Post
by ukaserex » February 24th, 2020, 12:49 am
Cangiem,
Thought I'd take a moment to share something about myself. Perhaps there may be some information that you can use to help you on your journey.
1. The fewer ingredients on any packaged food, the better. Like peanut butter? If you must - go ahead - but only have peanut butter that has this on the ingredients list: Peanuts OR Roasted Peanuts OR Roasted Peanuts, Salt.
Like bread? I don't advise consuming it - none of it is particularly nutritious, but if you must - look at the ingredients. Avoid breads that list much more than 10-14 ingredients. Definitely avoid breads - or any other foods that have "High Fructose Corn Syrup". This stuff is guaranteed, proven to stimulate your appetite. IT MAKES YOU HUNGRY, and has a negative impact on your microbiome. (the good bacteria in your gut that helps regulate so many functions in our bodies. )
Stay away from the nutbutters that have "rape seed" or "palm oil". Those oils do nobody any favors in your body.
2. Write down what you eat before you eat it. Myfitnesspal is a fine sight - used by, maybe millions. But a better site is Cronometer. It analyzes the foods you put down and tells you what micro nutrients you're missing. It's like your own personal dietitian, telling you how many grams of this/that you had, and you can see from the bar graphs what you haven't had. You can then do a google search (or pay extra, as it's a free site with an option to go premium) for foods that contain what you're missing.
3. Rest days. Rest days are for rowing slower rates. 16-22 strokes a minute. You can still do 10k on a rest day. Maybe not this soon in your journey - but in a few months, if you have 45-60 minutes, the only thing stopping you is you.
4. Hydration - drink as much water as you can stand, all day, throughout the day, every day.
5. If there is one supplement to anyone's diet I would encourage - Kombucha. It's a tonic to be sipped throughout the day. Not necessarily every day - but definitely on days you have something with artificial sweeteners, as those things play havoc with our bodies. Avoid artificial sugars if you can help it.
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I was what I would call "Stocky" as a kid. Big shoulders, lifted a lot of weights in high school - that helped me carry about 30 pounds of fat in my gut and butt.
Fast forward, I was about 45 years old, and at 5'10, tipping the scales at 280#s. I bent over to pick up a fork I'd dropped - and herniated myself. A big wake-up call. It was reducible -not incarcerated, so I was lucky. It wasn't my first one, so I knew what it was immediately. I went to the surgeon the next day - and he told me it was small, no rush - lose some weight.
I started walking. Found some podcasts to listen to - and walked 5k steps in the am, and 5k steps in the pm. I thought I had started to watch what I ate- - but I really had no clue about how to read a nutrition label. I went off the calories and that was pretty much it.
I began to increase my steps, learned a lot about nutrition while walking, as I was listening to health and fitness podcasts - for 90 minutes in the morning, and 90 minutes in the evening. Yes, I was walking 10k in the AM and 10k in the PM. And it was working! I got down to 245#s in about 8 months.
The problem was..my feet were killing me - I have bunions. They don't bother me now, but all those steps, despite great tennis shoes .. made for some sore feet. At work, a co-worker told me about a crew-fitness class that he and his smokin' hot sister went to. And that there were two ladies that led the class that were also..inspiring. (Yeah, I'm single) So, I went. The class was brutally tough for me. A warm up row of 2 minutes, some stretching - and then 100 meter sprints. Off the rower, some dumbbell work, as fast as we could safely manage, back on the rower- 45 minutes of sprints, dumbbell work, planks, etc.
One thing that class taught me - I had no idea what a workout was prior to that. I used to just lift weights, with no intensity. And while there is place for that in my current routine, I have found that to torch fat - I've got to mix high intensity rows with light weights, lots of reps with the best form I can manage. I found that within a month, I had dropped from 245 to 233 - which is probably too much, as I wasn't eating as much as I should have. To this day, I wonder how much muscle I might have lost - but I can bench and squat more now than when I was in high school - so maybe I didn't lose much muscle. No idea really - the scale doesn't tell you that.
Fast forward to present day - I'm 212#s, and one first place in the recent Row'd Royalty competition for the 50-54 age group, and 8th overall for the folks under 5'11.
100M - 16.1 1 Min - 370 500M - 1:25.1 1k - 3:10.2 4:00 - 1216 2k 6:37.0 5k 17:58.8 6k - 21:54.1 30 Min. - 8130 10k - 37:49.7 60:00 - 15604
1/2 Marathon 1:28:44.3 Marathon 2:59:36
5'10"
215 lbs
53 years old