Addressing the first factor in that
short list of possibilities, I have not lost motivation at all – if
anything, my life is full of it. I get constant support from a variety
of sources for my endeavours thus far and my
efforts to continue. I still enjoy it exercise, so that’s certainly not
a factor, and I definitely want to lose a bit more weight. Part of this
comes from a recent fitness video where I was informed that the average
adult man is seventeen pounds overweight;
I’m eighteen pounds overweight – making me pretty damn close to
average! Now, I appreciate being told that you’re eighteen pounds
overweight isn’t something that is traditionally worthy of celebration,
but being in that category makes me feel great.
However, it is no reason to rest
upon my laurels; I am, after all, still eighteen pounds over-weight.
This gives me a target, and one that is certainly achievable. I will
just have to work harder than I am already to reach
it. I believe my exercise regime has ‘got comfortable’ and so is no
longer really reaching the level I need it to. So I can up that to help
which shouldn’t be too difficult because, if I’m honest, my ‘regime’ is
fairly minimal.
Secondly, has my apathy towards the
idea grown? I can’t say I’m totally innocent of this – I’m just not
making the time, or when I have the time I’m not making the effort. I
can excuse not exercising very easily, and my
success only makes this easier. But if I’m to keep achieving results
then I have to keep caring about it. It’s no use knowing the facts and
how to deal with them if you don’t
care enough to follow your action plan. There’s no use dwelling
on the plateaus you reach when there are further heights to climb to.
Am I happy with where I am? Yes.
I’m confident, I’m healthier, fitter, and I no longer look like an
emergency doughnut disposal officer (a very serious occupation that is
definitely completely real). I enjoy myself doing
nearly everything I do, and I enjoy a wide range of activities. In
fact, I’m doing so much – and enjoying all of it – that I find that I’m
cutting into time I would otherwise use to exercise. And I’m happy with
that, because I like where I am. It feels good
and I’m comfortable. But so is sitting in a very good armchair all day.
I clearly know what my problem is;
I’m enjoying my success too much. It’s not that I don’t do exercise – I
just don’t do it enough. The only dedicated time I have now is three
hours on Sundays and that’s far from regular
enough to really help me lose weight or shape. I do daily exercises in
the form of press ups, crunches, tricep dips, planking and squats but
that’s all muscle work; while it definitely makes me sweat it lack any
serious cardio or stamina work which really
helps burn excess pounds.
A quick note here about what I
qualify as ‘real’ cardio or stamina work; aerobic exercise for at least
thirty minutes. I’ve investigated the claim that ‘unless you
run/cycle/jog/swim/chosen cardio activity for longer than
twenty minutes it doesn’t do any good’ and found the statement is based
on fact but actually incorrect. If you run for fifteen minutes every
day but increase your speed, thereby running further, you are clearly
improving. However, your body burns sugar stores
first rather than fat stores so while you’re increasing your fitness
you won’t be getting as much out of it weight loss wise. It is how your
body is designed to work, and it makes a lot of sense – fat is intended
to be stored in case of emergencies, and when
we were living day to day, competing with lions/tigers/bears/whatever
our local predators were we quite probably had these emergencies on a
regular basis. Unfortunately (for weight maintenance rather than
survival) we no longer wake up and have to worry about
being eaten on a daily basis – or at all, optimally.
As such, weight-loss is definitely a
first world problem and if you find yourself suffering from this
problem please remember two very important things. First, you have a
great life; if you’re primary concern is losing weight,
then your life must have been pretty good up until now to get in that
situation. Remember, it’s a problem caused by eating too much or on a
fat filled diet – a problem you wouldn’t have
if you couldn’t afford said foods. Secondly, you live in the first world! There are ways around this problem available to you
each and every day. All you have to do is bite the bullet and do so.