\health_and_fitness

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2019.05.18This Time Around

I posted the image above two years ago.

Life was really good then: I was active, I was slender, I was healthier. I lived in a lovely home in the Midwest, in a lovely neighborhood, with lovely people. And I had a position that I also loved. I had plans to buy a larger home and to move my mother-in-law in with us, because my father-in-law's health was in significant decline, and I didn't want mom alone in her home over the winter.

A few months on, I lost that position that I loved due to layoffs. I lost that house that I loved. Instead of moving the mother-in-law in with us, we moved in with her. I was angry, and I became depressed. Something about my health changed. All of the advances I'd made in improving my health over the previous couple of years had vanished by the following spring.

...and I May Ask Myself, "Well, How Did I Get Here?"

Last spring, I was hired by a company in Dallas and was asked to move down. That summer was spent on househunting trips, buying our Dallas home, and getting settled. The change in everything was disruptive.

Today, two years on, I'm happier generally. It took a while for us to find a family physician — hampered in part by a massive influenza outbreak — but my doctor renewed my Fentermine prescription, and I'm happy to say that the other night, I wore clothes to a semiformal event that I hadn't worn in quite some time.

This Time Around

My weight loss approach this time is different than it had been. First, I'm not weighing myself at home. My wife asked me about this just this morning. I'm letting the doctor's office handle the weigh ins, because I don't want to make my weight the center of an infoporn obsession. Last time, I was weighing myself every day, and recording those weights on my site so I could graph and chart the sh!t out of them (and use it as an excuse to do even more crazy stuff with my charting class). I'm not creating an obsession this time. I know weight is coming off because I'm fitting in my clothes better, and because my daughter especially has noticed — we have a standing date in our pool in the afternoons; she told me she can see a difference. Those things are good enough for me, I think. Well, and I want to notice a difference, too, obviously; I'll carry myself better if I have a little pride in my progress. I think it's going to be a little difficult to feel that pride while I'm obsessing over numbers. Forest for the trees kinda thing.

Fentermine, My Old Friend

Getting reacquainted with Fentermine has been a little challenging. In my first follow-up with my doctor, I was able to recount for her all of the things about taking it that I'd forgotten over the past couple of years — like the constantly dry mouth and occasional constipation (I stopped making fun of Dulcolax and Benefiber ads after my first really bad experience).

Fentermine is no joke. It speeds the metabolism, meaning that even little things that excite you take longer to recover from; like the time it takes for your heart rate to slow and your body to relax going from jumping jacks to being seated. Tonight I sweated for probably two hours while I cleaned the house — a task which included the discovery of a special feline surprise in the laundry room (a laundry basket "took one for the team" today). When all was done, I got into my pool to cool off. I feel like I sweat at the drop of a hat and I become more irritable on full-dose days.

Anyway, enough crabbing. I'm simply trying to say that it has its drawbacks — along with most things in life — and so one must make choices.

My choice at this point is to continue.




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