Archive for September, 2007

My Hell week took it’s toll.

Up 2lbs.  Yup, I know.  But, I suppose it could have been worse.  I’m surprised I even had the courage to step on the damned thing.  But I did.  I sucked it up and got on.  So..oh well…today is a new day.  In fact, it’s been a nice peaceful morning, thus far.  I woke up at 7:30a. (wayyy too early for a Saturday…but, I can’t argue with my bladder, ya know?)  I made my self a healthy breakfast…read the paper…watched a little trash tv (why I watch that ridiculous show “The Hills” on MTV I’ll never understand…but I do)…and here I am diong some laundry and relaxing before I start my day.  I don’t have much planned for this weekend other than putting up my spider webs in the front bushes (Halloween is my absolute FAVORITE holiday…and I go all out for it.)..and finishing the rest of my decorating.  Perhaps a semi-quiet weekend is just what I need to recharge my batteries and get back on plan full force.  October is going to be a busy month…so I must prepare.

Next Friday I’m going to see my favorite band EVER in concert in downtown Chicago.  (Their name is LIVE…if you aren’t familiar, think mid 90’s…they had a few hits, one entitled “Lightning Crashes”…yeah, you know what I’m talking about.)  Check out their website if you’re curious….I’m published on it.  www.friendsoflive.com.   Click on “Tour Diary” and scroll down to 5/16/06 Chicago: Vic Theatre.  That first entry is mine, where is says, Kelly writes:.  Yeah, that was an exciting day to find out they had published my critique on their website.  LIVE has been my favorite group since I was in 7th grade (many moons ago) and this upcoming show will be my 13th, I believe.  (I’m a tad bit obsessed, needless to say.)  In fact, after many tries, I met the lead singer at a show last summer…who is absolutely gorgeous and I’d sell my soul for one night with….yum…but I digress.  Check out the pic at the bottom of this entry…it’s the pic of myself, Ed, the lead singer, and a dear friend of mine.  Yay…can’t wait.

Other than that, I’ve got my cousin’s play to go see (he’s doing “Fiddler on the Roof”)…some fun fall activities…(If you’re ever in Chicago, check out my favorite place ever…it’s a pumpkin farm called Sonny Acres…it’s fun for all ages.)  What else is on my plate for October…an awesome Halloween party at our local bar…oh yeah, and my birthday.  Yup, the big 2-6 on the 20th.  (Gifts gladly accepted!)  Lots going on, and lots I’m going to need to have my head on straight for…and my eating and exercise in check.

Well folks, it’s time to start my day.  Have a great weekend…see you all next week!

(Sorry for the rambling…my brain is just returning to a semi state of normal come Saturday morning!)

Us and Ed.  Yay!  :)

Not only did I fall off the wagon..

…I got run over by it. Seriously, this past week has been so crappy…(diet wise, I mean)….I feel so totally out of control…it’s INSANE. I’m not entirely sure why, but I have a feeling it has a lot to do with this added responsibility that stupid me took on at work. Of course, I could have said no, but the second I was approached by my boss, the big neon $$$ lit up in front of my face. Needless to say, I said yes, and this past week I’ve been completely COMPLETLY stressed out. I came home from work Tuesday night convinced that I was getting sick. Yet when I woke up Weds. morning I felt totally fine, and realized that I was just f*ing stressed. This thing I’m doing at work…it’ll eventually run smoothly..but for now, it’s a huge pain in the ass, and I’m stuck cleaning it up. Unfortunately, it’s taken a huge toll on my diet.

Ugh. Tueday and Weds I didn’t wake up on time to make it to the rec. AND, I didn’t go to Jazzercise either night this week, either. I’ve been eating like the ship is going down, granted none of it has really been junk food…healthy stuff for the most part, but in mass quantities. I just feel so fucking out of control, and I don’t know what to do. Argh.

And…to top it off…I met up with an old friend who moved out of state and is back in the good ol Land of Lincoln for a couple of months the other night…he brought along a friend of his that I’ve known through him and have seen a handful of times in my life. The last time I saw her was in May at my friends going away party….(At this point…she was probably close to 300lbs). Well, apparently she got her act together, and when I saw her the other night, I about fell over. Since May, she’s lost 46lbs. She looking AMAZING. Was I a tad bit jealous? You bet you’re happy ass I was. I asked her what she was doing…and she basically told me that she was eating much smaller portions…and getting in 4-5 elliptical/free weight sessions a week. And here’s the icing on the cake. She said that I was her inspiration. Un-frickin-believable!! Me…the person who has been gaining and losing the same fucking 5lbs all year is somebodys inspiration? Please. How can that be?

Folks, I sincerely apologize for the rant, but I feel like I’m really close to the edge right now…and don’t know what in the world to do to bring myself back. It’s a fucking scary feeling…especially when people at work comment on how I’m looking thinner….but I sure as hell don’t feel it…or see it for that matter. :( I need to go chill…I’m just pissing myself off even worse. Hope you’re all having a better night than I…

(I added this happy picture of me as perhaps a pseudo inspiration to myself…we shall see if it works…)

smile.jpg

Starting weight on the new scale…

::drumroll please:: 252.6.  Ok, It’s not the end of the world.  I’m just going to use this as a starting point, and go from here. Jeez…I’m running late.  I have 12 minutes to take a shower, get dressed, and leave for work.  Argh.  Catch ya later kids!

Death to the scale…and those stupid rubber thingies…

Well, for whatever reason, I decided to buy a digital scale. I guess I’m a tad bit more anal that I once thought, and need precise numbers…which I wasn’t getting from that old school scale I’ve been posting pictures of. (I swear, if you leaned forward while standing on it, you weighed more….weird.) So, I went to the store Sunday to pick one up. (Let me note that I was MAJORLY hung over Sunday, and not a happy camper to begin with…) So, I pick out a relatively decent scale that happened to be on sale…and brought it home. Anxious to see my new toy, I opened the box…only to find that some asshole had taken out the scale I thought was in the box, and replaced it with a $5.00 cheapie. Yeah, Kelly was not a happy camper. But, the hangover got the best of me, and I put off returning it until yesterday. (I thought I was going to get some grief for trying to return the wrong one…but let me tell you, Target rules, and I had no trouble what so ever.) So, I get my new, and correct scale home, and decide to step on it…just to give it a whirl. Ugh. Piece of shit. I’m 5lbs heavier on this new one than the old school one. (I’m sure my partying this weekend didn’t help matters…but there’s no way I gained 5lbs in 2 days. Simply not feasible.) So, we’ll see what it has in store for me on my official weigh in tomorrow morning. Grrr. I hade continuously changing my weight ticker. At least when I have to move it back up. Boo.

On to the rubber thingies I eluded to in the title. So, I’m at the rec this morning, and Morty, the 85 year old cutest man in the world is using the free weights, so I decided to grab one of those rubber “bands” (I’m not sure what the proper name for them is.) Here I am, doing some squats and various other exercises with the band, when I apparently take too far of a step forward, and the damn thing shoots out from under my feet and slaps me in the ass. And hard, I might add. Not only did it leave a nice purple and red welt on my ass, but it made this horrific noise like somebody shot off an industrial size slingshot. Even Morty with his supersonic hearing aids heard it, andlooked at me like I was nuts. What a way to make a lasting impression at 7am. God I’m such a geek sometimes.

I wish I had something more to talk about, but sadly, it’s only Tuesday night, and my life just lacks any real excitement. I am looking forward to the weekend, though. A bunch of friends are planning a bowling night (were geeks, it’s ok)…and I’m thinking this will be a non-booze weekend for me. Aside from the negative effects on the scale, I thinking it’s slowly but surely dwindling down what remaining brain cells my job hasn’t already murdered. Oh well, you only live once, eh?

Have a great night, ya’ll! (You can thank my one too many southern customers I deal with on a daily basis for that one!)

7 workouts in 5 days =

…a total of 5lbs down this week!! I’m not quite sure what posessed me to get in 7 workouts, but I did, and I’m glad I did. I (for the first time ever) got up and made it to the gym every morning before work, and made it to Jazzercise on Tues/Thurs as well.  Let me tell you, by the time I got home from work last night, I was completely exhausted, but in a satisfying way.  (And I got 9 hours of much needed sleep…needless to say).  I think I’m going to try an keep up this workout schedule…see what awesome results I can reap from it.  I will say though…I had the attack of the midnight cookie monster 4 out of 5 nights…but I suppose with all the physical activity I’ve been getting, it balanced out a bit.  (I know…it’s terrible to try and justify that…let’s just say that’s a work in progress.

So now I’m back down to 250.  I’ve been stuck between 240-250 all year…and really need to break this cycle.  Perhaps all of this exercise will pay off.  It’s now t-minus a little less than 13 months until I’m the maid of honor in my friends wedding…and I officially need to lose this last 100lbs.  Ha.  That’s funny.  You know how you see articles on magazine covers that say “lose that last 5lbs?”  I want to see one that says “how to lose that last 100lbs.”   :)  I live in my own fantasy world sometimes, I swear!

Well folks, have a great weekend.  I’m off to start mine!  :)

Whoo hoo..down 3lbs…

…despite everything I shoved down my piehole over the weekend. Yay!!

Yeah, I need a pedicure, I know.  But it’s coooold in Chicago already.

 

In other news, I started doing what is referred to as “interval training” last week, and I think I’m onto something. I read an article about it in Oprah magazine (not something I would normally pick up, but it was sitting on the chair that I wanted to be sitting in at the time, so I said, “What the Hell?”) So the jist of it is this. Say you get on the treadmill or elliptical (or cardio machine of your choice) and normally go for say 45 min at a moderate pace. Well, interval training is like this. You go at your usual pace for a few minutes, then you crank that puppy up to as fast, or hard, or highest incline you can tolerate…but only do that for 30 seconds. After that 30 seconds, you return to your comfortable pace. The article indicates that 30 minutes of interval training at a time is as even more sufficient that going for a longer period of time at a moderate pace. **The article states that you want to try for at least 8 30 second intervals.** I did a 30 min walk with my intervals this morning…the tended to be closer to 45 secs (of running) but I’m sure that won’t hurt. Right when you feel like you’re about to die and fall face first into the pavement, you get to stop and walk. What’s not to like? Somebody give it a shot..let me know how it works out for ya.

Well people, it’s off to my shower then to lovely work. When oh when am I ever going to win the lottery? :)

Jazzercise.

Best workout ever.  No seriously.  I had always been curious about Jazzercise, having passed many a sign while driving, and finally decided to check it out.  (This was about 2 months ago).  Well folks, it’s a keeper.  Throughout my many years of trial and tribulation with exercise, I’ve found that I much prefer to be out of the house exercising (I attempted DVD’s for a while, but on a whole, they just weren’t for me.)…and this is perfect.  At first I was a tad aprehensive…thinking that the class (instinctively assuming, I should say) would be led by some 19 year old Abercrombie plastic blonde with all too perky tits.  :)  Oh how wrong I was.  There are NORMAL people in this class…all shapes, sizes, colors, ages, and even fitness levels.  Everybody is really cool..and there for a common goal.  But what’s the best part, you ask?  IT’S FUN!!  Honestly.  You spend the first 35-40 min doing your cardio (dancing) and spend the remainder of the hour using hand weights, and stretching.  I swear, you can’t get more bang for your buck!  (And it’s cheap…$37.00/month for all the classes you want to attend.)  And to top it off, you burn buco calories, too.  I used my heart rate monitor last week…and by the end, I had burned over 700 cals.  You seriously can’t beat that!  If you have Jazzercise in your area, I highly suggest you check it out.  You will not be disappointed.  :)

In other news, I’m stepping on the scale tomorrow.  Not sure what it will bring…because Kelly was a bad girl over the weekend.  (Can we say 2 nights of drinking, AND a trip to Red Lobster?)  Hey…it was my time of the month (I’m so candid, aren’t I?) and had a really really shitty work week.  We all fall off every now and again.  As long as you get back on in the end.  So, we shall see what ol’ Mr. Scale has to tell me tomorrow.  Keep your fingers crossed!  (Yep, I’m convinced that a scale is of the male gender…they’re generally a pain in the ass and rarely bring you good news!)  Goodnight kids!  :)

My story part 2.

Hey folks.  I didn’t realize that if you don’t have a MySpace acct, you couldn’t read the story that I linked you to.  So here it is, via copy and paste.  Enjoy!

 My Mother’s endless struggle.

I’ll never forget the day it all began.  Mid-July, 1988: the summer of the great heat wave.  It was one of those summers that just wouldn’t quit.  It was also the summer my mother got sick.  It was this summer that would define the rest of my life, and I was just 6 years old.  My brother Jack was born in January, 1988.  He was a huge baby, weighing in at 10lbs 12 oz.  Needless to say, he was born a healthy, baby.  For my mother on the other hand, this was the beginning of her nightmare.  That July afternoon of 1988, I was outside on the patio, playing with my little brother, while my father tinkered in the garage, and my mother showered.  I was in the midst of entertaining Jack, when I heard my mother calling me.  “Kelly, get in here.” she yelled to me.I hopped up, and ran into the house as fast as possible.  Upon entering the bathroom, I saw my mother standing in the shower, scared.  “Kelly, go get your father right now.  It’s an emergency!” she screamed.“What’s wrong, Mom?” I questioned, with unrestrained worry in my voice.“I’m coughing up blood, lots of blood.  Go get your father in here right now!” she demanded.Without a second to think, I ran out to the garage and filled my dad in on what was happening.  It seemed like only a matter of minutes.  He ran into the house, my mom got dressed, I packed the diaper bag, and we flew to the emergency room of Good Samaritan Hospital.  Upon entering the ER, my parents filled out necessary paperwork, while I sat with Jack, and nervously awaited an outcome of the day’s events.  The doctors ran tests to see what would cause a healthy 34 year old woman to suddenly cough up extreme amounts of blood.  I had no idea what to think.  I was so scared.  We must have been in that emergency room for about 4 hours, when they finally came to the waiting room.  I was scared.  I didn’t know what was going on, and more than anything, I remember thinking how much I didn’t want my mom to die.  It’s amazing how the human mind works, even at 6 years old.  The nurse approached me, and took me aside to explain the situation.  She was a kind, gentle woman, who explained things to me in kid terms, so I could understand.“Kelly, your mom is very sick.  Here’s what’s going on with her body.  Your mom’s heart is really big.  It’s a lot bigger than it’s supposed to be.  A healthy heart is supposed to be the size of your fist.  Your mom’s heart is the size of a football.” she explained.I wasn’t quite sure what to make of this.  I wanted to ask her what they were going to do to make it smaller again.  Things seem so simple to a 6 year old.  Fix it and make it all better again.  “Kelly, your mom is going to need a heart transplant.  Do you know what that is?” the nurse inquired.“Umm, I dunno.” I responded.“What they are going to do is this: before a person dies, they can choose to give their organs, like their heart, to other sick people to make them better.  When this person dies, doctors will take the healthy heart of that person, take out your mom’s sick heart, and put the new, healthy one in her body.” she explained.  “Do you understand?”Other than the fact that I was completely blown away by medical science at that exact moment, I think I pretty much understood the basics of it.  I wasn’t sure how she was going to stay alive when they took her old heart out, but I didn’t want to bother the nurse with my silly questions.  She was a busy woman, after all.  I wanted her to go fix my mom.“Are they going to put the new heart in her right now?” I asked the nurse.She gave me a wry smile.  “No honey.  There aren’t a lot of healthy hearts out there right now, so we are going to put your mom on a waiting list.  When a heart comes in that is the right kind for her body, then we will put it in.” she told me.  “Ok, I understand.” I said to her.It was late and I was tired.  Jack was asleep, and my dad was ready to go home.  My mother had to stay in the hospital for observation, which scared me.  My mind just didn’t comprehend things.  I didn’t want to leave her there, all alone.  I didn’t want to leave, but we did.  I’ll never forget the ride home.  We were in the parking lot of the hospital, getting into the car.  I remember looking up into the sky, and saying to God, “Please don’t let her die.” Little did I know, this was just the beginning of adulthood for me, at 6 years old.              The next three years before the transplant were hard on everybody, especially my mother.  Her health was constantly deteriorating.  Life became a constant struggle, for everybody.   My mother’s heart was extremely weak, and the things we all would take for granted, like walking from the parking lot to the doors of the grocery store were pure misery for her.  She had a hard time breathing, especially during those hot summer days.  Walking also became a task for her, so she got a handicapped parking permit, to try and alleviate some of the stress of her ever failing heart.  She could no longer walk up the stairs to get to her bedroom, so her sleeping quarters became the couch in the living room.  Life as my mother once knew it ceased to exist once she became ill.            During this pre-transplant time, I was forced to grow up a hell of a lot faster than my peers.  I was constantly doing things around the house to help my mother…things most “normal kids” would not be doing. Changing my brother’s diapers became a daily chore for me, as well as trying to get the house cleaned up and cook dinner before dad got home from work.  Don’t get me wrong, I was still allowed to be a kid,but only when my adult duties for the day were complete.  I was bitter about it, I’ll admit.  I didn’t enjoy the responsibilities that were cast uponme just because my mom was sick.  And I would put up a fight, but in the end, I always ended up helping her out.  This became the norm, and eventually, I accepted it.              Being on a transplant waiting list is like waiting for a bomb to explode.  Each and every day we eagerly awaited that phone call, telling us a heart that matched had arrived.  Towards the end of her time before the transplant, my mother had to go to the hospital almost daily to have heart-strengthening treatments.  Her heart had become so weak, thatwithout these treatments, she wouldn’t have survived.  In addition, a large machine named “The Buddy System” was installed right outside my bedroom.  This machine was used to keep a daily check on her vital signs.  This information would then be magically transported to the hospital.  At least this is what I thought, at age 7.             By 1991, we were beginning to lose hope in ever receiving a new heart.  My mother’s health had become so bad, that I was mentally preparing myself for the worst.  She had no energy, and had the hardest time completing simple tasks.  To top it off, we were having another incredibly hot summer, so this just made things even harder for her.  The doctors said she had extreme amounts of fluid building up around the heart, and that she needed this transplant soon, in order to survive.  I didn’t think we would ever find one.  I was ready to lose my mother at 9 years old.  And then the call came…            It was July 3rd, 1991, around 6am.  I was asleep on the couch in the living room when I heard the phone ring.  A minute later, my mom came running in to tell me the good news.            KELLY, THEY HAVE A HEART.  GET UP AND GET DRESSED!  GET YOUR BROTHER READY, THEY HAVE A HEART FOR ME!” she exclaimed.            She was excited beyond belief, as she called all of our relatives and neighbors to tell them the good news.  My father raced home from work and we were out the door in record time.  It was a heart-warming scene on my block that morning.  All of our pajama-clad neighbors were standing on their porches, waiving goodbye to my mother, and wishing her well, as she began the first part of the rest of her life.                My mother received the heart of an 18- year- old young man who died in a car crash the night before.  The surgery was performed at Rush Presbyterian St. Luke’s Medical center, in Chicago, and took around 6 hours.  These were the longest 6 hours of our lives.  Who knew if the heart would take…if there were going to be complications?  What we did know was that this was a blessing, and she had a second chance at life.            After a two-week stay in the hospital, my mother came home.  She had to be extremely cautious of germs.  Her body was already fighting this new organ, so any other foreign antibodies would just increase her risk of rejection.  Aside from this, my mother was a new woman.  She had the energy of a 5-year old flowing through her veins.  I remember days when she would wake me up bright and early to go walking with her.  She had more energy than me…and it was truly amazing.              About a month after surgery, doctors found a great deal of fluid filling her chest cavity, so she had to return to the hospital, where they opened up her chest and drained the fluid.  This required another two week stay.  She soon returned home, with the same amount of vim and vigor she had before entering the hospital the second time.  I couldn’t keep up!              With an organ transplant comes the fear of rejection, so it’s common practice to put the patient on quite a few medications to try and stave off rejection.  Immediately following the transplant, she was on roughly 8-10 medications.  In the beginning, the medications were outstanding, and did everything they were intended to.  Unfortunately, everything in life seems to have a side effect, as did her medicine.            As the years passed, my mother’s health slowly deteriorated.  As quickly as she gained extraordinary amounts of energy after her transplant, it seemed that it left her body just as quickly.  Her health problems started out slow.  She was still able to hold down a job, which gave her a sense of pride.  Unfortunately, her health just got the best of her.  At one time, she was working two jobs at once, then just one.  After a while, she just couldn’t muster up the energy to work at all.  Things simply became too hard for her to handle.              Throughout the years after the transplant, she was in and out of the hospital dozens upon dozens of times.  My mother would have to deal with extreme cases of gout in her feet.  If you aren’t familiar with gout, it is an extremely painful inflammation of the joints, which would cripple her for days, leaving her to wheel herself from the living room couch to the bathroom using our computer chair.  In addition, she developed type II diabetes, subjecting her to daily insulin injections and blood sugar monitoring.            In addition to the diabetes, her doctors had her taking roughly 20 prescriptions daily, to keep her levels in check.  Being on such extreme amounts of medication does countless damage to the body.  Some medicines counteract with others, causing ill effects.  In the summer of 2003, my mothers spent two months in the hospital, because of these interactions.  Her medicine to fight the effects of the gout counteracted with her anti-rejection medicine, causing her to be paralyzed from the waist down.  She was unable to walk for months, and only with time and rehabilitation did she re-gain the ability to walk.              The amazing thing about my mother was her attitude.  At times, she would let her relentless health problems get her down.  But all in all, she kept an upbeat, positive outlook.  I greatly admired her for this.  If I was in her shoes, I know I would have given up years ago.  She never did.  She kept the fight alive, always hoping her health would finally stabilize.  Hope was all she had.              With the combination of her endless medications, in addition to her diabetes, my mother’s kidneys began to fail.  A kidney transplant was simply out of the question, so dialysis was the only feasible answer.  She was optimistic about it, and with some preliminary tests, she started dialysis on February 5th, 2005.  After the first few sessions, doctors checked her kidney levels, and saw they were slowly, but surely improving.  We all had hope, and believed this was the answer.  Dialysis would balance everything out, and my mother would finally be as healthy as her body would allow.  Unfortunately, the dialysis treatments came too late in the game.              My mother passed away on February 21st, 2005, at 5:34am, in her home.  Doctors determined her cause of death to be cardiomyopathy.  In other words, her heart simply stopped.  I was devastated, beyond what words could convey.  We all were.  The family knew she couldn’t last forever, but we weren’t expecting it so soon.  That morning was a horrible shock that still remains a distinct vision my mind re-visits on a daily basis.  It’s bittersweet, when you think about it.  My mother was suffering towards the end.  She might not have vocalized it, but you could see it in her eyes.  Now that she’s gone, so is her pain and suffering.  She is finally free from every little ache and pain…every pill and doctor visit that became her sole existence.  My mother fought a tough battle until the very end.  She never gave up.            Medical science isn’t perfect, like so many things in life.  At the same time, thanks to medicine, and to the family that so selflessly donated that heart, my mother was given almost 14 more years of life.  She was able to see me graduate from high school and college.  She was also able to see Jack debut in his first play, as well as become an intelligent, independent young man.  My mother died knowing her job here was done, and that she did an amazing job along the way.  Thanks to that generous donor family, my mother was given a second chance at life.  For that, we are forever grateful.              

My Story.

So, I was thinking about this endless journey of mine, and decided that I would share with all of you the story of my weight loss, the partial gain, and where I am today. Sit back and relax…this is going to be a long one. (A lot of you have been asking me how I’ve come this far, so here it is.)
After many years of trying a diet here and there, my mother stumbled upon a commercial for a new weight loss facility in our area by the name of LA Weight Loss. After doing some initial calls, she told me all about the place, and suggested that I go check it out. I was a bit aprehensive at first, but decided to give it a try. So, I went to the local center, had an inital consultation with one of their “councelors,” (I’ll get to the reasoning for putting councelor in quotes a bit later) and decided to sign up. Now before anybody gets any brilliant ideas, I’m going to tell you, it’s expensive. In fact, it’s highway robbery. The way they calulated it was this. They charge you $7.00 a lb (sounds like I’m selling really expensive steak, doesn’t it?) and assure you a loss of 2lbs a week…therefore $14.00 a week. Unfortunately, you don’t get the luxury of paying as you go, (which would be much much more cost effective for people, and I guarantee you their sales would skyrocket…but hey…logic truly evaded these people.)…you had to pay upfront. So, when I first started, I weighed in at 326.9lbs. (Ouch, I know). My goal was 150lbs…so at 2lbs a week, it would have taken me 88 weeks to get to my goal, totalling to over $1,200. Yes, $1,200 up front. Here’s the catch. They promise to give you half of your money back if you reach your goal within a 5lb range by your goal date, if, and this is a big if, you purchase their “protein” bars. (People…these “protein” bars as they loved to call them were nothing more than a candy bar. I seem to remember 18g of sugar per bar…and you were required to eat 2 a day.) Well, I was desperate, so I signed up. (My mother told me that if I was serious about it, she would pay for it.) So they had me.

Once you sign up (and sell your soul to them) they try to get you to purchase EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEIR USELESS PRODUCTS. Soups, smoothie mixes, snacks, vitamins…you name it, they tried (relentlessly, might I add) to get you to buy them. Sometimes I would, but more times than not, I said no. (These “councelors,” as I mentioned earlier, are nothing more than used car salesman working on commission. Evil, pure, unadulterated evil, I say) On the plus side, they did teach me how to eat eat an extremely healthy manner…and what true portion sizes should be. And did I lose weight? Yes. Absolutely. Despite everything that happened in my life, I did. Some weeks better than others, but I was generally around 2lbs a week. In addition, I had also signed up for Curves, and was working out there 3x a week. And that was it for me, no other form of exercise. I started this whole “new life,” in April of 2004. Things were going well for me…and I was seeing results. By NYE of 2004, I had lost 55lbs, and I was exstatic. Then life took a turn for the worse.

On February 21st, 2005, my mother passed away. After more than a decade of health problems, she finally succumed to heart failure at the age of 50. I was only 23. Needless to say, my life was turned completely and totally upside down. I didn’t know day from night…I was a shell of myself walking around without any real reason to still be going through my day to day activities. But somehow, I did. It took a long time, but I managed to get through that, and slowly but surely get back on my feet. If you want to read the story I wrote about her, (and submitted to a non-fiction essay contest sponsored by “Glamour” magazine, click here. **It’s the story highlighted in pink.** http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog&pop=1&ping=1

Throughout the remainder of 2005, I continued losing the weight…somehow. Now that I think back, I believe that I used that as a distraction to my mother’s passing…and really game myself something to focus on (and make her proud). By my 24th birthday in October (the 20th, if anybody is planning on sending gifts :) I had reached my 100lb mark, weighing in at 226lbs. I was thrilled beyond what words could convey. AND, I was wearing a size 16. (From a 28/30, that’s pretty damned good.) I maintained for the rest of 2005 (I’m weak…the holiday’s get me good.)…and then came 2006.

Around the 1 year anniversay of my mother’s passing, my father informed us (my brother and I) that he was going to start seeing people. (My parents would have been married 30 years in July of 05). Initially I was ok with it…in theory, I should say. But once he actually did, I completely flipped out. I felt as though I had no control over my emotions, and in turn, my eating. I still exercised, but whatever progress I might have been making was completely masked by the mass quantities of shitty food (and booze) and I was shoveling down my throat. I just couldn’t handle seeing my father with somebody else…and so damned soon.

In October of 06, I moved out to an apt with a girlfriend of mine (and former college roomie). I hadn’t stepped on a scale in quite some time, but I knew by the way my clothes were fitting that the scale sure hadn’t moved down. I was in such denial about everything that was going on in my life that I just didn’t give a damn anymore. I coudn’t handle things. I ate. I rarely exercised…and I just let life and its circumstances get the best of me. I gave up.

January of 2007 arrived, and I was living on my own, and had started a new job a few months prior. In my dept, they run an anual “Biggest Loser” contest. You bet your happy asses I signed up. The final weigh in was on Good Friday…so I had 3 months to lose it. I tried everything…and lost a few lbs here and there, but nothing to write home about. (Oh yeah, I guess I should tell you that that at the inital weigh in, I was 268. I had officially gained back 42 of the 100lbs that I had lost. I know if could have been a lot worse…but still. I was pissed.

So here we are, just over a week until the final weigh in ($500.00 was at stake…I’m poor people!)…and I did some research into drastic measures. So, against everything my body desired, I followed to cabbage soup diet for a week, and downed some laxatives, you know, for good measure. Yum. Not something I recommed.

Weigh in day. I step on the scale. 241. I had lost 27lbs in that 3 months, to happily secure 2nd place in the contest. ($200.00…can’t complain about that.) Oh, and for the record, I lost 13lbs that final week. I would seriously not recommend crash dieting like that for ANY length of time…but it times of desperation, it worked. Of course, the second I started eating normally, my weight shot right back up to 250. It’s only natural.

So here I am, stuck around 250-255…and I just can’t seem to move anymore. I’m afraid I did some major damage to my metabolism when I gained that 42lbs back…but that’s why I’m here. I’m finally conscious of what I’m putting into my mouth, and I’m confident that it’s going to make a difference. And I’m getting tons of exercise. I’m trying to workout at least 5x a week…more if I can drag my lazy ass there. I’m finally ready to put the past in the past, and get healthy once and for all. That’s why I’m here. You are all such wonderful support, and I know that together, this will get done. I’m confident in that fact.

My goal is to be at 150 by October of 08, as I’m going to be the maid of honor in a girlfriends wedding. I know it’s quite a feat…but I know with everybody’s endless support on this great site, I can meet that goal. I’m now living back at home (the girfriend I was living with…her father passed away just this past May, so she had to move back home to help her mother out…leaving me roommateless…therefore I had no choice but to come home. It’s funny how life works sometimes, isn’t it?) So here I am, making a fresh start. It’s going to happen this time. There will be ups…and there will be downs…but it will happen, one day at a time.

**Stay tuned for further updates from, “The Day’s of Kelly’s Lives.”**

(This has been a KC production. All rights reserved.)

 

My mother and me,2004.

Couldn’t get any more honest than this, could it?

Well here it is. AND I got my period today. It’s not so bad after all. (Except I have really ugly, bony feet up close. Ewwww! :)

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