Not necessarily new

However, the last time I posted was back in 2008. I've jumped off and back on the wagon so many times I should be in shape by default! I'll not bore everyone with details, so just let me tell y'all where I'm at now.

Early this year, I topped out at 280lbs. At 5'8", that's too much weight. I am also being medicated for high blood pressure and diabetes. I kept getting started with losing weight, eating healthier, but something (or someone) always seemed to get in my way. My feet would crack open and bleed (horrendous dry skin issues), my knees would start in on their thing (injured USMC 1991), or my brain would kick in with a round of "I don't wanna", or "I can do that tomorrow"

Jump forward to July of this year. My wife and I devised a 6-week challenge for us, including my 13-yr old son who was getting a bit hefty himself. The plan was a simple, reward-based system designed as a baby step into building exercise and diet habits. In each week, we set up exercise (individual choice) to be a minimum of 3 days @ a minimum of 10mins each day, BUT needing a total of 75 minutes. For dietary, we agreed on getting 2 servings of fruit or veg each day, and a minimum of 48oz of water a day. I know this may not seem like much, but given our diets and habits up until that point, it turned out to be a very positive thing. I walked 1.6 miles 3x a week, taking about 30 minutes to do it. I also ended each walk by doing as many pushups (on my knees) and sit-ups (feet under couch) as I could. I also took the diet one step further, and I have completely cut caffeine. I only drink water, 100% juice or decaf sweet tea (1/2c sugar per gallon... just to take the edge off. You really don't want to know how much sugar was going into a gallon)

I have to admit that I was pleasantly surprised at my results. After the 6 weeks, PLUS an extra week of vacation in Dallas/Galveston, we weighed and measured. I lost only 4 lbs... but I lost 3.75 total inches from my chest, waist, hips and thighs.

We've started another 6-week challenge. Exercise has been increased to 4 days for 100 minutes, diet has been changed to 2 servings of fruit and veg (not or) and water remains the same (I generally drink 96oz of water/day). I've also added .6mi of walk/run to the end of my morning walks with a short term goal of running a 5k. I still want to complete a duathlon, but I need another bike.

I know what I'm doing doesn't seem like much, especially to a hard core fitness group. I am trying to correct 40 years of sloth and bad habits so I can 1) be around to see my grandkids, and 2) see my youngest daughter (14 mos) graduate college. I am of the mind that slow and steady may not WIN the race, but damnit I'm going to FINISH it.
 
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If you seriously think none of us hard core are impressed at someone your weight taking a long term decision to improve with realistic short term gains I feel you misjudge us.
You have kept in mind that 40 years of damage will not be fixed overnight, have done really well on steady maintainable weight loss and are looking at this long term.

I am very impatient in my sessions, even threw a little paddy over the weekend. But the years of training have shown me slow and steady not only wins the race but enables improvement to curve up to leave the quick fix crew in the dust.
Welcome back. I wasn't here last time, still training but not sharing my insanity with this forum in 2008.
 
Crazy: I didn't mean to come off quite that harsh with that statement. I generally lurk a lot and rarely post, and I'm like that on all the forums I'm on. In reading around, I've noted that a good number (I know not all by a long shot) of members have regimens that, quite frankly, would probably kill me rather than cure me, LOL! It was more of a "yeah, I know I'm starting off at a crawl" kind of feeling behind that.
 
You've done good to get back to it and organise 6 week challenges for you and your family. I like the 10min policy, because I know that there are a lot of practices where, if you're not in a good habit, an easy way to start is to commit not to 30-60min, but to 5-10min. Often, once 5-10min is up, you'll keep going for a bit afterwards anyway, whereas if you commit to a longer time, you'll often feel like it's too much effort and not get started.
 
My routine would likely kill many or at least hospitalise them. The irony of course being that I now consider myself very part time with training, work and family take up valuable training time, family I don't mind but work Pthuh!

The classic thing that puts so many off training in gyms is the presence of people so much fitter who they feel will judge them as being pathetic. The part many fail to remember is that most of us started out pathetic and a good number of us still think we are, that's part of what keeps us going, hence crazy.
Reality is we admire people who show commitment and progress, regardless of starting point. I started young, and kept going so it has been comparitively easier for me and means I can do more stupid things than most and love it.
Golfish who posted below is a fully committed power-lifter makes my 1RM lifts appear pathetic by being lighter and lifting more than I do, so I know training with him would leave me struggling. For him running is a foreign activity and endurance is only required as an aid to recovery between lifts in competition, so my training would kill him. We are both fit and maybe a little bit mentally unstable, hence get on well.

Welcome back to the assylum. Trust me it takes harsher words than those to offend me, I say worse of myself.
 
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