Sunday, February 17, 2008

Flying Foxes (or "Fruit Bats")


Tipped the scales at 117.8 kg (US = 259.7 lbs, UK = 18.55 stones) this morning and my fat index has dropped to 37.5%, so progress is being made. I did my first 1.60 km (US = 1.0 mile) in under 20 minutes this morning and took a slightly longer route home covering a total of 3.6 km in 44 minutes.
As I was out "walking myself thin" the other morning I met Andy along Keona Road. He mentioned, "Have you noticed all those big, black, low-flying birds that go over every morning . . . what sort of birds are they?"
I responded, "They're not birds, mate, they're mammals."
Andy was shocked, "Mammals can't fly; they must be birds!"
I went on to explain that they are flying foxes which have bodies about the size of a small domestic cat, heads that look like dogs, and front legs that have become wings, just like those on a bat. Their wingspan is approximately 60cm to 1 metre (US = 2 to 3 feet) and they use sonar to avoid hitting trees in the dark. Thousands of them fly North each night about 30-45 minutes after sunset, eat fruit all night, and fly South about 30-45 minutes before dawn to return to their roostring area. In some states they are called fruit bats.
I must say I was surprised that Andy, who must have been well into his seventies, had not heard of such a common Australian animal as the flying fox.
I only met Andy that one morning, but I watch the flying foxes winging their way home every morning while I am out walking. Even though I leave home in the pitch dark at 04:00 to 04:30 each morning, there is always plenty to see along the way.
I am really enjoying walking myself thin.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Progress is made!

Today I had covered my first 1.6 km (US = 1.0 mile) in 20 minutes and completed the 3.2 km (US = 2.0 miles) in 42 minutes, so I am making progress on the walking side of this diet to end all diets.
I feel better for walking. The book recommends that I do not weigh myself too often, so I haven't been on the scales again yet.
As a matter of fact, the book says I may notice a slight increase in weight as I get into regular walking, since muscle is heavier than fat and the exercise will be converting fat into muscle. However, if I keep it up regularly, in a year or two I shall be thin.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

The diet to end all diets!

I weighed myself this morning: 118.5 kg (US = 261¼ lbs, UK = 18.66 st) and BMI (Body Mass Index) of 40%. I'm definitely a big boy!
Would you believe I have lost more than a tonne (US = ton) by dieting since 1954? I've been the biggest human yo-yo you have ever seen!
And almost every time I lost mass (US = weight) by dieting I would bounce back afterwards to a greater mass (US = weight) than I had been before I dieted.
Let's start to list out my enormous losses:
Nov-Dec 1954: lost 12.7 kg (US = 28 lbs; UK = 2 st) "be thin for Christmas!"
May-Jun 1955: lost 14.3 kg (US = 31.5 lbs; UK = 2.25 st) "lose mass for winter"
Oct-Nov 1955: lost 12.7 kg (US = 28 lbs; UK = 2 st)
Apr-May 1956: lost 15.1 kg (US = 33.3 lbs; UK = 2.38 st)
Sep-Oct 1956: lost 13.1 kg (US = 28.8 lbs; UK = 2.06 st) "be fit for Melbourne Olympic Games" (I only spectated though!)
Mar-Apr 1957: lost 14.8 kg (US = 32.6 lbs; UK = 2.33 st)
. . . you get the idea. In about three years I had already lost 82.7 kg (US = 182.3 lbs; UK = 13.02 st)
My Mum would put me on diets 2-3 times per year and I don't recall ever losing less than 2 stones. Sometimes I would lose well over 3 stones.
When I left home, I would put myself on diets:
The most memorable example: March 1973 my mass was 19 stones; September 1973 my mass was 9 stones . . . in six months I had lost 63.5 kg (US = 140 lbs; UK = 10 stones) . . . I had shed more than half my total mass. That was an excruciating 1,000 calories per day diet. I don't know how I did it for so long. A month later someone said, "I used to know a bloke who looked a bit like you, and rode a similar motorbike, but he was a great big fat bloke; Phil Smith was his name." Straight away, I started to pack it all on again to fit everybody's image of me.

So what is the Ultimate Diet?
I have bought a pedometer, and in the packaging was enclosed a small book called Walk Yourself Thin or something similar. My wife has loaned it to somebody so I shall give you full details in a future post.
In a nutshell, the book says you don't need to diet; you just need to walk as far as you can as fast as you can every day. So that's what I have started to do.
I shall keep you posted on progress regularly. At the moment I walk 3.2 km (US = 2.0 miles) in about 44 minutes.