Well where to begin. I'm a forty-four year old , 5'5" and as of today I weigh 188 pounds. I'm a husband, father and police officer. I've been a cop for eleven years and before that I was in the U.S.Army. Fourteen years with eight of those years on active duty. I've always worked out though at times more dilligently than others. Over the previous thirteen years I had gradually put on more and more weight despite going to the gym two to three times a week. I was just eating more than I was burning off. I knew it. I watched weight creep up from 210 (which was where I was when I left the Army on 02/14/2000) to 250 lbs by December 2010. Clothes got bigger and bigger. I was having a harder and harder time with the strangest things. Shoes were no longer fitting correctly. I was snoring too much, there were odd things going on with leg muscles and so on. Everyone here has heard all this before. And yet despite all this I wasn't making any changes. Why? Beats me.
But in December of 2010 I went in for annual checkup. I had put on ten pounds since 2009 checkup and blood pressure was high. Like in Stroke territory. It was bad. Again you've all heard this before. But this time I listened. For some reason I'm terrified of stroking out and being paralyzed. resting heartbeat was in the 90's as well.
I joined the local YMCA and started getting serious about cardio as well as strength. Over the past year I've gotten very familiar with the various Elliptical machines, swimming pool, rowing machine and so on. I've gone back to old Army workout from twenty + years ago. Lots of push-ups, cardio and so on. I can't run anymore. The Army trashed lower back, but I can do all those other excercises. I then made some serious changes to diet. No fad diets. Just a whole lot more fruit, veggies, actually measuring out food portions, no more junk food, and eating five small meals everyday. It's worked. Actually I can't believe how well it's worked for me. Far beyond anything I expected. I mean I'm in forties now! The metabolism that I had in early twenties is gone right? But it's happening and now I'm not really working all that hard. Or am I, but it's become common? I don't know.
As I stated at the beginning of this post I now weight 188 pounds. resting heart rate is down to 62 beats per minute and blood pressure has dropped to 125/60. Cholseterol is down and doctor isn't just happy he's amazed. fellow officers think that I have a girlfriend on the side ( I don't ) and I getting in and out of patrol car is easy again. waist has gone down from 44 inches to 36 and the weight is still coming off. I haven't seen this body since Clinton was first elected in 92. I'd forgotten what it was like to be able to see jawline.
Now I'm not a monk. Once in awhile I give myself a beer or a couple slices of pizza, but not every day. And the amazing thing is I don't really miss them. Well okay I miss the beer and I keep some downstairs in a small fridge, but I limit myself to one a week. Seem to work.
Anyway I've joined here for new ideas. I figure one can always lean more. Just wanted to let you know a little bit about background.
Hello. I'm new here.
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Checkman wrote:No fad diets. Just a whole lot more fruit, veggies, actually measuring out food portions, no more junk food, and eating five small meals everyday. It's worked.
Looks like you made all the right changes. That's awesome! You are the perfect example of how someone can take back control of their life. Just by committing to making real changes, not huge or drastic, but just steady smart choices.Checkman wrote: I now weight 188 pounds. resting heart rate is down to 62 beats per minute and blood pressure has dropped to 125/60.
Congrats to you, and thank for your years of service in the military and for continuing to "protect and serve" as a police officer!

I don't really have any new ideas for you - looks like you have a program that works for you. You can inspire lots of folks here with your story, so thank you for sharing it.

Re: Hello. I'm new here.
WELL DONE bud. Seriously, because you were an active man in the services and you allowed yourself to get well out of condition, but it's not about chastising for past mistakes but recognising recent success and you're a good success story.
You prove what can be achieved for people who might think it hard, or not even doable and it's to your credit that you can say what you say right now.
So keep on believing and if anything, you're more likely to give others ideas rather than them giving ideas to you
.
You prove what can be achieved for people who might think it hard, or not even doable and it's to your credit that you can say what you say right now.
So keep on believing and if anything, you're more likely to give others ideas rather than them giving ideas to you

Re: Hello. I'm new here.
Thanks. In addition to being afraid of a stroke as a motivator I also wanted to see if I could the get back to the fitness level that I had in twenties. I didn't have a goal in terms of weight. I actually stayed away from the scale. I had three things to grade progress. One was clothes and especially bullet proof vest. Over the past several months I've see the Velcro straps of vest get closer and closer together when I put on the vest and cinch it in. I've also see pants get roomier and roomier. The other thing I did was see how fast it takes me to walk a mile on the treadmill and do pushups without stopping. When I got back into it last January it took me over 17 minutes to walk a mile. The last time (a few weeks ago) that I went for it I did the mile in 14:20. Last January I could only knock out 35 pushups before I had to stop. A couple days ago I did 73 pushups before I had to stop.
The one exercise that has really made a difference for me is swimming. I'm getting into the pool two to three times a week and I swim for thirty-five to forty minutes. If I'm not swimming laps I'm treading water. When I added swimming to exercise routine in October I hadn't swam in years. It wasn't easy, but by Thanksgiving I was seeing some real improvement in muscle tone and stomach and back were getting tight. "They" say that swimming doesn't help for weight loss, but I don't believe it. It's made a big difference for me. I also do calisthenics, walking, rowing and elliptical workouts.
The one exercise that has really made a difference for me is swimming. I'm getting into the pool two to three times a week and I swim for thirty-five to forty minutes. If I'm not swimming laps I'm treading water. When I added swimming to exercise routine in October I hadn't swam in years. It wasn't easy, but by Thanksgiving I was seeing some real improvement in muscle tone and stomach and back were getting tight. "They" say that swimming doesn't help for weight loss, but I don't believe it. It's made a big difference for me. I also do calisthenics, walking, rowing and elliptical workouts.
Re: Hello. I'm new here.
People who say swimming doesn't help for weight loss are talking rubbish. It burns calories so theoretically it can, providing the person doesn't suddenly jack up their calories and actually increase the calories in versus calories out.
An individual might need a small amout of extra calories to give them the fuel to swim, but as long as the person didn't use that as an excuse, to have a humungous bowl of Pasta and Garlic bread with a pudding afterwards, or something like that before a swim, then it can work.
An individual might need a small amout of extra calories to give them the fuel to swim, but as long as the person didn't use that as an excuse, to have a humungous bowl of Pasta and Garlic bread with a pudding afterwards, or something like that before a swim, then it can work.
Re: Hello. I'm new here.
Hello,Checkman.Hope we learn here together.
Re: Hello. I'm new here.
Congratulations! That must have been tough. Swimming is great for weight loss - the last time I trained for a swimming event I just did a 1 km freestyle swim at highest intensity level, every morning for 2 weeks and I dropped 14 lbs and was eating everything in sight! Swimming is a full body workout, both strength and conditioning, so it makes perfect sense that you would get those great results, especially with the time and work that you put in.Checkman wrote:The one exercise that has really made a difference for me is swimming. I'm getting into the pool two to three times a week and I swim for thirty-five to forty minutes. If I'm not swimming laps I'm treading water. When I added swimming to exercise routine in October I hadn't swam in years. It wasn't easy, but by Thanksgiving I was seeing some real improvement in muscle tone and stomach and back were getting tight. "They" say that swimming doesn't help for weight loss, but I don't believe it. It's made a big difference for me.
Well saidBoss Man wrote:People who say swimming doesn't help for weight loss are talking rubbish.

Re: Hello. I'm new here.
Hi Guys..
I'm new here and want to search forum topic which related to adult weight loss. Could anybody help to find out..
I'm new here and want to search forum topic which related to adult weight loss. Could anybody help to find out..
