Thursday, 23 December 2010

The Twelve Weighs of Christmas

My weightloss has hit a snag these last few weeks... fluid retention. Despite adhering to the diet, I gained four pounds two weeks ago, lost three and a half pounds last week, and then gained another five when I was weighed at Weightwatchers yesterday. This is yo-yoing of the worst kind, and to have it happen just before Christmas (and after months of reasonably careful eating) seems a bit unfair. But who do I blame? Is there a god of dieting? Is Dionysus still in business, looking down and laughing?


Sadly, the only way to cope with fluid retention is a regime of socially-inconvenient water tablets (which I'm on anyway; I've just increased my dose for 160mg to 200mg) and fluid restriction. This should be 1500ml a day, which is the rough equivalent of 4 cans of cola and a tiny cup of tea. At the moment, I'm aiming for 2000ml, working slowly down to 1500ml as I can - but it isn't easy.

Restricting food and restricting fluid at the same time is particularly tortuous; the last time I managed it successfully, I was in hospital, and it was a tremendous shock to the system. Eventually after around two weeks, I settled down and got used to my restricted fluids - but those initial fourteen days were very, very difficult. Going back to 1500ml now is something that fills me with dread, if I'm honest - which is why I'm trying to cut in down incrementally. But, if at least some of my weight gain is purely fluid, it should be worth it in the long-run: when I left hospital I had lost nearly two stone in two weeks...

What I intend to do over the Christmas holidays is weigh myself with the same scales every day, at the same time, after taking my water tablets at the same time, and see if it fluctuates. I've decided to call this "The Twelve Weighs of Christmas" (if nothing else, because it gives this post a snappy title) and any drastic fluctuations in weight should give me an idea of just how bad my fluid retention is...

Anyway, Christmas...

... come round fast this year, hasn't it?

For those desiring weight loss, this time of year can seem a bit of a poisoned chalice. What is it actually for if you can't indulge and revel when the nights are at their shortest? The need for a midwinter celebration is common through many cultures and many religions. So how does a dieter cope? How do you avoid putting on another half stone while still joining in the week-long party?

Many people at my Weightwatchers meetings are either (a) just going to take "a week off", or (b) try to use "lighter" alternatives in their Christmas meals (pigs-in-blankets with lean bacon, steamed rather than roasted veg, sparrow rather than turkey, etc.) At first glance, the latter might seem the better option, but only - and it's a big "only" - if you can cope with the extra preparation and the (let's be honest) distinct possibility of culinary disappointment on December 25th.

For me, I intend to be good ... but not that good. I shall weigh myself every day (scout's honour) and try and restrict my fluids to 2 litres. As a diabetic, chocolates and sugary puddings and alcohol are all something I instinctively avoid, so that's an area of indulgence which thankfully is easily shut for me. But other things - genuine indulgences, particularly snacks and eating out - may prove far more resistant. Although whether their pull will be any stronger over the next week than over a dull weekend in February is yet to be seen!

Anyway - a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all our readers from the Quarter-Ton Couple! Have a good one, and we hope to see you all here again in the New Year: with fresh gym kits, blank weight trackers, sharp pencils and even sharper resolutions!

X

8 comments:

  1. I do enjoy your writing, John. You have my good wishes for success at 'not being too bad' this season. You are quite right about the boring weekend in Feb. It seems, though, that food is sneakily multi-purpose...it works when things are busy, and it works when things are slow. The trick is finding something ELSE that serves.
    I do think there is something in Diet Coke that is addictive and you go through withdrawal when you stop drinking it. I have found that after I have not had it for a while I really can't stand the taste.
    Happy Christmas to you and Deirdre. You are my favorite quarter ton couple!
    Doc

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  2. Have a great Christmas both, I look forward to following your weight loss journey in 2011.

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  3. Dont know about a god of dieting but there's a god of meatballs - he's very inspirational!
    http://zeusmeatball.blogspot.com/

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  4. Thanks for the comments. Merry Christmas to all - especially the god of meatballs! :-))

    (I might do a post about giving up Coke Zero in the New Year ... )

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  5. Hi - just popped in and have only read your opening para so far. I had to write this down while I think of it.

    If your body is retaining fluid, it suggests that your body is dehydrated. So reducing the voume of fluid going in is not going to help

    Sorry if this sounds like a nag and an unwelcome one too, but I don't think 4 cans of Diet Coke is going to do you any favours. I know, I know, you enjoy drinking it. And it's your right to choose what you want to drink but I'd be failing in my lurker status if I did not comment on your blog (well that's how I feel anyway). My OH tells me the same. Likes Diet Coke, doesn't want to cut down.

    But strange as it may seem, not getting enough fluid in can actually lead to fluid retention and bloating. And eating/drinking some specific types of things can make it worse. By limiting salty foods, caffeine, alcohol and fizzy drinks, fluid retention can improve. I don't set much store by water tablets to be honest.

    Water is better for us. I have adopted drinking weak squashes, adding water to juice drinks (icluding craberry juice which is good for healing IME) as well as plain water and tea.

    Best wishes xxx

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  6. Hi miss haversham
    I totally agree with you on the diet coke, it's not the best, but for now we've agreed to tackle one vice at a time.

    re the fluid retention, the heart specialist has specifically advised the restrictions, and we know they work. So hopefully john will be able to stick with it. It's helped him before.

    Best wishes and thanks for posting!

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  7. Hi Deirdre. Reviewing what I posted 27/12 I realise I sounded preachey but honestly that was not I intended. Sorry!

    My friend is doing WW and decided to take the week off. Re the 'lighter' options, the list made me smile. I have only recently discovered roasted veg,... well, that's not exactly true, but it has only recently become an option to consider when planning menus. Roasted veg seems quite popular.

    Anyways, I love my veggies esp. broccoli and if I am cooking I tend to opt for steamed veg. I don't really enjoy pigs-in-blankets (but cook them for others) and love turkey. Why opt for sparrow?! And maybe I am being pernickty but I don't get why the second option would involve more prep.

    *confused*

    I have read some older postings but have not come across anything that might explain why someone would weigh themselves once a day. Do you both weigh youtselves daily or is that only J's personal preference?

    I only ever weigh myself once a week at the most. So I am curious to know whether there is a benefit to doing it more often.

    Best wishes x

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  8. Hi Miss Haversham
    You didn't sound preachy at all! The daily weighing thing is because of John's heart condition. He's supposed to weigh himself every day to check for fluid retention. I weigh myself weekly like you - though I haven't for a few weeks now - naughty!

    I don't know about the extra prep for the WW dinner - I don't know what they were advising there! But the roast veg were yum!
    D x

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