone density instead of body fat. | |
Obviously, I’ve made no progress on my secondary goals (which remain): I am still working on my secondary goals going forward – smoothing out the “calories-in” numbers and to eat more healthy on my one-meal-a-day / all-you-can-eat day. If there is a silver lining to my cloud, it’s that I didn’t have a single OMAD opportunity when I over-stuffed myself to the point of feeling sick, as I did in my first month of the MITF. So, I am improving there, too. Slowly, slowly… | |
A final observation (again, pretty much the same as last month): although it is theoretically “impossible” to spot lose weight (or spot gain weight), I seem to be losing “size” in areas which correspond to my activity. My waist is not shrinking much, but my legs, ankles, shoulders and forearms “feel” like they are getting smaller to me. It’s not that big a deal, except it would be nice to imagine I was losing fat around my internal organs and not just legs and shoulders. Oh, well, time will tell… | |
PS: I went to Urgent Care for a pounding ear and then to my cardiologist about 10 days later. My weight at the Urgent Care was 30lbs heavier than my home scale on the day. Between that visit and the Cardiologist visit I lost 5lbs on my home scale. At the cardiologist’s office, I had lost 5lbs from the Urgent Care, but it was still 30lbs heavier than my home scale on the day. The bottom line is my home scale is probably 30lbs too light and I am 348lbs and not 318lbs. While this is mentally hard to take, it means my home scale is consistently incorrect and therefore reliable for showing weight loss (and gain), even when it isn’t showing my “medical” weight. | |
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On This Day In: | |
2022 | What Do You See? |
2021 | Lite It Up |
Some Day | |
2020 | No Answers Yet |
120 Day Health / Weight Update (Jan 2020) | |
2019 | Stationary Target |
2018 | And Firmly |
2017 | Nearer My Goal To Thee |
2016 | Relatively Simple Actions |
2015 | And Yet, You Did |
2014 | Difficult Learning |
2013 | Four Things To do |
2012 | When I Was Young… |
Emergence | |
Archive for January 16th, 2020
120 Day Health / Weight Update (Jan 2020)
Posted in ADF, Diets, Health, ITF, MITF, OMAD, Running, Workouts, tagged 120 Day Health / Weight Update (Jan 2020), BMR, Calories, Charts, Diet, Health, ITF, Jan 2020 BMR Chart, Jogging, MITF, Morning Weight: 318lbs, OMAD, Urgent Care, Weight Loss on January 16 2020 on January 16, 2020| Leave a Comment »
No Answers Yet
Posted in Education, Philosophy, Quotes, tagged Answers, Failure, Friedrich Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, Learning, Philosophy, Quotes, Success, Thinkers on January 16, 2020| Leave a Comment »
A thinker sees his own actions as experiments and questions – as attempts to find out something. Success and failure are for him answers above all. | |
― Friedrich Nietzsche | |
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On This Day In: | |
2022 | What Do You See? |
2021 | Lite It Up |
Some Day | |
2020 | No Answers Yet |
120 Day Health / Weight Update (Jan 2020) | |
2019 | Stationary Target |
2018 | And Firmly |
2017 | Nearer My Goal To Thee |
2016 | Relatively Simple Actions |
2015 | And Yet, You Did |
2014 | Difficult Learning |
2013 | Four Things To do |
2012 | When I Was Young… |
Emergence | |