Going Concern

Member Since 02/11/2014

  • Going Concern 7 years ago on I’m Going To Lose This Weight: Some Weird Things I Eat Now, Part 2

    I am fully in on RXBars. 210 calories, satiating, good protein source, and most importantly all real food. If you’re eating snacks with a bunch of ingredients you can’t pronounce and sugar substitutes, it’s often just a way for food manufacturers to pack more sweetness into fewer calories, however ultimately those ingredients can have worse counteractive effects on weight loss as normal sugar.

    In personal news, my 5 month diet/workout mark is tomorrow, just hit the 51lbs lost mark and ran my first half marathon in 1:47 and change. Next up, NYC Marathon in November.

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  • Going Concern 7 years ago on I’m Gonna Lose This Weight: Recipe Corner

    This is all good stuff and I’m sure is useful for people who cook, and obviously you’ve been very successful losing 80(?)+ lbs, but for guys working a 8-7 or longer who don’t cook much and want to get in shape quickly without putting their whole lives on hold, I thought I’d at least share my routine.

    I started working out on January 9th at 230lbs, so now I’m just about 15 weeks from when I got going and I weighed in this morning at 187.6. So down 43.3lbs in 15.5 weeks with noticeable muscle gains as well, over 2.75lbs per week. Still going to drop ~20-25 more before I maintain. Diet is the biggest part of this but you need to make a generally healthy lifestyle routine.

    Diet:
    Monday-Friday is CLEAN, no excuses, period. Every breakfast during the work week for me is an Rxbar and water (buy boxes of 12 on Amazon for $20-25), every lunch is a Kale Caesar with Chicken at Chopt. Breakfast and lunch M-F is almost half of your weekly meals, and there’s no way to mess those up if you eat the same thing every time. It’s boring but I like the food so it works well for me. If I’m really hungry during the afternoon on a day I have a workout, I’ll have another Rxbar or Clif Bar, but stay away from anything that uses a lot of fake sugar (Kind bars, ThinkThin, etc. Anything that’s ingredients list is mostly things you cannot pronounce).
    Dinner is always after I workout after work. I bought a Ninja blender on Amazon and go to an organic market on my block to buy a bunch of frozen fruit, granola, and acai to make acai bowls at home which are cheap/healthy/filling dinners that taste good. That’s a third of my dinners probably. I also sometimes pick up sweetgreen/chopt or once a week grab an italian sandwich. If I go for a long run on Saturdays I’ll have something high carb at a restaurant on Friday night like Pasta or Indian food.

    On the weekends, live your life. I don’t count alcohol calories because you’ll drive yourself insane doing that and obviously I’m making good progress anyways. If I’m not doing anything during the afternoon I’ll still try to get a salad or something light for lunch, but I love going out to dinner with friends and my girlfriend, and you can’t cut off your social life to lose weight or you’ll gain it back quickly when your diet “finishes” and your lifestyle returns to normal. Don’t order too many apps and you can easily make up for whatever you enjoy on the weekend during the week.

    Exercise:
    I’m training for a half marathon which is coming up in like 3.5 weeks, which has really helped me stay on track with my workouts as I’m actually training for a tangible goal. Big motivator. Running is tough on the body but obviously an excellent workout and gets hugely easier after the first couple weeks, and building up mileage slowly makes it easier to see that you’re getting better at it. I also signed up for classpass which helps significantly. My current exercise routine roughly looks like…
    M- 5 mile run
    T- 60 minute flywheel
    W- 5 mile run
    Th- Off
    F- Swim laps at easy pace, 30 mins
    S- Long run (build up mileage here slowly towards eventual race)
    Su- Boxing

    This is a rough schedule as life demands can vary it significantly, and of course you can’t start running 5 miles twice a week right away. I still maintain that the slow as shit 1.5 mile run I did for my first workout of all of this is the hardest I’ve ever done.

    This all said, the main point is that if you don’t bullshit yourself and actually commit to a routine, it’s possible to make significant change in your body/health in relatively short order without totally disrupting your life. If I can do it, someone who’s not been an athlete since high school baseball and had never run longer than a mile in my life, you can too.

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  • Going Concern 7 years ago on 'Friends The Musical' Is Headed To NYC To Dethrone 'Hamilton'

    Nobody gives a shit about the TV or Movie remake musicals. American Psycho was on broadway for a second last year and it totally flopped – I’m a big fan of the movie but it would have been a waste of money to even check out. This will be equally bad. Hamilton is in a league of its own.

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  • Going Concern 7 years ago on From Couch To 10k: I'm Training For A Bachelor Party

    Running gets immensely easier if you keep at it more than a month or so. I was laughably (like 50 pounds) out of shape at the beginning of the year, started training for a half marathon and I’ve dropped 30 pounds in 11 weeks and just ran a 7:56/mile 10k on Saturday. I know it gets shit on a lot but it’s undeniably an excellent workout and gets way easier when you make it a routine.

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  • Going Concern 7 years ago on Saying Goodbye To Boston: Moving In Manhattan Is Impossible

    Your first mistake was choosing to live in what sounds like Murray Hill or Midtown, and the second was using your own UHaul. Moving in the city is easier the second time around, just use a service to wrap up all your stuff and transport it to your next place same day. It’s well worth the cost.

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  • Going Concern 7 years ago on I’m Going To Lose This Weight: Going Dry

    This is horribly false. You’re not going to be close to the level of “starving yourself” necessary for this to happen by cutting out a few hundred calories every day. Limiting calorie intake to less than you burn over the course of a day is the absolute only guaranteed weight loss technique, and it works for everyone. If you’re doing this and not losing weight, then you’re counting wrong.

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