mabelharris1105
New member
Wow, Rob! I'm just starting to read your thread and that's amazing that you lost half your body weight! Congrats 
I think so, but to be honest I just got a call and only asked specifically about the hemoglobin, they are mailing the full results so I'll see whatever else is on it. I did ask for a "full" test, but was not very specific.Did your doctor order overall blood work or just a test for the hemoglobin? I like to get an overall check once in a while and it might be good after being so low cal for so long.
Thanks Petal, and I am pretty happy to be at this place. To be honest I probably am obsessed with it, and have been for the past year plus. Ending that obsession is a bit of a challenge. Like right now I do feel a bit of anxiety for not having lost any weight in the last 2 or 3 weeks, even though I think I am still in a calorie deficit. I know I need to let that go, but it is not easy. Maybe it is a bit of an addiction. I think the obsession has been necessary to keep up the steady weight loss, now I just need to transition to some new thinking in maintenance. Can one change an obsession to a habit?I think it's clever to stop trying to lose weight now Rob . I have a feeling you will indeed see a dip to maybe 150s at some point soon but as you tell me sometimes they are just numbers. But I think it can become an obsession or an addiction.
You really can't buy a peach like that. We call them OMG (oh my god!) peaches, that's the way you feel when you bite into one. To be best a peach needs to be over ripened on the tree, soft when picked. Skin pealing off just from holding it. A peach like that can't be picked and make it to market, the farmer just leaves them. Fresh farmers market peaches are pretty good and can ripen to something close, but its just not the same. I guess I have purchased a few that would qualify as OMG peaches but only in u-pick orchards.I have ripe, juicy peach envy! The peaches we buy here are never like that!
I like that idea, so I did some research. There are lots of body fat scales on the market, costing from $20 to thousands, kind of confusing. All seem to be "smart" scales that require use of a cell phone. To be honest I prefer something dumb and simple, no blue teeth or apps involved, and no long list of output that I would not know what to do with. Could not find one of those. Is there a type you recommend?Or get a bodyfat scale and disregard the total number completely, just focusing on the fat percentage and upping your calories every time unless that number goes up? Those things may have horrible accuracy overall but they're good at measuring changes within an individual.
Thanks Mabel, nice to see you here. I am still a pound or two short of losing half my body weight, but real close. Close enough.Wow, Rob! I'm just starting to read your thread and that's amazing that you lost half your body weight! Congrats![]()
Hey Xena, thanks for posting on my diary, your condolences and best wishes are appreciated. My blood work turned out fine. The condolences made me think of my uncle again. Did not mention that he was a WWII vet, a turret gunner on a bomber in the 8th Air Force, a very dangerous job. He never talked about it, I had forgotten until I read his obituary. Not many WWII vets left now.My condolences and hoping the best for your blood work.
There´s a difference between the lower end of what´s allowed for blood donation and the lower end of healthy. They don´t want you to damage your own health by giving blood so they need you to have a buffer.I did hear back from the doctor and my tests were all good, hemoglobin 13.5 gm/dl, which is on the lower end of normal and healthy for men. All other blood work and tests were fine, doctor says I ain't dead yet. Maybe my eating more red meat and taking an iron supplement made the difference, is that possible in only 2 days? Or maybe the first test was wrong, it was a quick test done in the blood mobile, the second one was done on a real blood sample in a real lab.
Mine is a solar-powered (well, light-powered) Soehnle. Maybe 40 €? Dumb as a brick but very reliable. Doesn´t care if the floor isn´t 100% perfectly horizontal and only tells you weight, body fat, and water percentage. Had it for years so I don´t know if the exact model is still sold.There are lots of body fat scales on the market, costing from $20 to thousands, kind of confusing. All seem to be "smart" scales that require use of a cell phone. To be honest I prefer something dumb and simple, no blue teeth or apps involved, and no long list of output that I would not know what to do with.
is interesting - and pretty convincing, from my perspective. Yes, it's probably time to meet the next challenge - i.e. how to turna bit of an addiction.
I don't have one single doubt that you can do it.an obsession to a habit.
Nothing wrong with store bought peaches, when ripe they can taste good and are certainly good for you, just nothing like a tree ripened fresh one. Before I had peaches sometimes I could find a u-pick orchard where I could find some OMG peaches. Fruit stands that sell freshly picked local peaches are pretty good as well, but even there they don't have the best ones, too soft to make it from tree to the stand.I bought some peaches today . They are just ok .
Petal, thanks for your confidence, things do feel different this time so I am optimistic. And having the support of y'all here will help.Rob I never got to the obsessed or addicted stage with my weight . A family member did . Unfortunately it went the other way for her and she put back some weight . She was too strict . I am not sure how you turn it to a good habit . But I am positive that you will tbh .
I think that is true, mine was 12.5 when I tried to donate, and 13.5 when I got the blood test two days later. Maybe the iron supplements and food made the difference. 13 is the cut off for donation, for men, its 12 for women.There´s a difference between the lower end of what´s allowed for blood donation and the lower end of healthy. They don´t want you to damage your own health by giving blood so they need you to have a buffer.
I will see if I can find one, I don't want a scale that's smarter than the operator!Mine is a solar-powered (well, light-powered) Soehnle. Maybe 40 €? Dumb as a brick but very reliable.
Not at all, he lived a very long and good life, so while his passing was a bit sad I am more in the mode of just thinking about him and appreciating, not mourning so much. He was my father's only sibling and we were pretty close. It sounds like your iron problem was worse than mine, I think I will keep taking the supplements, can't hurt.I'm sorry if I caused you to mourn by talking about him days after you posted...I
Thanks Liza, and I always like garden planning. I do a lot more of it than actual gardening.Great about the blood work results! And fun garden planning!!![]()
Hey back Amy, and I'd be happy to share an actual peach with you, but by the time it got to Australia I don't think it would be so good. So just drop by in peach season and I'll fix you up. Thanks for your confidence, support from you will help. Did I mention how glad I am to see you back here?Hello, there Rob!Good to back and reading your diary again - and to hear that peaches are back in season. (oh my! how I'd love a ripe-to-bursting, fresh-off-the-tree, sun-warmed peach! I'm glad you can revel in all that peachiness for us!)
Wellll you did say you made peach wine last year. Maybe it´d be an extra-cheery peach by the time it arrived?I'd be happy to share an actual peach with you, but by the time it got to Australia I don't think it would be so good.
Yes, and we still have a lot of the peach wine. Its not terrible, but not worthy of shipping to anyone. Its hard to make good homemade wine, the best you can hope for is drinkable and it is. Problem is I don't drink much anymore, it will be with us for a while yet.Wellll you did say you made peach wine last year. Maybe it´d be an extra-cheery peach by the time it arrived?
I think your winters are milder than ours, and I believe you are no neared to Antarctica than we are to the Arctic. We are at an elevation of about 1,300 meters with much higher mountains very close, it can get real cold in winter -15 to -20 C happens. Must be something else in your climate that makes peach trees hard to grow.we're limited with what we can grow here in Tassie as we're not that far from Antarctica
Maybe so, we get a lot of very bright sunshine, pretty much all year.Light intensity, possibly?
Working in the interior in Kuwait I have been in 50+, all I did into it though were a few quick trips out of the air conditioned truck. At those temperatures odd things happen, wearing more clothes can protect from the heat, and a wind makes it feel hotter, not cooler. And of course lots of things start to melt and get soft. Fortunately our elevation keeps us out of the 50s here, even on the hottest days we don't get much above 40, still too hot for me.I can't imagine 54!