I'm not freaking out or anything. Really, I'm not.
I get up this morning at 5:40 and I make my coffee and I put on my baseball hat and swim trunks and Packer shirt with Brett Favre's number on it and I drive down to the club and I walk in and kick off my Crocs and step on the scale and it says
252.
And I didn't freak out at all.
But I also wasn't what you would call happy, and so when I went to the Big pool to swim and noticed that it was full and I had to go to the smaller pool I thought "So it's going to be that kind of day," and it was. I got in the smaller pool, which I had to myself, and began swimming, and it was hard to swim today: my arms felt like lead, my legs felt like lead, I kept thinking I was swimming into a current, I got water up my nose...
...it was probably psychological, feeling down because I'd gained a pound back, but I kept on pushing through, going for thirty laps today as my goal, and struggling through every inch of it. Down and back and down and back.
I remembered that when the Olympic swimmers did their thing, they turned their heads with every stroke and I thought that might help, get more oxygen in me, but when I tried that I just got dizzy, so there is at least one thing that Olympians can do that I can't.
I finished the 30 laps, and a thought occurred to me.
I went back into the locker room, and weighed myself, post-swim.
251.
So I was right, last time: I lost water weight while swimming, enough to tip the scale just above and below 251/252, so my real weight is 252, but even before I thought that, I wasn't freaking out, and here's why:
1. Sweetie said to me the other day "Look at your muscles," and it was true: I have them. They're not huge, but I have muscles, already.
2. I can already feel the difference in my health. Take blanket swings, which are something Mr F loves: I wrap him up in a blanket and spin him around like he's the hammer in the hammer toss, until I can't anymore and he spills out. I haven't done those in a long time, much, and when I have it's been one or two of them, but last night Mr F wanted blanket swings and I did ten of them for him.
3. I can wear shirts that I haven't felt good about wearing in a long time. I have this Richmond Spiders team shirt I got from Sweetie because I like odd sports mascots, and it was a little tight for a long time but I tried it on the other day and it fit pretty well, so even if I am 252 -- even if I gained back a pound or never lost it -- I am feeling more fit and fitting more clothes.
So I wasn't freaking out, although I wasn't exactly happy about not being 251 because I know this is working, and tonight I proved it even more when I walked with Mr F and Mr Bunches to the small pool, a mile away, and on the way back, Mr Bunches got tired but didn't want to ride in the wagon, so I carried him and walked backwards pulling the wagon uphill a half mile.
I couldn't have done that 24 days ago.
Today's workout: Swimming, medium pool, 30 laps, 17:00.
Latest weight: 252.
Song that popped into my head the second I saw I was 252 pounds again and which I assume was mourning the loss of my lost pound:
Bonus photo of Mr Bunches in his Spongebo hat and inner tube:
4 comments:
I was 203.8 this morning - according to my scale which, despite being digital and high tech, seems to vary wildly if you weigh even within a few seconds of your previous weight - and that's the least I've weighed since my tooth hurt so bad in the spring and I went a week without solid food.
But since I know muscle weighs more than fat, I plan on losing every ounce of muscle possible to hit my target of 180 by, oh, I don't know, say... October.
So instead of weighing yourself, what you should be doing is measuring yourself. Tape measure. Around the waist. That might be a more accurate measure of what you're trying to do.
I haven't weighed myself in so long...
If you know you have muscle growing, certainly don't worry about a pound. That's a good thing!
that spongebob hat is adorable.
also i hate adele. sorry.
but it's true...muscles weigh more than fat. as long as you're feeling good, that's what counts.
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