I was simultaneously demoralized and re-motivated.
Demoralized in the sense that I felt that I was making no progress.
But re-motivated because here was another signal that I did not know what I was doing and that I needed some kind of help, some kind of plan if I was going to make this work.
And then, completely out of the blue, I read about the Hacker's Diet. I wasn't looking for Diet information - I was reading Jeff Atwood's daily software development blog (www.codinghorror.com) and he was talking about Geek Diets, of which the Hacker Diet is the grand-daddy.
I read the entire Hacker Diet online book over a few mornings -- I was fascinated and so motivated I was almost giddy. I was definitely receptive to the message. Here are the main points that I took away from it.
- Small Changes over time Add up.
- Reset your expectations about a successful diet.
- Use Simple Techniques to track a real weight trend.
Reset your expectations about a successful diet. Armed with a little bit of math I could see why losing more than a pound a week would be difficult. In fact, I now consider the loss of a pound a week to be just right. Two pounds a week would be like, crazy-talk! The reason for this is simple -- a pound of fat is 3500 calories. My metabolic rate is about 1800 calories a day. If I ate absolutely nothing I could lose a maximum of 3.5 pounds a week. Of course, I would probably collapse and be completely useless.
And look at it this way -- losing a pound a week is still fifty pounds a year. That's a lot. And years pass quickly.
Use Simple Techniques to track a real weight trend. This is key. Weight varies by several pounds a day due to random variations making it very difficult to get a feel for how one's diet is going. By applying the same techniques used to tease out trend data from financial market data one can get a true representation of their weight loss.
But by looking at the trend of the loss you can see that its much more realistic representation and more importantly, its never going up, which is the all that really matters, right?
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