I'm down 7.4 pounds from a week ago, which means I've lost about half the weight I gained back over the past year. Another good week, or two decent weeks, and I'll be at my lowest weight in years.
Today is also Day 7 without soda, caffeine or, for the most part, processed sugar. I may have eaten some this week, but if I did, it was through something like bread or pretzels. None has come from candy, cookies, cake, chocolate, ice cream or soda. Deprivation doesn't work for everyone, but it's working well for me, so far. I haven't had any cravings for soda or chocolate. I can't say the same for fast food or caffeine, but I can say that I haven't given in to any of those cravings. And I have to continue to not give in, because when I've given in in the past -- you know, just that one time -- it's invariably led me back into making poor eating choices.
This week's weight loss is an excellent beginning to my new lifestyle: it reminds me that I was eating way too much food just a week ago, and more importantly, that I was eating way too much of the wrong kinds of food. It also reminded me that I can survive without a visit to McDonald's or wherever -- and that I'll feel better by not eating that garbage.
My wife has been totally supportive, doing things like measuring when she cooks dinner so that I can analyze the calories and carbs in each meal. I'm presently counting 1,800 calories a day, with everything else like fat, carbs and sodium falling into an appropriate range for that many calories. What I mean is that while I could eat 1,800 calories worth of Sausage McMuffins and hash browns, the fat, carbs and sodium would all be inappropriately high. By eating things like chicken, vegetables and brown rice or fruit, yogurt and oatmeal, the fat, carb and sodium numbers will naturally fall into line. So while I do track those things and have some daily targets for them, I'm not worried if my sodium goes up one day (Sunday, when I made homemade tamales, for example) and the carbs go up the next, as long as they're a) up only a little bit, and b) drop back down the next day. I've been much less tolerant of variances in my calorie intake.
I use a simple Excel spreadsheet to total my food for the day, and then re-enforce how I'm doing by color-coding each day's calories, fat, etc., as green (good), red (bad) or yellow (okay, but....). I developed that system 18 months ago when I started this after reading a number of other blogs. I took bits of the tracking systems that worked for different people, put them all together, and then met with a dietician to figure out what my target numbers should be.
What is clear to me, from reading all the successful weight loss blogs I've found on the internet, is that you have to come up with something that works for you. That's what I'm doing.
