Saturday, July 4, 2009

No… more… Palin… puh-LEEZE

2 1/2 years into her first 4 year term as governor of Alaska, Sarah Palin is resigning.  That is her choice, whatever the real underlying reasons.  (Devotion to family?  Too many ethics complaints?)  I hope she does Conservatives AND Republicans a favor by STAYING OUT of national politics. 

She was a risky choice by McCain for vice-presidential nominee last year, one which sparked his campaign somewhat.  I think she eventually proved to be woefully out of her league and in over her head.  She continues to prove that as in her resignation remarks, the most substance of which she could muster was “only dead fish go with the flow”, an analogy about basketball point guards, and a military misattribute about advancing in another direction.

Let this one go, Republicans.  It is definitely time to advance in another direction.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

What’s up with Weight?

My weight. Hopefully it’s not UP but still DOWN. This is an update to my previous blog\diary of my weight loss this year (same blog, different sites):

ONCE THERE WAS A WEIGHT
ONCE THERE WAS A WEIGHT
ONCE THERE WAS A WEIGHT


How am I doing, and what works?

Short answer:

After 6 months of dieting I’m maintaining a weight loss of 32-33 pounds. What has worked is eating a LOT MORE fruits and vegetables, salads, and the like, and eating a LOT LESS fat. I’m also maintaining a regular exercise program, which I did before dieting but was proof positive that exercise alone didn’t work.

Long answer:

May 13 I reported: “My greatest loss… …has been 32 pounds, which I’ve hit twice this month. I’ve hit a 31 pound loss 4 times this month and been at a 30 pound loss the other days.”

In the last 30 days my greatest loss (since dieting started 1 January) has been 35 pounds, which I’ve hit 5 times. I’ve hit a 34 pound loss at least 6 times, 33 pounds at least 6 times, and 31 or 32 the other days. I haven’t dropped below a 30 pound loss since May 1.

Thirty is good! I’d like to stay “around” a 30 pound loss indefinitely. That so-called “cushion”. I feel if I drop below a 25 pound loss I’m in danger of serious weight gain. After all, just how do those pounds creep back anyway? One at a time, I suspect. Over and over and over.

A 30 to 35 pound loss is even better. I haven’t tried to get to the 35 pound loss, and I don’t really want to lose more than that, but perhaps the healthy eating and exercise is taking its (good) toll. I’ve spent hundreds of dollars on clothes alterations, mostly pants. I almost could have bought new for the price, but I’m nervous about gaining. Is this new me too good to be true? Can it last? That will be the real test of weight loss, keeping it off.

I’m trying to get into a “groove” on eating. Eat healthy, eat regular, eat enough to satisfy and maintain the weight level, don’t binge or eat so much that weight-creep starts again. This could take awhile.

Does it seem like I think about it a lot? That’s what it has taken. Fo-cus. (Something I don’t feel is necessarily my strrrrong suit.)

What are my current cravings and binges? Splenda. Lots and lots of Splenda. In coffee. On bread and margarine. On bowls and bowls of fruit (bluebs, strawbs, clementines and yellow peaches when available), and yogurt, often with high fiber cereal mixed in. Best guilty pleasure which I don’t O.D. on: high fiber 8” wheat tortilla thinly spread with peanut butter and Splenda Brown Sugar, rolled and nuked for 17 seconds.

Binged on bread\margarine\Splenda last night (25 June). TLW has introduced me to sugar free gum, which helps to stave appetite if I remember to pop one in in a timely manner. Still, I’ve been eating a lot of cereal in the evenings all this week. Must… eat… “rationally”. (No one said it would be easy.)

Weight loss milestones from the dietetically obsessed (I’d be lost without digital bathroom scales reading in tenths):

01/01/2009 – Weighed 174.6
01/22/2009 – Weighed 164.6 Lost 10 lbs
02/01/2009 – Weighed 159.6 Lost 15 lbs
02/13/2009 – Weighed 154.4 Lost 20 lbs
03/07/2009 – Weighed 149.4 Lost 25 lbs
04/21/2009 – Weighed 144.6 Lost 30 lbs (That 5 lbs took awhile.)
06/02/2009 – Weighed 139.8 Lost 35 lbs (Highest loss to date, hit 6 times in June so far. Wasn’t trying for that and not planning on greater losses, but a “cushion” is nice.)

04/30/2009 – Last time at 29 lb loss
05/11/2009 – Last time at 30lb loss

“Hovering” in the 32-34 lb loss range this month (June).

What has worked? Less food, more exercise. REALLY! Healthier food. (Fruit, vegetables, fiber.) LOTS of salads, usually with meat or fish atop, but lots of Romaine, mushrooms, carrots, onions, tomatoes, dressings (usually lite dressings) often mixed with light olive oil. Egg beater omelets, with fresh cooked spinach, artificial crab meat, shrooms, 2% cheese, onions. Bowls of aforementioned fruit, yogurt, cereal. Snacking on those high fiber tortillas, dry whole almonds roasted on a cookie sheet for 18 minutes for a little extra flavor, chewing gum. Exercise. Home exer-cycle mornings. To the gym for abs and weights. Evening exer-cycle if eating too much during the day. I can do a lot of computing, reading, TV, or crosswords on that exer-cycle. (I just rigged a holder for my laptops, both the light one AND the heavy one (but not both at the same time). Lookout, I may bicycle all day!)

What doesn't work? Craved (crazed?) or binge eating. I do (did) love to eat and it's tough, even though I'm immensely liking the healthy food much more, to not let those cravings take over. I don't binge often, or too much when I do, but that partial loss of control when I want "more" doesn't work.

Will eating healthy ever become second nature? One can only hope. In the meantime… fo-cus… fo-cus.

See photo for my weight loss comparison over recent years. The plunging red line is THIS year.



Am I DONE yet?

Blogging, that is. Don't YOU wish! I am getting caught up.


I have a brief blog drafted on military service. I'd also like to explore, for my own edification, the topic of majority rule (that's freedom isn't it, except we don't want to crush the individual (freedom for little old me) in the process, do we?) and sacrifice (I'm very much into "rational" self-interest these days, and as noted elsewhere, helping others (such as your boss in your job) is really just helping yourself and your own self-interest). Is freedom about individual CHOICE or does the "greater good" take priority over choice? Woof. Hope I can keep both those under thesis length.

 
Then there is the daily news. It's wearisome, often, but we are so UNrepresented on either "side" these days I think it behooves us (behoofs?) to be informed. I am hearing of and reading ever more informed and intelligent commentary from the likes of http://www.ft.com/comment (the Brits are not idiots, despite being British), http://www.ibdeditorials.com/, and http://online.wsj.com/public/page/news-opinion-commentary.html, to name but a few.

Oh well, I've never had so much fun talking, talking, and talking. Blog on.

You don’t have to thank me for my service

You can if you want to, of course. You can and perhaps should thank any other veteran for their service. Those that served in the military, whether in times of peace or war, were in the forefront of keeping this country’s residents free to pursue their life, liberty, and happiness. Many made the ultimate sacrifice and paid the ultimate price for their service and for your freedoms. I was named for my mother’s brother John who died serving in Europe in 1945 before I was born. At the recent dedication of the Highlands Ranch Veterans Monument I saw the parents of two fallen soldiers receive posthumous recognition. It was tragedy brought close, and difficult to watch, yet just a small example of the tens and hundreds of thousands who have passed before to protect the greatest bastion of free individualism for over two centuries.

I served in the Army and Vietnam because I wanted to. Admittedly I was hedging my bets a bit, as I knew I was most likely going to ‘Nam one way (college ROTC officer volunteer) or the other (enlisted draft). (There was no draft lottery when I entered college and ROTC, otherwise I might have been happy to gamble on the luck of the draw.) I've just never felt I deserved a special thank you. Actually it has been my observation that what is extraordinary about service men and women is that they are “ordinary”. They are regular, everyday, people just like those that don’t serve. Yes, they DO extraordinary things when called upon, and sometimes pay that ultimate price, but they are just regular folks doing that.

I don’t have a problem with those that avoided ‘Nam. Some "served” locally, within the States. Service none the less. Some lucked out with a good number in the draft lottery and didn’t have to go. I knew many in college that furthered their education, year after year after year. 5, 6, 7 yrs. B.A., M.B.A., PhD. At least they were educated! I never thought of running away. In my family if you were called upon, you served. Dad and all 3 of my uncles were in WWII, one of them, as mentioned, paying the ultimate price. A fraternity brother felt strongly about serving in Vietnam, joined the Marines, went through Officers Candidate School, and was killed in action over there. I've looked him up on "The Wall" in Washington D.C. I DO hope that those who moved to Canada to avoid the service had the strength of their convictions to stay there. If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen (and stay out).

I feel I’ve committed the ultimate vanity by buying myself a dedication tile at the Highlands Ranch Veterans Monument.

(My award was for service, not valor. I'm not a war hero.) Perhaps it's that longing that I will be named somewhere, for some time after my eventual demise, as I intend to be cremated and scattered to whatever strong wind is available. (Mountains preferably, windy coast if you must, but puh-leeze not windy Nebraska lest I surely wind up on the East Coast seemingly within 5 minutes.) But I digress.

Like most folks, I've made my share of mistakes in this life. (I must do an inquiry someday on how we humans can make sooo many mistakes and still, so often, turn out ok.) Hopefully my service was "something" worthwhile. Thank goodness many have served to give us the freedom to make and correct those mistakes.

I've posted numerous pictures of the Highlands Ranch Veterans Monument dedication which took place July 1st: http://cid-ce977edb8ece66b3.skydrive.live.com/browse.aspx/H.R.%20Veterans%20Monument%20dedication,%20July%201,%202009 . Let me know if you have any problems accessing the site or photos.