178 today. Goal 168.
I completely agree with that Nancy Clark thing. I knew I was going to be going through some very difficult times work-wise (leaving a firm, starting my own practice, fears of retaliation from former partner) between fall of 2009 through fall of last year. So I gave myself a break. I kept riding, but didn't worry about food choices. Yes, I gained weight, but it came off and I got through the very difficult time without pushing myself in every area of my life.
I also give myself a couple of cycling breaks throughout the year where I'm not pushing to ride long distances every week, etc. That keeps things fresh.
Sarah
When it's easy, ride hard; when it's hard, ride easy.
2011 Volagi Liscio
2010 Pegoretti Love #3 "Manovelo"
2011 Mercian Vincitore Special
2003 Eddy Merckx Team SC - stolen
2001 Colnago Ovalmaster Stars and Stripes
Finally kicking up the nerve to do this - I usually hate giving myself a definite goal since I stray a lot and wind up with massive guilt trips, but what the heck!
Sept 9: 124
Goal in October: 115
I can relate about work leading to non-exercise. Finally, finally landed a real job mid-August that actually requires my diploma and a comparable salary. While it's been busy, the job security has definitely lowered my stress level and I feel more enthusiastic about exercising.
Last edited by Caddy; 09-09-2011 at 07:25 AM.
2011 Specialized Crux, aka (Toxic Honey)
I'm faster in kilometers!
Some folks join in but don't put down a goal. That is totally fine and completely understandable. This is to help folks in any way that works for them. So if it is better for you to just track the weight without any goal in mind, that is totally fine!
Here is the link. Let me know if it gives anyone any trouble. There are some blank lines that have whited out names of folks from last go around. I'll clean it up in a couple weeks once I'm sure those folks are just taking a challenge break and not that I missed them signing up.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/...5tYkE&hl=en_US
You too can help me fight cancer, and get a lovely cookbook for your very own! My team's cookbook is for sale Click here to order. Proceeds go to our team's fundraising for the Philly Livestrong Challenge!
231.4 for me this morning.
Goal: 220. I can do it. I can do it. I can do it.
Roxy
Fast food-free since August 7, 2011 <g>
Getting in touch with my inner try-athlete.
Thanks, ladies!
Ok, deep breath.... starting weight for this challenge is 144. (I guess that 139.5 I saw on Monday was just dehydration from the long flight.) That's pretty much consistent with what I saw on the scale before I left for France (and consistent with the lastt couple of days, too),so at least all the croissants and cheese didn't do too much damage!
Ok, so goal weight for the challenge... Hhmm, I want something achievable and realistic, that will make me work for it, but not so optimistic that I disappoint myself by missing the goal. Eight weeks. I'm going to say 6 pounds. Enough to see progress, but not so much that it's unrealistic. So, 138 for my goal.
Thanks, Possegal!
Susan
Wow, Ellen - that's a lot of lost weight already! Good job!!
My starting weight: 151.0
I'm going to adjust my goal to 142 for the end of October. It's what I weighed exactly 10 years ago (I know this because it's what I weighed when I met my husband and we met 10 years ago on Monday).
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
147 this morning. Dammit. Stupid sedentary vacation.
Goal remains 140.
Tomorrow is the Civil War century (metric). Normally any ride >60 miles earns me a trip to Five Guys for a giant burger and absurd quantity of fries. However if the Antietam Dairy folks are back with their ice cream, I will have that tomorrow, and no Five Guys.
- Gray 2010 carbon WSD road bike, Rivet Independence saddle
- Red hardtail 26" aluminum mountain bike, Bontrager Evoke WSD saddle
- Royal blue 2018 aluminum gravel bike, Rivet Pearl saddle
Gone but not forgotten:
- Silver 2003 aluminum road bike
- Two awesome worn out Juliana saddles
135.4
Just an FYI for folks, technically this is a 7-week challenge since that takes us to Oct 28th. So 7 weeks from today is the last weigh in. Just in case that impacts any goal weight you may have chosen.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/...hl=en_US#gid=0
You too can help me fight cancer, and get a lovely cookbook for your very own! My team's cookbook is for sale Click here to order. Proceeds go to our team's fundraising for the Philly Livestrong Challenge!
I'm a little late here - will get caught up now.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/...hl=en_US#gid=0
You too can help me fight cancer, and get a lovely cookbook for your very own! My team's cookbook is for sale Click here to order. Proceeds go to our team's fundraising for the Philly Livestrong Challenge!
Ok, I'm in! Today was the last day of another fitness challenge I participated in, so I feel I still need someone to be accountable to. This one is way more laid back, though. No points to keep track of!
Starting weight: 235.4
Goal weight: 225
On a side note, at my heaviest I was 305 at the beginning of last summer. Yikes! I feel a lot better now...lol!
143.4 this morning. Well, I'm not moving around much (some pain where my incision scar is knitting itself into shape). Yet.
It's heartbreaking to hear some of you be so awfully harsh on yourselves about your weight or body fat. Susan, as others have said, you've just completed Paris-Brest-Paris -- you're being really far out there, woman! 10 or 20 or 25 pounds of extra body mass are minuscule in the greater scheme of things. And I'm saying that as a recovering hater-of-my-own-body (and myself). I don't think I was much below 200 pounds, or for very long, during any period between the ages of 28 and 40. Now that I've dropped about 1/3 of my body weight in the last year, my partner has been wondering what I changed to make it happen. (She's been naturally skinny all her life, but now, in her 50s, is suddenly accumulating some extra fat, which bothers her -- we've been converging slowly towards the same weight range, she from below, me from above.) It occurred to me that I needed to make peace, at some level, with my body and work with it instead of fighting it. I'm not more disciplined at 140 pounds than I am at 200: I'm exactly the same person.
What I do note is that I'm less motivated to go from 145 to 130 (unheard-of since my teens) than from 200 to 180 or from 175 to 150. I can wear regular clothes now (except that my legs are STILL short, so that many pants don't fit), and all is more about getting fitter than about losing fat.
Chris - formerly of Heidelberg, Paris and London, now of Fairbanks, Alaska
2011 Kona Sutra 49cm - Selle Italia Diva
2009 Specialized Rockhopper Comp Disk 15" - Specialized XC Body Geometry, 143mm