The BLF Get-in-Shape Thread: (formerly, "A Newer, Thinner Rusty" Thread)....

Thanks for the kind words guys. I wouldn't say I'm on the program as Rusty outlined it, more that I'm just generally watching to make sure that I have a high calorie deficit whenever possible, and keep track of calories on a day to day basis.

The rationing is very hard, part of the way I do it, is I force myself to chug a 16oz bottle of water before I eat, I have at least six bottles like that per day total, and most of all, everything I eat, I view in terms of what I have to do on the treadmill, or bike to burn it off.

The bike is fantastic at burning off calories... do 18-20mph for half an hour and that's 800 to a 1000 calories right there. My only problem is, I started off doing too much, and my knees got very sore, so I keep it to just half hour, 40 minutes on the bike per session, and spend more time on the treadmill now. My goal is to burn off at least 1000 calories extra, five times a week, on top of my metabolic rate, which is ~2500.

Treadmill is slower... you can increase the pace at which you burn calories by increasing the incline... figure on about 10% increase in effort, for every 3 degrees you raise it. Doing 4mph, at 9 degrees for 10 minutes leaves me very out of breath, but a lower incline like 3 degrees is doable for a while. Found out that a decrease, going downhill also burns more calories... and you can go faster.

I also fell of the wagon a for a bit... went to a buffet I used to go to a lot, and had a lot to eat. Felt completely like crap the next day, wiped out at least 4 days of work. Only option is to just keep going though.

Congrats, all. Everyone seems to have taken a step or two up instead of down—some setbacks notwithstanding. I’m royally glad to hear it.

As most of you are now finding out, you have to be careful jumping off and back on OMAD. You will very easily make that a habit, and of course, when that happens, you will have to re-adjust back with great discomfort.

Adjusting back to one meal isn’t all that difficult without the common trigger foods. The trigger foods (cakes, candies, chips, etc) make things insanely hard, which is why it is advisable to give them a total no-go while you are in the prime losing phase (remember, they do NOTHING for you at all, so there is no sense in allowing them a place). You can bring them back in sure enough in maintenance (see below), but even then you have to be careful.

It is easy to see old habits re-appear. Just like that alcoholic friend I once had. He did so well for six years. And then he relapsed. Those jaudicey, yellowing eyes quickly returned, he was again arrested for public intox, and before we knew it, he had crawled into a drunkard’s grave. Once you toy with being out of control, it is hard to take that control back. Once gone, the momentum seems hard to get back. Sure, it may not seem to matter as much with food as opposed to substance abuse, but what you do today affects the you of tomorrow, and you keep putting off your long-term goals when you jump back off and say “this is good enough for now.” Get to where you want to be and then have a solid plan to stay there (again, see below).

My personal update: My current weight is 186.4 as I enjoy maintenance mode and continue to add back lean muscle. The easiest way to maintain weight with little OMAD form-factoring is actually quite fun and pliable; I now do 3 days strict OMAD with the other 4 as “eat anything you want when you want” days, and it all levels out. The times I am around my family or friends, I just eat when everyone else eats. It works out nicely, although my body still prefers to eat once and I often have to remind myself I need at least several big splurge days to keep where I am. This involves me going for “junk”-ish foods, if for no other reason, then to make up for some not-so-big eating days. Amazingly, even with trigger foods, I still find it hard to want to really chow down again. I add in Chinese foods and all sorts of fast foods on peak eating days just to get back those needed calories. If I top out at 4,500 calories, it just levels things off and I’ve got muscle-building tools + lots of extra energy. Lasts for several days, actually, and I have trouble wanting to follow up with another two splurge days.

My activity levels continue to stay high—with the occasional rest day due to some moderate arthritis that has developed in the knees and hips. But if I make a deal with my body to hit it hard consistently and then hike no more than, say, 3 or 4 miles the next day, plus the weights, I recuperate well enough to be just fine and functional after an 8 to 10-mile hike and/or heavy weight routine the next day following. My body continues to get used to rigorous activity. Since I am 40+ now, I do have to take it a bit easier on running, but not really. Just because of the jarring of the body in the process, I save that and do it when needed as opposed to for recreation (and I never really need to).

But for maintenance, it is easiest to work the scale with 2 or 3 days strict OMAD vs 3 or 4 days on unregulated eating. We evolved to go between feast and famine, feast and famine. It just works beautifully to stay in control this way. I finish off each week with two strict 1,200-calorie OMAD days and that takes me quickly back down about 8 or 10 lbs to where I stay where I want to, but if I need to change things up further, I always can and still be in control. The body really likes losing when there are several top-off days in calories. And if I don’t watch it and make sure to get a good amount of eating done on the unregulated days, I will actually lose more weight. This is kind of fun…it’s like a mini-polar bear expedition where I mini-lose and mini-gain and my body gets extra-ready to not make me suffer when I have to go lean again. As with weighing, it is so very easy to track things over the week as opposed to longer time intervals.

Same here, I slipped, for the most part

My biggest weakness is coming home from work and being “a little hungry” and eating the leftovers from the OMAD

I failed, I need to get back on it…I felt alot better, I didn’t weight myself so I don’t know if I have lost weight or not…my pants are about falling off in the same belt hole they have been in so I believe I lost some weight, but I need to loose ALOT more.

For those who PM’ed me about recommended listening while walking with the ipod, here are a few good audiobooks and podcasts. I get all mine from itunes. These are about leadership and social engineering since that’s my new passion, but you can vary yours depending on whatever interests you have…

BOOKS

The Art of War, Sun Tzu
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, Stephen R. Covey
How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnegie
Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap…And Others Don’t, Jim Collins
Extraordinary Leadership, Robin Sharma
Managing Oneself, Peter Drucker (or any book by Drucker)
Made in America, Sam Walton
Civilization and Its Discontents, Sigmund Freud
Awaken the Giant Within, Anthony Robins

PODCASTS

The Harvard Business Review
Dose of Leadership
The Entre-leadership Podcast
The Useful Commute
The Tai Lopez Show
People and Projects Podcast
The Hans Finzel Podcast

I know audiobooks cost more, but don’t be afraid to invest in yourself. This stuff can be like nuclear fuel for the psyche. I keep these updated nightly on the ipod and iphone and any chance I get, I zap myself with more.

You become a better listener, too. It starts to occur to you how much your mind zones out and you re-focus on keeping on point. Now, I speed up the dialog twice as fast and get more listening done in shorter time. This sort of stuff really is a game-changer for info uptake in the digital age. I’m tellin’ ya!

Congratulations for turning your life around, I haven’t read this thread but have read your blog.

“There is always a reward in all hard-work and sacrifices, so you must be patient and stay strong in all circumstances.”

“It takes a huge effort to free yourself from memory, but when you succeed, you start to realize that you’re capable of far more than you imagined.”

Time for a progress/status report?!

Yeah, how’s it going folks? Inquiring minds want to know…

Rather unhappy to say that my progress has slowed. Have been sick a couple of times which kept me from the gym, and have not been as strict with my diet as I was initially. Still some making progress, just very slow. About 45lb down as of right now. I was hoping to hit 50 friday, but that's not happening.

I'm doing great. Am in the police academy at present. All is well. I eat when I want, usually still in the OMAD format (and always feel best when I do), but I don't have to care either way.

I've been putting on muscle ever so slowly-but-steadily. Have gained back to 195 lbs of lean mass. I've also taken up running and love it! A great app is mapmyrun. It is free.

Still moving forward though, good for you!

failed…fell off the wagon

I follow the program about 2 to 3 days per week. I usually break from the plan by decidomg to go out for lunch at work. Haven't weighed myself in a long time, but can tell I'm about at the same weight I was when I stopped losing weight.

I would like to go full time again to loses some more weight. It's weird. I know will have more energy and feel better if I follow the plan. It's just too easy to use lunch as a way to get out of the office.

Iam myself looking at laproscopic gastric bypass in mid November.

45 is a huge step that in its self is quite an accomplishment!

That’s great! Good to hear others, except one, are not doing this great, but still on the program.

Sounds good/great guys. Very impressive.

WarHawk-AVG will you be taking another crack at it or are you through with OMAD?

light junkie - GL! That bypass business can be pretty harsh, but it should let you get the job done.

On a related note, I went to a health thing at work recently. The info pamphlets they had recommended dieting in such a way as to lose 1-2lb a week. That ends up being about 100lb a year on the high side, which is really quite a lot even if you actually want lose more. I think a year is an impressively short time to achieve such a big change.

The only people that achieve faster results are;

A. Actors who have a huge incentive to lose or gain weight, and it's their job.

B. Reality show contestants (The Biggest Loser) who are isolated, kept from any distractions, have 24/7 access to gym, nothing else to do, as well as trainers an nutritionists to help.

Of the people on the biggest loser, almost without exception they revert back to their original weight, or worse, once back to their normal environment. Season one winner is the perfect example. My goal is to lose 100lb total, but to also replace some of the lost weight with muscle.

Maintenance really isn't difficult... I really don't find myself struggling to keep to ~2000 calories per day, but losing weight, that is proving to be slower then I wanted it to be. To me, the hardest part by far is finding the motivation to actually go to the gym.

As you know I have always been a part time participant in this due to social circumstances.

I am still doing this and have found that:

If I have a active day, say 8-10 hours on my feet, it is no issue to uphold this kind of diet.

If I on the other hand have 12-14 hours I loose my minds "sharpness" for a lack of better term. It is not that I feel ill, dumb or mentally tired. But I am mentally tired. As if everything that is normally clear and consistent to think about is dimmed and dulled as through a photographic filter in photoshop. Due to my work which require I am sharp and thinking straight at all times I then eat an extra meal. Normally cereal as I like that. Though most times the meal is taken at 22 or later in the evening.

My weight has gone down. I do not remember my last update but I am currently at ~92 kg (I am 185 cm tall btw) and I am feeling fine.

It should perhaps be mentioned that I have also gained some muscle mass after I rebounded from a back injury that left me pretty much unable to perform basic daily things for more than 3 and a half month this year. I have no idea about how much of that 92 kg is fat and how much is muscle.

So I am basically still using this to slowly shave off the kilos and it is not too hard. And I like that even when I stray far and wide from the path it seems to harden my resolve and I then follow the diet more stringently a few days which takes off the majority of repercussions from said forage into the gastronomic venues of sinfull bliss.

Way to go, Ledsmoke. Progress is progress, slow or fast.

And the mirror and the waist line does not lie even if the weight is the same :-)