Track Your Data!

Good morning, internet!

It’s been 2 weeks!

I’m not going to do an update of all my measurements until a month in, but I will say this for today: Get you a Body Fat Scale.

I know a lot of people are opposed to weighing themselves every day, but for me, it keeps me accountable and knowledgeable about my own body. I started weighing myself (almost) every morning back when I initially started this in February, partially to track weight loss but also to track bloating.

Like I said yesterday, I used to drink virtually no water at all and I started to notice that when I would eat certain foods and drink less water I’d weigh more the next morning. So I started weighing myself to figure out what foods made me bloat, how much water I should be drinking for my particular body, and ultimately how to make my weight loss steady and consistent.

But now my scale sends to my phone the specific percentage of water weight on my body on any given morning!

What?!

My husband was skeptical of this purchase of mine for a lot of different reasons…

To quote the princess Ariana herself: “think retail therapy my new addiction”

… but mainly because how on Earth can a $20 scale, running on AA batteries, with some metal plates “scan” a person’s body?

Listen, I have no idea how this thing works; I have a studio art degree. But you best believe I googled it and told him all the big words.

Babe, it uses Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis (BIA) technology. Duh.

In all reality, I read the reviews on Amazon and found several that said the data from this scale was corroborated by the numbers given to them at the doctor’s office. I trusted strangers on the internet. Don’t tell Babe, please.

Now obviously I take the stats this scale give me with a grain of salt. I may be an impulse purchase, but I’m as much of an idiot as this scale is a licensed medical professional. Even so, if it’s giving me the wrong Body Fat number, but that number is decreasing over time, then what’s the problem? I personally don’t need to know to the tenth decimal place what my measurements are, I only need to know that whatever I’m doing is making those measurements shrink.

It’s also fun to look at the charts of my Body Fat percentage going down while my Muscle Mass goes up. Even little gains are gaaaiiinnnsss, baby!

My point is

If you can strip away the emotional attachment to the numbers you’ll realize that it’s only data. The more data you collect, the more you’ll be able to learn. Weighing myself every day keeps me informed about what’s going on in my body. And I’m a sucker for a good line graph.

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Even if the numbers are not 100% accurate, I like the look of that line.

How to Make a Workout Routine

Hey, hi, hello internet. I’m going to add more knowledge to your collection of knowledge today. (It’s gonna be a long one, brace yourself.)

I’ve been a chubby kid my entire life. I have no idea how it feels to have a flat stomach or toned arms. I was born with rolls and they’ve never gone away. So since at least age 11 I’ve been interested in weight loss and fitness. Now, I am one of the lucky ones, I’ve never been too obsessive about my weight and I’ve never had any of the typical eating disorders. I’d say I fell into the category of: A bad relationship with food and some very mild body dysmorphia. However, I have been on the diet and exercise fad for all of my life and like most stories, mine always ended in failure giving up.

Then there was a morning in February of 2018 where I woke up and thought to myself… 

“Hey, self!”

“What up, fam?”

“Get your butt out of bed, we’re doing the thing and this time we’re gonna do it right.”

“Okay, sure, we’ll be miserable for two weeks and then order $40 worth of pizza? Wake me up in two weeks, thanks.”

“No! We’re gonna do it slow, we’re gonna change our whole thing here, and it’s gonna stick!”

“Oh. Wait, really?”

“Dude, get out of bed!”

I wish I could tell you there was some magical moment that happened or some inspiring quote that changed my life, but truly I woke up and decided to become healthy.

My tactic…

…was to start so slowly that I could trick myself into thinking I wasn’t changing anything.

I replaced one diet pepsi per day with one can of sparkling water. Yes, it was disgusting. Flavored sparkling water tastes like 10 year old Sprite that a grapefruit sneezed into. And now I’m addicted to it.

A couple weeks after that, I replaced two diet pepsi’s a day with sparkling water. (I love carbonation, so regular water wasn’t doing it for me.) And a couple months in I was able to start weaning off a few of my sparkling waters and replacing them with regular water.

It took almost a year for me to stop drinking diet pepsi every day. Don’t feel bad about yourself if you’re addicted to soda, those companies manufacture soda to be addicting. Walk before you run.

Two or three months into breaking my sody-pop addiction, once it wasn’t something I had to focus a lot of energy on, I started to do the same thing with replacing my fast-food meals or bad snacks with healthy alternatives. (I’ll do a whole other blog on how to fix your diet, so I’ll leave it at that.)

By the top of 2019…

…I was finally ready to implement going to the gym. Again, I started ridiculously slow. I bought some dumbbells and did tiny workouts twice a week in my living room. I also started a Pinterest board of weight lifting workouts; subscribed to and downloaded every fitness podcast so I could listen in the car or at work; procrastinated everything to watch way too many YouTube videos under the excuse of “doing research”.

From February to June I consumed and digested all of the knowledge that I could hold. I was still walking my dogs at a very hilly park and doing light dumbbell workouts at home, but for the most part I was learning. Now that’s what I call a slow burn.

In fact, one reason I started this 90 day expedition is because I got bored! I’m not saying I’m an expert, but I felt like there wasn’t anything more groundbreaking for me to learn until I complete my first set of big goals. I mean, after 8 months of constant research there comes a point where you have to trust yourself and do the thing.


Alright, here we go.

Amidst all my research, one thing that I thought was lacking on the world wide web was a FREE comprehensive guide on how to start weight lifting or working out at the gym in general. Not a specific quad routine, not a “do what feels best” sort of guide, not ten quick tips; I scoured the internet for someone who could tell me how to do this for myself. I, like I’m sure most people do, had to piece together bits of information from multiple sources and a couple paid subscriptions to finally get a handle on how to:

  • Start going to the gym
  • Make my own workout routines
  • Adjust my workouts accordingly to get the best results

And listen, I know this is not a big blog and I’m not a known person that anyone would take advice from, but if one person finds this and I make life a little bit easier for them, then I’ve done what I came here to do.

Also let me preface this my saying: Please don’t sue me. I’m literally no body. If you take my advice, then you’ve taken advice from a novice stranger on the internet. (How do people actually sue people for that? Geeze.)

Phase 1

If you’ve never gone to the gym, start by going to the gym. That’s it. Pick a time that works for you and challenge yourself to go to the gym for 20 minutes every day.

If you’re sleepy that day:

  • Walk around the gym and familiarize yourself with where everything is located
  • Stretch for 10 minutes and then walk on the treadmill
  • Hop in the sauna if your gym has one
  • Find a corner to sit down and drink coffee while you save Instagram workouts

It really doesn’t matter what you do for those 20 minutes as long as you’re doing it at the gym.

Then if you’re feeling more energetic on a particular day:

  • Put your treadmill on an incline and walk
  • Pick a machine that you know how to use and do 10 reps on a very low weight (I don’t usually recommend machines, but I’ll get there.)
  • Pick a different cardio machine and try to challenge yourself for 10 minutes

My point is, make a habit of going to the gym.

 

Phase 2

Make yourself a beginner weightlifting routine. This is going to take a minute to sort out, so commit an evening to yourself and really figure this out.

  1. Decide on a stretch flow that you like; it doesn’t have to be complicated or lengthy, just stretch all your big muscles until you feel slightly more flexible than when you started. I have a secluded part of my gym with a wall that I can put my butt towards when I stretch so I don’t worry about people looking at my booty.
  2. Decide if you’re going to do an upper body day or lower body day and then choose three exercises from the following body parts:

Upper Body Day:
Shoulders, Biceps, Triceps, Rear Delts, Upper Back, and/or Chest

Lower Body Day:
Quads, Butt, Hips, Inner Thighs, Calves, and/or Lower Back

If you’re as neurotic as I am then you’ll already have a bunch of weightlifting videos, pinterest pins, and instagram posts to pull from for these body parts, but if not then google it! Type into your search bar: “Free weight shoulder workouts” and you’ll be met with all the oily, orange, muscle people that you never asked for but who know how to lift heavy things.

How you’re going to structure your workout:

1. Stretch: 3 to 5 minutes

2. Aerobic Warm-Up: 5 to 10 minutes (i.e. walking on the treadmill or yoga; anything that gets your heart rate going while also letting you focus on breathing)

3. Weight Lifting: 3 sets of 10 reps per exercise

Example Upper Body Day:
3×10 Cable Machine Tricep Pull-Downs
3×10 Dumbbell Bicep Curls
3×10 Lateral Pull-Downs

4. Cardio: 10 minutes (optional, but I like to add in an inclined walk on the treadmill to round out my workout)

5. Cool Down: 5 minutes of stretching / walking

A couple notes before we move on:
  • Don’t skip your stretching or warm-up! Just don’t.
  • If you’re going to use machines, stick to the ones that aren’t rigid. Go for the Cable Machine or the Lateral Pull-Down Machine that has the swingy bar, not the metal beams; Unless you’re trying to body build, you don’t need to isolate specific muscles. If you want to tone your body focus on types of weight training that forces you to use other parts of your body for stability. If you’re confused on this, just opt for free weights, they’re probably better any.
  • When picking the amount of weight for each exercise, use this rule of thumb: Pick a weight that is easy enough that you can do all 10 reps but difficult enough that you’re making an involuntary weird face by the 9th and 10th rep.

This is how I structure all my workouts.

As for a split, I like to workout 5 to 6 days a week and I never do the same day twice in a row. I go back and forth between upper and lower body days and usually switch up the actual lifts that I do each time, too. Sometimes I throw in full days of cardio if my muscles are feeling extra sore. Listen to your body and don’t push yourself too hard. Personally, I’d rather go too slow and take an extra month to reach my goal than go too hard and injure myself and have to start from square one once I’m healed.

That being said, when you’re ready to kick it up a notch…

 

Phase 3

This is where I was when I decided to do this 90 day challenge for myself. I was nailing all my workouts and stalling in weight loss and getting bored. If you’re here, try amping things up.

> Use compound movements instead of working on one body part. That is, instead of doing a Bicep Curl try doing a Hammer Curl into a Dumbbell Overhead Press. It’s still one movement but it’s a little more intricate, requires more stability and thus more muscles activating, and works your biceps, triceps, and your shoulders.

> Add a HIIT routine into the mix. (Or crossfit or a workout class if you’re brave enough, but I’m personally not there yet)

> Make some new, baby, fitness goals that align with the main goal you’re still working towards.

For example, my main goal is to lose fat, but I’ve decided that I’m going to start running. I’ve always been too heavy and (too ignorant about running form) to run without injuring my lower back or knees. Well, that was 30 pounds ago. So now my little tiny baby goal is to do interval jogging as my cardio at least twice a week. It’s still pushing me towards my main goal, but it’s something smaller that I can check the box off of every week and feel like I’m progressing more quickly. It’s essentially a distraction from my main goal.

> Add supplements to your routine! Don’t go overboard, but give half a scoop of pre-workout a try or drink a protein powder shake after you workout. I’ve been loving BCAAs for extra hydration (and flavor) during my warmup.

See what works for you, see what challenges your body, and take it slow.


If I could travel back in time this is all the stuff that I would tell my younger self. I’ve been gathering all of this information in my brain-place for years and if public school taught me anything it’s that I should regurgitate that information back into the universe in my own words.

These are the sources of more or less all of my knowledge:

(And these are all people and accounts I legitimately follow and love. There is no filler that I popped in to make a longer list. I told you I’m obsessed.)

YouTube:

  • Whitney Simmons
  • Heidi Somers
  • Blogilates
  • Mari Fitness
  • Jordan Shrinks
  • MissRemiAshten
  • Nikki Blackketter
  • Love Sweat Fitness

Instagram: (The best place to find new workouts, imho)

  • julia_terpak
  • buffbunny
  • whitneyysimmons
  • noexcuses.fitlife
  • atighteru
  • mytrainercarmen
  • lisafiitt

Podcasts:

  • Fitness Matter with Pahla B
  • Chasing Excellence
  • Dishing Up Nutrition
  • Cut the Fat Weight Loss Podcast
  • TRAINED by Nike

 

Okay cool, so I basically just wrote an E-Book. Sorry for the wordiness, friends. You’re welcome for filling some of your knowledge gaps, internet.

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Bonus Tip: Get yourself a workout buddy as cute as this.

Story Time

Hey, so do you guys want to hear about my dentist appointment yesterday? No? Cool, I’ll tell you!

Have you ever spent four hours at the dentist to walk out with: An aching set of gums

  1. A newly shaved (not numbed) tooth
  2. Another appointment card
  3. Another temporary crown that is not the temporary crown you came into the office with and yet also not the permanent crown you had been fitted with for the past four hours
  4. No more will to live
That was my day yesterday.

A little backstory, I have horrible white coat syndrome and I avoid any and all doctors until my only other option besides avoidance is death. Well, when I was 17 I had to have an emergency root canal. I was very far from numb, the dentist was very aggressive, the nurse made fun of me, after all that…

I didn’t go to the dentist for 7 years.

Fast forward to the top of 2018: I had just entered my mid-twenties and thus quarter-life-crisis-mode and decided that I needed to get my teeth cleaned. I went in and was told that I had 14 cavities and also had to get my crown replaced.

Which brings me to yesterday.

The past two years I’ve been living at the dentist and I’ve gotten all of my cavities fixed now (a lot of tears from a grown woman, but I did it) and the day came to get my new permanent crown put on.

Whew, that was a lot of backstory…


Well I got to the dentist office yesterday, sat in the chair, and the lady comes in and tries to numb me.

No no no, ma’am. This tooth is deader than my soul and you will not be sticking any needles into my mouth this day, kthnxbye.

Then I waited in the chair for about half an hour I guess while my non-numbed tooth got non-numb. Finally the nurse came in a swiftly yanked my temporary crown off and started with the gum poking…

Oh, cool, that’s what that feels like when I’m not numb? Love that.

… and the squeezing of “material” in between my tooth-nub and gums.

Oof.

It’s fine, I’m fine, I’m only slotted for an hour and a half and it’s already been an hour so this is almost over.

Low and behold she says “Okay, we’re going to make sure this crown fits good, take an x-ray or two, and then you’ll be good to go!”

Wonderful, thanks!

Crown on, gum poking, crown off

Crown on, gum poking, cotton biting, crown off

Crown on, x-ray, crown off

Cold water tooth spraying, oh my god my other teeth aren’t dead and that’s like biting straight into an ice cream cone, spit sucker, crown on, x-ray, crown off

Crown on, gum poking, polisher, crown off

We did this song and dance for another hour. They had given me six x-rays at that point and then she said, “Alright, I think that’s good. Let me get the Doctor and we’ll get it cemented on.” “Um, alrighty then. Thank you.”

And then I waited for half an hour.

The dentist comes in:

Crown on, gum poking, crown off

Crown on, edge shaving, crown off

“Hmm, okay let’s take a couple more x-rays” “Um, okay then, that’s fine.”

And then I waited for half an hour.

So apparently “the lab” isn’t that great because my crown did not fit down onto my tooth as smoothly as was necessary to avoid me coming back to the dentist more than twice a year. My dentist said that she would rather send it back and get it corrected. And because I trust my dentist with my life (she’s might be the best thing that ever happened to me) and I also hate to see her, I agreed. To reiterate: “I have horrible white coat syndrome and I avoid any and all doctors until my only other option besides avoidance is death.”

But then she said she was going to drill down some edges of my teeth to make sure the new new crown fits better.

Come again?

Yes, drill down some of my non-numbed teeth.

Should I have put a trigger warning on this blog? Is that what the kids do these days? Don’t worry, it didn’t hurt at all. I mean, my two teeth that she trimmed that don’t have root canals are ridiculously sensitive now, but it will subside.

And then I waited for half an hour.

That’s all that happened; they made me a new temporary and cemented that on and took another x-ray, yada yada. But what got to me was that I spent four hours at arguably my least favorite place getting effectively nothing accomplished.


I’m being dramatic. It wasn’t that bad. Don’t get me wrong, my gums and soul are very sore, but I’m grateful to have a dentist that is thorough enough and invested enough in my well-being that she’s willing to spend an extra three hours with me and not charge me for it. I’m pretty sure would give her any of my dispensable organs.

I just wanted to vent, y’all. If a girl can’t vent to strangers on her own website under the guise of entertainment, then what’s the point of being an adult?

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This is a full-on pajama onesie. This is truly adulting.

11 Day Progress

Good morning, internet.

Alright, so I skipped a daily blog for yesterday. I’ve had some weird adult life stuff happen recently and it has sent my anxiety so far through the roof that it is on the moon. I also have to go to the dentist today, so yeah, I’m super excited. But that’s beside the point.

I said I’d update my numbers on day 10, so here’s my day 11 numbers update!

(I’m a dependable adult, yes, hi.)

Weight: 188.8 lbs (down 3 lbs)
Body Fat Percentage: 36.2% (The goal is 25%)
Neck: 35.5 cm
L Arm: 31 cm (up 1 cm)
R Arm: 31 cm (up 1 cm)
Chest: 109.5 cm (down 1.5 cm)
Waist: 100 cm (down 3 cm)
Hips: 113 cm
L Thigh: 59 cm
R Thigh: 59 cm

Everything seems to be going in the right direction! WooHoo!

But listen

Since the autumn solstice I’ve been slacking I’ve been sleeping. It’s so dark in the morning now and contrary to popular belief being a morning workout person does NOT commensurate being a morning person. They’re very different personality traits.

However, here I go… off to the gym… turning over a new leaf… in the dark.

Clarification

Let me clarify.

I was thinking about yesterday’s blog all day long. I feel like it came across that I was telling you to pick the most efficient way to ONLY lose weight and to stop doing all other types of exercise. Which I know a lot of people interpret as “only do cardio”.

Now, I do more cardio and aerobic exercise than I was doing when I was trying to meet all of my big goals at the same time, but

I still weight train!

I love weight lifting. Keep in mind people, weight training is a great way to lose fat! Of course that’s still helping me gain little baby muscles, but that progress won’t be as prominent.

The shift I made was to weight train less often and less intensely to focus on losing weight instead of building muscles. I started to do more HIIT type weight lifting and compound movements instead of trying to tear down and build up one specific muscle.

Remember at the beginning of this 90 day adventure when I said that I split upper body and lower body days instead of specific body parts? Well that’s the reason!

If I do an “upper body” day as opposed to a “shoulder” day then I can incorporate some ab workouts or some compound tricep / bicep / back / shoulder movements or I can do plank modifications for a HIIT routine; I’m not limited to only shoulder movements.

I always used to think:

  • You walk on an inclined treadmill and use the elliptical to lose fat
  • You dead lift and do bicep curls as heavy as you can to gain muscle

And there was no in between.

But honestly, as long as you’re moving in a way that gets your heart rate up, it’ll help you lose weight. It’s really that simple. The other day I folded laundry so fast that I counted it as a workout warm-up. Seriously. It was that intense.

I’ll put together a workout for the blog sometime soon. (It won’t involve laundry.)

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Taking a mental health day from work and this is my current situation. ❤