20191016 Daily report

Staying on a diet is hard, if you are doing it using willpower.  Think about it.  A dieter is trying to do something they don’t want to do.  Maybe they are eating something they don’t like; maybe they are eating less than they want; maybe they are skipping meals; maybe they are are doing all of those things!  I failed on many attempts at dieting. The important point is that I was trying to force myself to do things I didn’t want to do.

I like creative lunch sandwiches on toasty bread.

My food intake and calorie count

Breakfast – Oven-toasted Jimmy Dean sausage, egg, and cheese croissantwich;

  • 400 calories

Lunch – ham (100); salami (110); and cheese (100); sandwich (bread 260); with mustard and horseradish and whatever pickled veggies I had lying around (30);

  • 600 calories 

Dinner – 6oz cooked spaghetti (300); 5x Costco meatballs (230); sauce and cheese (30)

  • 560 calories

Snacking – tea with half and half (80); 2x Jaffa cakes (100); Costco chicken strips (100);

  • 280 calories

Total for the day: 1540 calories (limit 1800)

Changing my mind: how it plays out

The most success I ever had in those days (before realizing it was my mind that needed to change) was a variation of the low-carbohydrate diet.  I allowed myself to eat as much as i wanted, but restricted carbohydrates (non fiber) to 30 grams per day.  That’s about as many as are in an English muffin.  So I stopped eating things like bread (my favorite), rice, noodles, chips, and fruit juice, which are high in carbohydrates, but was unrestricted on anything else.  I lost about 25 pounds in 12 weeks, and there it mysteriously stopped.  After a couple of months stuck at 290, I gave it up.  

Now things are different.  I decided what needed to change was myself and the values I was living out.  What I valued was incompatible with losing weight.  I needed to value different things and look at life in a new way.  I have changed how I see the world, and my reasons for eating, and my life goals.  Willpower is involved, but since what I am trying to do is attractive, pursuing it comes more naturally. 

I changed several things, but one of the most important things I did was to promote weight control up my list of values, to one of the top spots.  Now, there is not much in my life that is more important than that.  After I made that decision and thought it through, it was clear to me that what I needed was a system that would last my lifetime.  I wasn’t at all interested in losing weight and then gaining it all back again.  So in effect I needed a new weight control lifestyle, and that meant I had to figure out a new way of thinking about food and eating.  The new lifestyle would have to be attractive and self reinforcing, so that it wouldn’t take willpower.  I talk about my lifestyle a lot on these posts.  Do you see why I like it?  My pictures are meant to capture this happy approach.  

And it’s not just food and eating.  Figuring out what you value is also very important for controlling money and spending!  I have been thinking about this and intend to write a few posts about financial control.  Financial control, to give a preview, is similar to weight control in that your values make all the difference.  If spending money makes you feel good and feel happy and important and loved, then how would you make yourself stop?  It would be like withholding happiness, love, and goodness from yourself.  A person with the habit of spending, like a person who is overeating and gaining weight, needs to discover new values to make any lasting change.  

Your values might be revealed this way:  “What kind of life do you want to have?  What would it take to get there?  How do you NOT want to end up?”  Try asking and answering those questions and you can start to articulate answers.  If you don’t like the answers, you can think about changing them.  

Positive values might include taking care of your family, taking responsibility for your life, saving for a rainy day, helping others, being a good parent, or a good partner.  I made a value out of weight control, but it clearly fits under the categories of taking care of my family and taking responsibility for my life.  

Do you see how it fits there?  

-The Doctor