Week One – Progress?
It’s only when you take the time to look back at where your journey began
that you realize how far you’ve actually
travelled. What you think you’re doing, seeing and achieving is probably so
much less that you really are. Not a
believer? Well, you and me both…until now. To help me demonstrate why I believe
now, I’m going to look back over my life (briefly) and reflect on the
development as I initially see it and
then I’m going to delve a little deeper and prove that the things I personally
take for granted are so much more valid than I realize. I want to share some of
my secrets with you…..
Why? – Honesty.
I want to be honest. Honest to you, Honest to me. I want you to
know. That, and the fact that I’m feeling the reflection and I believe it’s a
good time to share – after all “sharing is caring”. I often feel the twang of
non-development and guilt for not pushing harder, and as such I lose sight of
how far I’ve come in retrospect for how far I still have to travel. Another
reason I want to share is because I’ve been holding this in for many years and
now I’m letting it out.
My Health & Fitness
In terms of my health, I’ve never really taken it seriously until
recently. As a kid I played football (soccer), ran long distance and
participated in Royal Navy Cadet sports such as Field Gun. I was encouraged to
be active by my parents and enoy it. I was always motivated by movies such as
Rocky and the (original) Karate Kid. A an adult I worked out irregularly in the
gym, played squash and spent many years teaching and competing as a kickboxer.
I don’t think I can remember a time post 18 years old where I didn’t have a
belly and excess body fat. One of my oldest friends back in ‘Old Blighty’ used
to say she was proud of how far I’d come (of course I never took it on board) –
I was the guy who ate dunkin donuts and coke for breakfast, with a cheesy
garlic bread chaser, in 1997. By 2000, I’d kicked the donuts and garlic bread
but I never realized that until recently…
I spent my twenties teaching
scuba diving, which although physically demanding has a particularly fun and
active social side – meaning excess drinking, eating and partying.
As a consequence, my late twenties arrived pretty quickly (in the
haze of youthful alcoholism) and I landed in Sydney (after a few drinks on the
24 hour flight) – the most body-conscious city I’ve ever known as a fat heavy
drinker. I weighed 118kg but I was loaded with body fat, visceral fat and was
not in great shape. Bending to tie my shoe laces caused me to break into a
sweat (no lie) and I’d frequently end up huffing and puffing after a short walk
up stairs to my apartment. It didn’t improve until I met Winnie. She was
healthy, very healthy. She trained Taekwondo and swam fairly regularly. She
inspired the change.
My Diet
In terms of my diet, I was always fed nutritious meals at home.
Portion sizes were massive and I was raised to clear my plate. Seconds never
really happened because we were served big enough portions to leave no excess.
Every meal was a mountain to climb. Every bbq was more or less a challenge
where survival of the fattest/hungriest would win out. That said I was raised
to enjoy veggies and salads (and I make a pretty awesome salad – thanks for
that Nanny Marg!). I’ve had a sweet tooth as long as I can remember, and crave
sweets, lollies, chocolate, ice cream and fizzy soft drinks. It’s not easy
giving those things up. As I grew up my hunger grew too, therefore my portions
kept growing too I guess. Then I reached legal age to drink alcohol. Welcome
the fun of pubs and bars, enter the beer belly. Dang! Well as I mentioned the
diving era was very sociable and as such I drank a lot. A lot is an
underestimation. I was binge drinking by modern standards, most nights. Now,
almost a decade later, I drink irregularly and I’m proud to say I consume no
more than 1-2 drinks per week (more like per month) at medicals I may attend.
The other side to excessive drinking, was that I’d stuff myself silly with pies,
sausage rolls, chips, kebabs and other unhealthy junk foods late at night,
prior to going to bed. Now I eat a
sensible, gluten free restricted diet and rarely consume alcohol. I take
dietary supplements and supplements for my training regime. It seems like a
huge waste of money to consume those and then ruin it with binge drink/eating.
The Present
I’m deployed. I’m focused, driven to succeed – I’m a proudly serving
member of her Majesty’s Royal Australian Navy. I apply myself and test my
limits every day. I work hard and smart. I train hard and often. I eat well,
with occasional rewards and treats. I usually share them with my fellow watch keepers
– which reduces my potential intake and keeps me satiated with small tastes of
my favourite things. I stick to my planned training routines and never quit. I
have developed a self-actuating mentality and I’m determined to succeed.
In my life I’ve always lived with no regrets. I still keep myself
honest with this, but now I look at my own life with a greater appreciation for
the present.
The Past is History, The Future is a Mystery…but the
Present, that’s a Gift.
SO now, I’m 95kg and I’m not bothered about my weight. I’m bothered
about transformation. I’ve been working hard to make 2014 my year of transformation.
I have travelled so far, I’ve done a full 360 on who I was, and I’m loving the
person I’m becoming. Today for instance, I worked out in the gym. Granted I was
motivated by Rocky 3, and the Eye of the Tiger is playing in my head right now,
and I pushed harder. The result was an awesome workout, Arms and Abs day flew
by in a blur. My arms kill right now, and my body is sore – but that’s making
me feel more alive.
I’m the luckiest man in the world. I have a super wicked awesome
family, a pretty cool job that I enjoy and the best wife ever. She supports,
motivates and inspires. She challenges me and gives me a reason to be better.
To prove how good I am to the world. I Love my darling, little bear.
Personal side to my journey has been even more epic, and I’ll save
that for another day….
My Goal – Moving Forwards
My biggest, most difficult goal is to transform my life, my habits
and my thought processes to being healthy and active. For my future family, I
wanna be the kind of dad who runs around with, plays games with and enjoys the
journey of bringing children into being. I don’t want to be restricted with
aches, pains, excessive blubber. I don’t want my future teenage kids to be
ashamed of me, to think of me as a poor role model. Na-uh. I’m going for the
opposite.
I want my wife, my family and my kids (one day) to be proud of who I
am, where I come from and where I want to be.
“In defence of my country, I will make my
family proud”
Next….
Three Questions
To finish, I’d like to pose three questions for you. Take them on
board and use them at will for any aspect of your life. It helps me and its
part of my meditative practice to mull over them:
1.
What have I learnt?
2.
What am I learning?
3.
What am I yet to learn?
Challenge yourself, push hard but remember looking back to lubricate
your journey onwards from now is vital.
Looking Back to Move Forwards