This is Me at 40…

This is me in 2006. 

 

Me in 2006

 

I turn 40 years old today. This is what I look like now. 

Meat40

The difference here is around 50 pounds, or about 8 large college textbooks. I used to weigh 20 pounds more than that but I don't have any pictures from that time. When someone holding a camera would yell "Everybody look over here!" I'd leave the room. Photos from that time that did catch me were immediately rounded up and destroyed. 

As of today I weigh 185 pounds, 70 lbs less than I did in my late 20s. I've long passed out of the range of my size being a health hazard, a dark promise to future me that I'd be living a shorter, more painful life as I aged. 185 had been a goal my trainer and I set at the beginning of the summer, to be reached by Aug. 1st. When I reported my victory, he geared our entire Aug. 1 workout around a 70 lbs. kettle bell. We finished with me carrying it, like a pail of sand, around the building. 

A pail of sand weighs less than 70 lbs. This was more like 7 medium-sized bowling balls out for a walk. Those bowling balls used to be part of me, rolling under my the skin of chest, resting below my chin and under my eyes, assuring me, according to one doctor that the weekly occasions when I'd wake up unable to breathe would get worse and one day, could be fatal.

 I did not do this for the noblest of reasons. Of course I wanted to be healthier, to not pant climbing a staircase, fall ill twice a month or sweat while standing still. Just as much I wanted to buy clothes without having to place special orders, have an easier time attracting women, and watch a movie without thinking everyone who looks like me ended up falling into a swimming pool or slow-clapping while the thinner hero made out with the pretty heroine. 

And I didn't want to be scared of food. I love to eat, everything about it, around it, in anticipation of it. That will not change nor did I think it should. If food were only supposed to be glorified energy suplements, then clothing should only be glorified blankets and homes only glorified  rainflys to keep out stormy weather. Food is a basic joy of life. Which means eating should be a both a joy in the present but not one that robs joy from the future.

There's no magic for what I did. I ate slow enough to know when I was full, then stopped and learned to see leftovers as the chance to eat a great meal twice. I stayed away from bread, grains and any other food than made me feel physically worse after eating it. Eating something tasty knowing you'd feel sick later is like buying a new car then throwing yourself out of it on the freeway. Every other food I said yes to but learned say "It'll be here tomorrow" and stop after two bites. I'd try not to eat out too many nights in a row. I considered exercise anything that kept me moving between 40 minutes and an hour. I drank water, didn't do drugs nor consume alcohol. Which came easier for me than most people. I haven't been interested in drinking for a long time now. When I had a special occasion coming up I ate as one does during a special occasion then booked time at the gym the following morning. 

 None of this should surprise you. Nor will it when I say that losing weight is not the answer to life's problems nor any promise of happiness. Look out any window and you will see average weight miserable people, fulfilled large people, the anxious skinny, the inspiring fat and every possible combination in between. Life's great challenge is to have the body you have be the truest representation of your mind and heart acting in union. The shape of that is your business. 

Kevin at 255 lbs was an angry, self-righteous wounded person, a young man who used his large size to explain away why he couldn't achieve what we wanted and why that was everyone else's fault. My weight was not a simply matter of the parts I came with. It was a living, growing, aching manifestion of how certain I was everyone else got to be happy but me. 

I needed to get far happier before I could do any of this, just to get out of my own way. I didn't have the fufilling career, the wonderful marriage, the unyielding support of friends and family back then the way I have it now. But I had enough to know that living that way wasn't what I was meant for, that by being this defensive, embittered person, I was not only consigning myself to sadness but laying waste to my own life in front of everyone who cared about me. I did it just as much as a thank you to them for caring when I clearly did not. 

There's another way to go now. I'd like my body to reach newer athletic heights I never thought it would in middle age. I don't have any secret desire about competiting in a triathalon or something like that but living at my physical potential is a gift I didn't know I'd have and don't intend to let pass. I'd like to dance more, which I've loved doing since I was a child but always embarassed me. If you don't get that, try not giggling the next time you see a fat white guy bust a move. 

Most importanly, I'm planning on living a good long time, thanks very much. And to do so, in pride and not shame, in gratitude instead of indignation, as this me, instead of some disfigured imposter ashamed of me. 

If I can do this, it is all the birthday present I need. It is the gift that will keep on giving for the rest of my life. 

This is me at 40. The real me. Forever. And now. 

Then Again, Maybe Not:

So I’ve got what’s being referred to around the way as SXSaRS, I’ve got the flu. Which means my writing on the experiences of the last few weeks will have to wait one more day.

Please, no gasping from the galleries. It’s best this way for all of us.

Scary Email News:

So guess what? We hold our breath when reading email.

That’s downright scary. I tried to hold my going past a cemetery last week and made it about 25% of the way. I suck at holding my breath. And I’ve been known to suffer from sleep apnea.

So what’s the latest horrifying thing we do while plotting through our ordinary lives? Fainting while rolling over? Paralysis while organizing the refrigerator? A series of strokes while tying our shoes?

I’m going back to bed (via Caterina.net).

Stand in the place where you are…

ABC News: The answer to excess weight may be not more exercise but more standing up. Researchers are noting that our key fat burning muscles are in our legs and back and that "standing up and puttering" may be just as important as hitting a 5 PM kick boxing class.

I’m seeing a series of standing seminars, each of us in thick shoes which phone books balanced on our heads.

There’s gold here. Eh? Who’s with me (via Cody Fielding)?

Felled by Snot:

I am not proud of this but I have been brought low by allergies. For most my adult life, I’ve been No Allergy Person (NAP) who would zoom on where others weezed and complained about the coming of spring. Now I am the guy watching hour 4 of Friday Night Lights, home on a Friday Night while my nose mimicks Mount Kilauea. Except with snot.

My college buddy Dave used to spend 3 days in bed at the beginning of every allergy season. He was also the guy who would beg out of social engagements to fold napkins or back up his Palm Pilot so I figured him for the introverted type. Now I get it. My nose feels like a giant, bleeding tumor welded to my face. I have the energy of a wet mop.

Have fun without me, you, you crazy kids at the horse races. You, you lushies out getting lushed. Save yourselves. Even all ya’ll doing something with robots that I don’t understand. Get wired. I need to get well

The Kitchen is Closed…

After two straight weeks of out of town guests and a surprise trip to Los Angeles, I’ve never been so tired in my life. Apologies to those I had social obligations with this evening. I’m going to bed.

The Fine Art of Napping:

As a believer in the fine art of napping, it hurt to learn that the modern world killed off the nap and that some people still believe in this endangered pleasure. To wit…

We are a culture that celebrates action, doing, achieving, an attitude that leads to a disdain for sleep in general. We stay up late and get up early. We pull all-nighters. We’ll sleep when we’re dead, and in the meantime there’s always a Starbucks on the corner.

It’s a misguided attitude. A good nap is one of life’s great pleasures, and the ability to nap is the sign of a well-balanced life. When we nap we snatch back control of our day from a mechanized, clock-driven society. We set aside the urgency imposed on us by the external world and get in touch with an internal rhythm that is millions of years old.

Amen brother. (via AL Daily)

On Why You Won’t See Me Naked Here…

This from my friend Min Jung….


My personal relationships are not for public consumption or broadcast. There’s no PR in my romances. I find it horrifically offensive when people put broadcast spin of a web 2.0 nature on their personal relationships. That, I find really gross.

For instance, I received a sms msg via Dodgeball from someone I know stating “@ a very romantic place! having a brilliant conversation with my amazing boyfriend” To which I thought the following:

a) But not saying where you’re at, you kinda defeat the purpose of using dodgeball for its intended purpose

b) if the conversation is so brilliant, why are you dodgeballing in hoping someone will track you down to join you?

c) how amazing is it that this social utility, dodgeball, has been tweaked for such anti-social behavior

d) ok. you guys are squishy. we get it. now can we move on with our lives because the rest of the world really really isn’t that interested in your love life. i mean, it’s not like you’re tom cruise and katy holmes. and even them – i don’t really care much about. Not even in that (and don’t draw parallels here) train-wreck kinda way.

Yes, yes, yes and one second, yes. I do not use new media to broadcast who I’m dating or involved with because

A) It’s no one’s business.

B) I have a little dignity and thinking that the world needs to know everything I’m up to says more about my insecurity than it does about The Power of Technology or anything mythic and imaginary like that.

C) I still believe I exist even if no one flickrs/tags/dodgeballs/blogs/podcasts my wheelings and dealings.

D) If I don’t or if you don’t, I’m yanking the plug on (y)our hyperconnected lives right now and forcing you/us to communicate through a tin can telephone.

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