I wonder the same thing, Crank. It gets harder and harder every year. And I do enjoy an occasional cheeseburger and a beer or a piece of chocolate. I can't imagine giving all that up.
I wonder the same thing, Crank. It gets harder and harder every year. And I do enjoy an occasional cheeseburger and a beer or a piece of chocolate. I can't imagine giving all that up.
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"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." George Bernard Shaw
Luna Eclipse/Selle Italia Lady
Surly Pacer/Terry Butterfly
Quintana Roo Cd01/Koobi Stratus
1981 Schwinn Le Tour Tourist
Jamis Coda Femme
Well, I won't give up my red wine a couple of times a week and my daily square of dark chocolate, which help get my cholesterol down.
I love whole grains in all forms, but I pretty much have to ration those, too, even though they are "healthy."
I do go out to eat more than most, but I even try to be "good" there, but sometimes I do eat the bread and I don't skip the rice either. I have pretty much stopped eating Chinese or Indian food, but I can't give up Mexican; thankfully, here in New England I have to drive a bit to get the really authentic stuff I am used to.
Unless I start doing the type of heavy duty training like Veronica is doing, it's going to be a constant tweaking and restricting myself for the rest of my life.
What everyone else said about not worrying about it, especially if you're losing inches and becoming firmer.
But I will say this: for me, when I'm running more than I'm riding, I will gain weight. Simple reason is that it's just more intense and I can't sustain it as long. Even now that I'm doing one four- or five-hour run each week, that's way different from three or four six-hour rides each week at a lower intensity.
So if you're running more and riding less, take a look at your total expenditure.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Thanks, Oak. I had suspected that intensity might be the case. I'm only riding once a week and running 4 x a week until the HM is over. I'm hoping once I'm back on the bike more I can drop a few pounds. It sure is stubborn though and has been frustrating. I think what bothers me most is that I want to be thin and trim and look athletic. I want to look as good as I feel. I look like Beaver Cleaver's grandma instead. It's hard to be taken serious and I feel like I need to wear some SPANX under my running and riding shorts![]()
__________________
"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." George Bernard Shaw
Luna Eclipse/Selle Italia Lady
Surly Pacer/Terry Butterfly
Quintana Roo Cd01/Koobi Stratus
1981 Schwinn Le Tour Tourist
Jamis Coda Femme
Ok ladies I have to report that I took your advice and quit jumping on that darned scale every day! I also got serious about tracking my food with Weight Watchers online. I pulled a pair of summer slacks off the hanger this morning and dreaded putting them on and low and behold they were loose around the waist! I weighed myself just to see and I have lost 6 pounds since my original post. So I feel like a big crybaby for complaining in the first place. I just needed to be patient and pay more attention to what I'm putting in my mouth.
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"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." George Bernard Shaw
Luna Eclipse/Selle Italia Lady
Surly Pacer/Terry Butterfly
Quintana Roo Cd01/Koobi Stratus
1981 Schwinn Le Tour Tourist
Jamis Coda Femme
Congrats on the weight loss. Six pounds is an awsome number. Whoot! I am excited for you. Keep it up.
Red Rock
Accountability is key. I track everything I eat, and all my activity, by time & exertion level. When I slack off on tracking, I can feel it in my waistband soon enough.
In general, people eat more than they think they do, and expend less energy than they think they do.
I tried cutting my portion sizes a little and adding in very small amounts of whole wheat grains (1 slice of bread here and there, brown rice a little more often) and found that my weight has stabilized over the last few days. I am not overweight, but it seemed like all of a sudden, the pounds were creeping up. I eat plenty of protein, that's for sure.
Running kept the weight off like crazy, so since I stopped running, I don't have that to help control things. I notice I lose or maintain when I ride at a moderate pace, but when I do long rides or very strenuous climbing, it goes up, probably because I am just plain hungrier.