Many people have been asking me how I was able to lose 100 110 lbs this past year. I do think different methods work for different people. It
depends upon the person and his or her lifestyle. Personally, I really wanted
to look and feel better, so this is the regiment I developed for myself. This
is what has worked for me.
When I fasted a few years ago I noticed much of my eating
was based on habits and rituals, rather than appetite. I realized I was more addicted
to routines of when and where to eat than anything else. It was more mental
than physical. “It’s this time of day; time to eat this.” “Game’s on; time to
eat this.” “I always like to eat this when I do this.” My eating was more about
the comfort of familiar repetitions than shear hunger. I concluded that, to
lose weight, I would have train or retrain my mind to lose weight and then keep
it off. Therefore, I established 9 rules from various sources to follow
religiously in order to train my mind to naturally follow particular routines.
1) Get on
the scale every morning. Let what you see determine how you’re going to eat
that day.
2) Drink 3
or more bottles or glasses of water a day.
3) Don’t eat
after 7:00pm.
4) No
snacking (my only exception is eating popcorn at the theatre).
5) No sodas
(again, my only an exception is the theatre).
6) Eat very
small portions.
7) Eat
slowly, chewing your food, so you fill up quicker.
8) Eat foods
that fill you up quicker, like blue cheese.
9) Eat out of aesthetics, not appetite.
This last one is peculiar to me but fits my personality. In
the movie Ratatouille, the food
critic Aton Ego states, “I don't like food, I love it. If I don't love it, I.
Don't. Swallow.” I made this my credo. I deliberately chose not to waste
calories on poor and mediocre foods. I chose to save my appetite for the food
that’s best. For years, I’ve made a practice of not watching films and TV shows
that are bad or mediocre just to watch them. Instead, I diligently do my
research into a show or film to see if it meets my standards. The same is true
for books, music, and restaurants. Now I only watch, read, and eat what is
great. I no longer eat because I am hungry; I eat because it appeals to my
aesthetic values of proper gastronomy. This is about delayed gratification.
This is about making a bargain with the future. This works for me.
In everything, this is about loving being thin more than
liking food. There are definite physical and psychological benefits from being
thinner. Once you experience the benefits, it’s easier to appreciate the
sacrifice. Having lost 100 pounds, I now feel better and enjoy some increased
physical benefits. For example, for many years I found that I was having
difficulty putting my socks on. I was unbalanced and couldn’t reach my foot. At
first, I thought it was just my age. However, one day, after having lost 50
pounds, I suddenly found myself standing on one leg, lifting my foot up, and
easily slipping on my sock. I was quite surprised. The cause had been weight all
the time.
So these are the rules that helped me lose weight. Again, it
was about changing my mindset and, therefore, my routines. It was about
situating myself to run along new grooves until they became commonplace
practices that I didn’t have to even think about. In essence, it was conforming
to new patterns and being transformed by the renewing of my mind (Romans 12:2).
2 comments:
Aesthetic values of proper gastronomy? Does that mean you eat it because you think it's healthy?
It means that I eat it because its good, fine food with exquisite ingredients that has been properly cooked with some form of culinary skill. It has to have a wonderful taste. I still eat "unhealthy" foods, but it must be of a high quality and only in small portions.
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