Thirty-eight Days

I have to admit, I don’t think about it much. I cook at home, mostly; so, it is not an issue.

About the only time going meatless is an issue is when I eat out. They don’t even have meatless entrees at Panda Express here in Kennewick. I had to order a side of mixed veggies and get some veggie spring rolls.

That’s okay, but I guess I am spoiled. Back home you can something veggie friendly in about 80% of the eating places. I guess they’re all carnivores here. Although, I met a vegetarian woman at work today.

But, there really are not a lot of fast food options for vegetarians out there.

Veggie Sandwiches

Very few things are more convenient for a quick meal or snack than a sandwich. Very little prep work is required – a couple of pieces of bread, something in the middle, some mustard – then, you munch.

I think it’s easier to accomplish a sandwich if you eat meat. However, that could just be me. To me, it seems as if there is a lack of options. Maybe that is due to my limited definition of a sandwich: meat and cheese. Which, if you think about it is pretty limited.

Okay, what makes for a sandwich if you’re forgoing salami and cheese? There’s always peanut butter, or just cheese. I have few complaints for either, other than a steady diet of either is going have some negative consequences weight-wise. Then, there is hummus, which I love and make from scratch. By itself, though, it’s more like a condiment than the excellent source of protein it is. So, I think sliced veggies, maybe some sprouts and/or lettuce, too.

Some folks will suggest marinated tempeh or eggplant or zucchini. Those are good ideas; but, I usually want a sandwich on the fly, and those options take preparation and planning. I am not vegan, so eggs are an option; yet, they are easy to overdo, too. I do eat veggie burgers, but I don’t want a steady diet of them.

I haven’t tried any of the veggie “sandwich meats.” They are expensive and unappealing to me. Maybe I’ll give them a shot sooner or later.

What about you? Do you have a non-animal flesh sandwich you like and want to recommend?

First Five Days

Five days without meat, and to be honest, I have hardly noticed. My diet is light on meat in the first place, so it’s not the hugest of sacrifices.

My big concern in meeting my goal is in sustaining it over the long haul. I can do pretty much anything over the short run. One year constitutes “the long run,” I think.

My biggest temptation so for was a sudden urge to eat some jerky the other day. But, that passed pretty quickly. One of the other things is convenience. It is far more convenient to be a meat eater; it’s ubiquitous. You have to think things through a little more if you are opting out of the carnivorous lifestyle. For me, at least, that involves pre-cooking several dishes on the weekend so they are ready during the week.

Or, maybe I just over think it. 😉

A Well-Timed Compliment

I’ve sort of stalled, with regard to my weight-loss, since about the second week of August, rolling back and forth within a five-pound range, generally between 202 and 199.  As one of my WW friends might say, I’ve been learning how to maintain…I just wanted to maintain a bit lower than where I am at now.

So, I’ve been kind of down recently about it, and trying to figure out how to get it jumpstarted DOWN again, and this negative thought and that negative thought…blah, blah, blah.

So, tonight, I stop at Starbucks to get a latte.  A couple of the guys with whom I’ve become friendly were there.  I had not seen either during Ramadan, so they had not seen me in over a month.  One’s a well-educated Nepalese guy, the other a Saudi kid raised in Florida (who would love to go back there).

Both of them, at the same time, see me and say, “You’ve lost so much weight!!”  They went on and on about how much I’d lost, how good I looked, how much smaller my stomach was now than it used to be.  Man, I just let them go and soaked it ALL up.

Perspective.  Although I still want to lose another 20 pounds, I am so much healthier and healthier looking than I was this time last year it is not even funny.

Sometimes, a well-timed compliment can do so much for you.

Mmmm…Yogurt

When I was a kid growing up on the dry, dusty plains of the Texas Panhandle, in the 1960s and 1970s, yogurt seemed to me an element of counterculture and hippies…something found in an ashram as one contemplated free love (especially with that blonde sitting in the next row over in school).  Now, as a grown man working in the dry, dusty basin of the Arabian Desert, yogurt has taken on a whole new identity – one which also involves love – the love of flavor!

Yogurt may be the most flexible food available.  I guess, if you’re lactose intolerant, it might be a problem (there is Lactaid, though), but for the rest of us, yogurt is about as utilitarian as you can get.  Even forgoing full-fat yogurt for its fat-free cousin does not result in any lessening of its utility.  If anything, it improves it.  Dips, dressings, cereal host…is there anything this food cannot do?

When I started back on Weight Watchers Online in December 2008, I started eating breakfast again.  Although traditionally my weakest meal of the day (since I was a kid), breakfast is key to a well-balanced, healthy eating lifestyle – certainly if one is trying to drop a bunch of weight.  I eat on the go, so cooking in the morning is not a good option.  Stopping somewhere to pick up something in the morning is also not a good option due to the fat content found in most fast food.  So, I settled on cereal.  Whole grain cereal is an excellent choice in the morning – filling, a great source of fiber, and a good way to keep one’s blood sugar balanced throughout most of the morning.  But, milk was a problem.  I had no container particularly suited to going back and forth from apartment to work, nor was keeping it in the fridge at work a good option.  So, I decided on yogurt – a tremendous source of calcium and good stomach flora.

Yogurt is available everywhere, in every form, throughout the Middle East.  The stuff is a staple here, much more so than in the USA, where it has gained a foothold over the last several years.  Never big on its flavor, I opted for yogurt with fruit at first.  That lasted for a couple of months.  But, after some study, I realized I got more bang for my buck if I used plain yogurt.  I could add fruit if I wanted.  Or, I could make a dressing or dip with it.  Or, I could use it in various Indian dishes.  The flexibility totally became real to me.  Now, it’s one of the cheapest, most used food choices I buy each week at the grocery store.

Tonight, I made an awesome garlic, onion, and dill dip.  A teaspoon of each, salt and pepper to taste, and some crudités – and what an excellent, minimum calorie, very healthy dinner!  Pour it over a salad, and the dip becomes a salad dressing.   I mix it with cinnamon and cereal or oatmeal each morning – awesome way to eat cereal or oatmeal.  And, as I alluded to, I often mix it with some vegetables and curry to create some wonderful Indian dishes.  Seriously, I can think of few foods more flexible.

Yogurt.  It does a body good.  Much more so than dust and heat.  Not as dangerous as free love.

New Blue Jeans…

…bought some new blue jeans this week…four pair.  My old ones had become tents on me…belt cinched up tightly and still sliding over my hips…seat hanging down to my knees…I looked like an old guy trying to be a skater.

I bought the first pair at a legit Levis Store in one of the major malls.  They cost me SR367.  That’s $97 per pair.  Ouch!

Today, I went with a friend to a clothing souq and visited several stores that sell “Levis” and “Dockers” and just about any other name brand you could want.  I bought 3 pair of “Levis” for SR100.  That’s $8.89 per pair. 

I’ll bet they’re real.  Huh?  They had the tags, so they HAVE to be real, right?!

😉

207

Woohoo!

My official weigh-in today was at 207!

What is the significance, you ask?  That is the lowest weight I got during my first Weight Watchers incarnation back in 2004!  I shall soon lay that ghost to rest and trod upon new ground!

8 more pounds to reach my goal of being below 200 pounds by the time I turn 50!

“Have you been losing weight?”

Waiting for a meeting to start, one of the other managers sits down across from me. 

We’ve both been incredibly busy, so we haven’t talked in awhile.  He’s quiet for a bit, then he says, “Greg…have you been losing weight?”

“Yes.  Thank you for noticing.  I’ve lost 56 pounds or 23 kilos.” 
(The rest of the world uses metric…turns out it’s 25 kilos, btw.)

“It’s really obvious.”

🙂