Lunch!

Wheel full 70px  All I can think of is Adrian Cronauer [linkie].

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Wheel full 70px “Oh my God it’s hot!”

Wheel full 70px I’m eating lunch at a really nice sub place next to the apartment I’m staying at called Larry’s.  It’s in the Jacksonville neighborhood Five Points, which would really be a nice place to live if you just moved here from, say, Hell  and wanted to live in a place with the same kind of weather.

Wheel full 70px I ordered a Greek salad and my new special favorite beverage, ice water.

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Wheel full 70px They give a really sweet 20% retired military discount.  I think Larry’s my kind of guy.

Please, sir, I want some more.

Wheel full 70pxDickens is so evocative, but Mark Twain probably nailed it on the head.

Nothing so needs reforming as other people’s habits.

Wheel full 70pxA promise.  This blog is not going to turn into one long diatribe about healthy diet or weight loss.  Neither is a primary goal of the whole enterprise.  If I am successful, mind you, I believe they will be outcomes.  But I am obsessed with neither, and other than an open invitation to be a friend on myfitnesspal [linkie] so you can track what I’m eating if you’re interested and the results of my weekly weigh-in, I don’t intend to bend your ears about this stuff.

n.b. If you’d like to friend me on myfitnesspal you need to have a user account (which is free) on that app.  You can then send me an email here at info@b2bbiketrip.com letting me know that you have signed up and the email you used to sign up under.  I can then send you a friend invite.  Sounds more complicated than it should be, but it’s not my app. -de

MyFitnessPal icon

Wheel full 70pxThat said, I am currently morbidly obese.  The National Institutes of Health (NIH) define morbid obesity as: Being 100 pounds/45.3 kilograms or more above your ideal body weight, or, having a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 40 or greater or, having a BMI of 35 or greater and one or more co-morbid condition.  I’m pretty sure without checking that 357 pounds/162 kilograms has got to be more than 100 pounds/160 kilograms over my ideal body weight, but a few minutes checking on the Internet confirms that as a fact.  Using the “Hamwi Method” [linkie], one of the MediCalc website’s handy calculators [linkie] discloses my ideal body weight to be 202 pounds/~92 kilograms.

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Well, I guess not.  So I’d have to lose 155 pounds to be at an ideal weight.  First NIH criteria: Met.

Wheel full 70pxIt’s “Strike one, you’re out morbidly obese,” but let’s do the others just for grins.  As far as “BMI over 40” goes, I couldn’t tell you what my BMI is, unless it’s on the InBody report I posted [linkie] the other day…

yep, there it is: 44.7, about halfway down the page on the left

But 44.7 what?  Butter pats?  Frog’s eyelashes?  Some more looking on the ‘net led to me discovering that Body Mass Index is calculated by using the following formula

Body Mass Index formula

where m is your weight in kilograms and h is your height in meters.  Using the 357.2 pounds from Monday’s weigh-in to convert to 162.02 kg and my six foot four inches to convert to 1.93 meters, then squaring 1.93 to get 3.725, and finally dividing per the formula 162.02 by 3.725…

following along at home?

I get just a smidgen under 43.5.  So still well over 40.  I’m morbidly obese times two.  Let’s go for three out of three.

Wheel full 70pxI see my endocrinologist tomorrow to talk about, mainly, my Type 2 diabetic condition and how my trip will impact it.  Fortunately enough, my diabetes is manageable through a combination of oral meds, but I have been concerned from when I started planning the trip that the change from a sedentary to an active lifestyle might upset the balance we have reached, with my A1C at or below 7 going back a good little while.  But diabetes is diabetes, a serious co-morbid condition, and my BMI is over 35, so…

[cue somber music]

I’m three for three.  Out for the count.  Morbidly obese by every measurement.  Well, that sucks.

Wheel full 70pxI’ve fought the scales since the 70s.  The then in force Army Weight Control Program, which if I recall correctly allowed me first to weigh 232 pounds/105 kg max, then 238/108 as I got older, was an every six-month bogeyman just waiting for me to trip up.  This was despite what would be objectively found to be a higher than usual physically active lifestyle.  I ran (ugh!), I backpacked, I biked.  A lot, actually. My little vanity piece here [linkie] describes in sad detail what happened as that slowed down then more or less stopped altogether.  The short story: my weight ballooned to just under 400 pounds/181 kilograms, at which point I considered bariatric surgery (which one of my daughters had, and is, 15 years later, a poster girl success story for).  I went through the six month period the insurance company (well, my insurance company, anyway) makes you go through to see if you can’t just lose the weight on your own and lost 40 pounds/18 kg.  I decided not to do the surgery based on that and other considerations, and have never looked back.  My weight has bumped around in the 360s for a few years short of a full decade now.  It’s been higher at times, mainly in the winter (which is hell for the sedentary here in Alaska) and at times of stress.  But I’ve eaten and drunk what I’ve wanted to and in the quantities I’ve felt like.  Shame on me for saying it, but sometimes, given the state of my health overall, that really hasn’t been such a bad trade-off.  I love to cook and I love well-prepared food.  I adore wine.  A gin & tonic or two are just what hot days are made for.  So I get 40 years of indulging myself in, but I’m beginning to realize that can’t go on.  You just can’t do that and dodge bullets forever.

Wheel full 70pxAnd, if it’s time to go, I’d rather go pedaling a bike than eating a steak.  Saying that required a closer call than I was comfortable with, so there is all the more reason to know that it is time for a change.

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I can do this.

David Edgren

 

 

Lunch, anyone?

Lettuce-wrapped burger 800px

Wheel full 70px330 calories for the burger patty, plus another 10-15 or so for the tomato and onion.  Say round it off at 350.  I had two yesterday while we were at an outdoor event in a club my wife and I are members of.

Wheel full 70pxI’ve said before that I’m not dieting in the last days before I start my trip.  I am counting calories pretty strictly, though, and am keeping a detailed food and exercise log on an iOS app called MyFitnessPal [linkie].

MyFitnessPal icon

My dietitian recommended it, and it has proved both easy to use and an invaluable tool.  Free!- there is a premium version you get nagged every so often to buy, but it meets all my needs at the basic level.  It even has a “Friend” feature- you are welcome to be a friend if you would like to follow my diet on the ride- my username is “davidedgren”.

Wheel full 70pxSo here’s what I’m doing pre-ride.  I’m about two weeks in to doing nothing more than counting calories very strictly.  I set a daily maximum of 2,000 calories and have only exceeded that once by a little bit in that two weeks.  Most days I’m around 1,500.  My exercise each day burns about 300 calories- you’ll see more about that in my post about the new bicycle shoes that is coming up.  My goal is to start the trip as close to 350 pounds as I can get.  I will weigh myself every Monday both before and during the ride, probably in the late afternoon.  I will post the weekly results here, of course.  So tomorrow we will see- stay tuned.

Wheel full 70pxIn the interest of gathering as much info as I can, I went early this week to a local place also recommended by my dietitian that has one of these fancy body mass index calculating scales.  The process took a couple of seconds and involved standing on a large scale while holding an electrode grip in each hand.  Doing this, plus lightening my wallet by $30, caused the following report to be generated.

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Wheel full 70pxNow I’m not going to whine about how I shouldn’t have eaten lunch before I got weighed or that I had my heaviest pair of pants on.  My home scale is reading about 5-10 pounds/2.5-5 kilograms lighter than this weighing myself buck-naked.  But I get the message.  I could drop about 120 pounds/55 kilograms and be a lot more svelte than I am today.  Not to mention healthy.  We’ll see.

David Edgren

 

 

Lunch

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Wheel full 70pxA cup of green seedless grapes equals 110 calories.

Wheel full 70pxWe arrived back in Alaska on Monday evening.  I have pretty much lived out of a suitcase for the past three months, after packing to accompany my wife down for the first 10 days or so of medical treatments expected to last for four weeks.  Heh!  That went well.

Wheel full 70pxOne of the things I planned to do after I returned home for the month during the month preceding heading to Florida to start the ride is to eat more frequently each day and keep the overall amount I eat within a set caloric limit.  I’m going to start with 2,000 calories per day.  That’s an arbitrary number, and I know I’ll require more when I start logging daily miles.  So it’s not a diet- it’s just an effort to routinize what I eat and get used to many small portions over the course of a day.  I’ll also be logging everything I eat or drink except water, and I may start keeping track of that as well.

Wheel full 70pxI would be really pleased if the long-distance cyclists reading this would make recommendations concerning trip food- good stuff, stuff to stay away from…

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..jalapeños, five alarm chili, food covered in Sriracha sauce…

any “dining out” suggestions (remember that I will not be taking anything to prepare or heat food with), that sort of thing.  I don’t intend to make a Tour Gastonomique out of this ride- food will be fuel, and that’s pretty much it.  That said, if you think a place is just too good to pass up, let me know.

Wheel full 70pxMore about the next month in a bit.

David Edgren