140 Pounds?! How did you do it?!

 

This morning, I reached a huge milestone in my journey to good health. I am officially 140 lbs. lighter than when I started.

From my in-depth research, which included Google and little else, I discovered that this means I\’ve lost the equivalent of a Nikki Minaj. I\’ve lost an Angelina Jolie holding an Oscar and wearing 1.5 lbs. of bling. I\’ve lost a Beyonce carrying one of Angelina\’s adopted babies. So, yeah, I guess it\’s a lot of weight.

In addition to the fantastic encouragement I\’ve received from you four faithful readers, one of whom is my mother, I\’m getting the inevitable question, \”How?\” How on earth did I lose 140 lbs. where I couldn\’t before? How is it that I\’ve followed the most restrictive way of eating I\’ve ever attempted and succeeded after I failed at low-carb, fat-rich diets?

I\’ve been thinking about it a lot, because a trite answer is useless to anyone who might want to accomplish the same thing. I take it seriously, and truly want to help anyone achieve what I have.

As for the eating plan itself, I outline it here, and you can also read more about it at Dr. Esselstyn\’s website as well as the less restrictive Engine 2 Diet, created by Rip Esselstyn. Dr. Esselstyn\’s plan has been proven to halt and reverse heart disease, prevent diabetes and cancer and generally improve the health of everyone who commits to it. I truly believe it has saved my life.

But I\’ll also say that the diet was only a small part of it. Eating the way that I do has made me healthier than I\’ve been in a long time, but the \”diet\” itself is really just a guideline, a road map, pointing me in a direction. The rest is what I want to really share with you, because it\’s honestly the \”how I did it\” part.

1. Resolve

When I was faced with the truth of my heart disease, everything changed for me. I had been eating well, had lost 40 lbs. and had been maintaining that weight for awhile, but it wasn\’t enough. I was back in the hospital, getting two more stents, and facing a future of even more stents or, eventually, bypass surgery.

When I decided to follow Dr. Esselstyn\’s eating plan, I told myself, out loud, \”No matter what anyone else does, no matter where they eat, no matter what they put in front of me, no matter the social situation or event, no matter if I have to skip a meal, no matter what…I will only eat plant-based, whole foods. Period. For the rest of my life.\”

Eating this way became my life from that moment on. It was never a \”try it and see\” kind of experience for me. This was a complete rearrangement of my belief system about health and food and life. It was a paradigm shift. It was clear. It was concise. It wasn\’t vague at all. It was a very specific goal that I set my mind upon wholeheartedly.

This resolve and belief is at the core of any kind of lasting life change. If you don\’t have a good, fundamental, specific reason for making a change in your life, you won\’t stick with it because nothing is really at stake. I found my reason for doing this and to succeed, you\’ll have to do the same.

2. Emotion

People underestimate the power of emotion when pursuing a goal, but research says it\’s not only important, it\’s essential. Dan and Chip Heath\’s book, Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard, paints a picture of emotion as a huge elephant, being steered by \”the rider\” of your rational mind or your resolve.

Following Dr. Esselstyn\’s health plan is intensely emotional for me. My quality of life, my time with my wife and children, my goals and aspirations — living past 60 years old! — are all wrapped up in this life change.

Emotions can trip you up, they can lead you into dark places of despondency, where you\’re questioning whether or not you\’re doing the right thing. When pursuing a goal like this, you have to seize your emotions, finding the feeling behind the change. What will it feel like to be healthy? What will it feel like to come off your meds? How will it feel to be able to play with your children, move easier and help around the house?

Latch onto these emotions and use them to drive you in your quest for your goal.

3. Adventure

Adventure is really just another word for \”journey,\” which is the word I use to remind myself that nothing comes quick and easy. This is a lifestyle. This is one step in front of the other. This is a path on which I sometimes trip and fall, have to get up and then sometimes fall again.

My battle with soda was a rough patch in my journey, but one I eventually travailed. Some of the foods I was eating contained oil or animal products without my knowledge, and I had to adjust to rid them from my diet. In those slip-ups, I didn\’t quit. I\’m on an adventure, and those types of changes and adjustments are par for the course.

When you\’re on a journey, you keep moving. You keep following the path and sometimes, you get to look back and say, \”Wow, look how far I\’ve come.\” But you keep walking.

4. Preparation

I\’ve talked about this several times before, but I\’ll say it again. Preparation is the key to eating to live. I am constantly thinking about my next meal, the next family get-together, the next office party. The old adage, \”if you fail to plan, you plan to fail\” is absolutely true.

I make sure I have lunch and snacks for work. If I don\’t, I\’m basically giving myself an open door to possible failure. There aren\’t any vegan fast food places I know of, and even the healthier restaurant chains don\’t offer choices for strict vegans who don\’t eat oils of any kind.

I\’ve gotten amazing support from my wife in this (all of this!), and she helps me to make sure I have food for each day. I won\’t go to bed until I\’m sure I have breakfast, lunch and dinner (if necessary) away from home.

The Secret Sauce

If you didn\’t notice, I took a bit of artistic liberty, stretching a bit in the process, to create an acrostic that I hope you\’ll remember: REAP. In the Bible, Galatians 6:7 says, \”for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap.\”

You want to know the \”secret sauce\” to losing this kind of weight? It\’s the same secret sauce that drives any and all success stories, and it took me 40 years (and a movie about an overweight panda who practices Kung Fu) to figure it out.

There is no secret sauce. You will only reap from something in equal measure what you\’ve put into it. Mastery, success, results and excellence only come from persistence, determination and work.

So what will you do today to get started?

6 thoughts on “140 Pounds?! How did you do it?!”

  1. Elizabeth Gilmer

    I still stand by my first impression — you are a rock star – a healthy , handsome rock star but a rock star, all the same. Inspired!!!

  2. This is quite a journey. Maybe give us an example of your meal plan. I am curious to see your typical days diet. Congrats to you and your family.

    1. Hi, Jennifer! I’d be glad to.

      Generally, for breakfast I have Old Fashioned oats, with a little brown sugar and cinnamon, a dash of vanilla and sliced bananas. That’s about the extent of my sugar content most days. If I don’t do that, I’ll just have fruit.

      Lunch is usually beans and rice of some sort. I’m really partial to black-eyed peas and brown rice, but this varies. Sometimes I’ll have a Mexican dish with corn tortillas (only the tortillas with corn, water and lime as ingredients) and some seasoned black beans, or sometimes some leftover whole grain spaghetti with sauteed chickpeas. We get a ton of recipes from the Happy Herbivore Everyday cookbook. Great stuff there.

      Dinner is a range of things, usually, from the Mexican dishes, to black bean burgers, spaghetti, vegetable stir fry and the like. We try to make enough that I’ll have leftovers for lunch the next day. It’s all about preparation!

      There are so many great vegan, no-oil recipes out there. It’s honestly a great time to be a herbivore! 🙂

  3. Doy – You are always such an inspiration to me and congrats on losing almost the equivalent weight of one “Carl!” (I have lost 20.4 lbs since my heart attack and presently weight around 135 pounds.) Your posts are always so encouraging to me so know we are all so proud of you and that you have such a positive effect on us so…KEEP ON DOING GREAT JUST LIKE YOU ARE. IT’S WORKING! (and rubbing off on all of us too!)

    1. Thanks so much, Carl! You guys inspire me more than you know. I think accountability is such a huge part of weight loss and health, and it’s one of the reasons I write in this little corner of the web. Every time I hit a goal, I think of you guys, too.

      Keep up the great work!

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