I haven't personally had a snapping point like this, but I have made sudden decisions like this before. I decided one day to not eat fast food and I have only once since when I was traveling with my parents to go camping and we stopped off of a road stop.
Fast food is just really, really terrible. I think that we all know this, but we aren't appreciating food when we eat fast food like that. I cook all of my food now. Friends of mine hold community dinners in which we pool our resources to make delicious food for all of us. I cook on days that I don't eat with them and I focus on high fiber, nutritious food that is loaded with spice and flavor.
I started walking one day and I'd walk several miles a day on most days of the week.
After awhile, I decided to run. I started quick. After a couple of weeks, I was able to run two miles. After three weeks, I could run three miles.
People advise you to start slowly and work your way up for success, and I think that is generally good advice, but if you have a moment of clarity where you suddenly have very strong motivation, use it. Let your unexpected success spur you on. I'm glad that I jumped right into it.
For some people, starting slowly is great because they won't get discouraged. For other people, starting fast so that they will get encouraged is the better route. Know yourself and either way, be motivated enough that you won't give up after a setback or two.
Downsize Me
I knew that my terrible diet and nicotine habit were probably killing me, but I didn't really care. A trip to the doctor ended my complacency.
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
It all began in January of 2006. I woke up with bad abdominal pains. The pain was so severe that I called in sick to work and immediately went to see my doctor. There I had some blood drawn and had a urine sample taken. The doctor suspected that my kidneys may not have been working properly due to the pain around that region of my abdomen and because of my urine, which had a funny color to it. But a few days later, after the test results came back, my doctor told me my kidneys were fine. I was relieved, for the moment. He then told me that my liver was producing more of one amino acid than it should, and that was a cause of concern. He tested me for hepatitis C, but that came back negative too. Finally, he concluded that my lifestyle was the culprit. "You are slowly killing yourself," he said.
The weekend after that consultation I rented the documentary about fast food, "Super Size Me," by Morgan Spurlock. I saw too many parallels between my own life and that movie, which documents Spurlock's daily consumption of McDonald's meals and his body's reaction to it. My office was a one-minute walk from a Burger King, Taco Bell, Sonic, Godfather's Pizza, Subway, Pizza Hut and Krispy Kreme. I never woke up early enough to eat breakfast at home, so it wasn't uncommon for me to be at my desk with a breakfast sandwich or a doughnut in the morning. I estimated that I averaged at least one or two fast-food meals a day, seven days a week. On top of all that, I'd been smoking a pack of cigarettes a day for five years. I had made several attempts at quitting with nicotine patches and self-help tapes, but they didn't help.
At six-foot-one I weighed 235 pounds and had no motivation to improve my lot in life. I thought I was content to be overweight, out of shape, and in a job that, while not terrible, gave me no fulfillment. I was also having problems with my girlfriend. I thought things couldn't get any worse—until I figured that I was running out of money to pay my rent. I had a decent-paying job, but I was spending all my money eating out, buying the latest gadgets and partying with my friends five hours away in Chicago. I was forced to move in with my parents (not fun at 26) to save money. Additionally, I was put on formal review for my lackluster performance at work. After I helped my girlfriend move out of her old apartment, she dumped me on the drive to dinner the same night. This was also the time I began experiencing the abdominal pain. All of this occurred within a three-week period.
In other words, I had hit rock bottom. Yet something inside me told me I needed to change my lifestyle and I needed to do it soon. A few weeks after I moved home I woke up one morning and decided right then and there to quit smoking. In the shower that same morning I thought back to my glory days in high school and how I enjoyed running on the cross-country team. When I went to read the paper before I left for work, there was an article about how to start a running regimen. I saw it as divine intervention.
I went for my first run that night. I ran for the initial eight minutes and walked the remainder of the two-mile course I had planned. My goal was to someday run those two miles nonstop, and I made a plan to work toward. I kept trying to run one more minute than the previous run, and I worked at that five days a week, never taking a night off.
I also changed my diet to one that did not contain processed foods. I ate only lean cuts of meat (I have since gone to a vegetarian diet) like turkey and chicken, and I ate only at predetermined times, every three hours—three "regular" meals supplemented by healthy snacks like fruit or granola bars. This system worked really well for me, and I never felt as if I was starving, despite the fact that I was eating less than I was used to.
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »










Discuss