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You can't call it a failure if you learn from it.

5/28/2017

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The month of May is wrapping up and so is my most recent challenge of no sugar, flour, white potatoes, corn, milk, and cheese.  In the spirit of transparency, I will admit that I wasn’t 100% successful this time around, but I’m still pretty proud of my accomplishment.

People often ask me what the point of these challenges are, especially since I’m already a pretty picky person and it just limits my eating even more.  I’ve thought a lot about the answer and it really comes down to helping me realize what I am capable of living without.  You see, each of the items on my list were all things that I swore I couldn’t live without for a week, let alone a whole month.  With each successive challenge, I was able to remove the shackles of that particular food group from my eating.

As people go on “diets” or other restrictive eating programs, it seems they identify a couple of foods that they enjoy and are also within the parameters of their current eating regime.  These foods tend to become the crutch that helps them survive the timeframe of their restrictive eating, so often it becomes a sad trade off where you don’t get out and experience new foods, but instead just stick to what you know.  Often times, the over dependency on certain “healthier” foods might actually make those foods work against you.  This is something I discovered early on with my first no sugar/no flour challenge when I leaned too heavily on white potatoes, French fries, and corn so my results were minimized.

As I built up my confidence with completing the first challenge, it gave me the courage to eliminate something else in addition to sugar and flour, so white potatoes went.  Then after a few months, I once again wanted to challenge myself and added corn and corn based products, simply because corn tortilla chips were becoming a part of my weekly eating routine.  So corn was added to the list of no-no’s and still survived without it.

For over a year I was able to balance my intake on corn and white potatoes, but as I looked at my diet I quickly realized that cheese was filling in the void left by eliminating those other foods.  Up to that point, I felt that cheese was never going to be something I could live without, which made it a perfect candidate to go.  To my surprise, chees was easier to give up than sugar and flour, so the first three weeks breezed by.  Near the end of May though, cheese sought me out as an ingredient for a meal or two and I ended up eating it instead of seeking out something else.

I don’t consider the month a failure though for a couple of reasons.  First, I’ve realized that cheese doesn’t need to be such a big deal in my life anymore.  I don’t need to sprinkle it on all the foods I did previously, and I’ll still live without having a block to slice up when I need a quick snack.  In fact, I realized that by not having cheese at those “snack” times, I really wasn’t hungry at all and didn’t try to use another food to fill the gap.  This was the equivalent of me reaching into my daily eating and removing close to 1000 calories a day, but not replacing them.  The results from this month have been wonderful on my waistline.  (If you think 1000 calories of cheese is a lot, take a look at the portion size and you’ll see how fast someone can get there in a couple of meals.)

So once again, the education about my capabilities is reinforced and I realize that I’m able to do more than I imagined I could.  This message is really what my book and continuous challenges are all about, encouraging you to tackle one month just to see how it impacts you.  People are always quick to say what they can’t live without, but they just go off of what they know and not what they want to test.  I know you can make a change for at least a month, maybe more.  I hope that one day you’ll realize the same thing and that the day comes soon.
​

John Graham
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May 7th, 2017 - Update on my latest challenge and more.

5/7/2017

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ello Everyone.
Over the past year I’ve gone through a variety of challenges with my eating habits to encourage a healthier lifestyle for myself.
  It started with giving up sugar and flour for a month and then has sporadically grown to include other foods that I began to rely on too much when not eating sugar and flour.  These challenges have become less about weight loss and more about an attempt to see what I am capable of when I put my mind to it.  Throughout the entire process, I’ve tried to be as open with others as possible so they can gain insight into my journey and decide to take on a challenge themselves.

In this month of May, I am challenging myself on a grander scale than ever before.  Not just giving up sugar and flour, but also white potatoes, corn, milk, and cheese.  This may seem crazy to you, but this is my way of determining my dependency on these “crutch” foods that I find myself relying on as I try to be healthier.  I don’t hold any personal ill will towards white potatoes and corn, I simply found myself eating French fries, corn chips, and other snack foods a little too often, which worked against me even as I ate no sugar or flour.  Cheese is a whole other issue, stemming from what could be called an addiction to the delicious substance.  I ended up putting cheese on too many foods and found myself snacking on cheese cubes when I wanted to curb my hunger. 

I always said that I could give up everything else, but I could never give up cheese, but as I continue to evolve my mindset I realize that I can do anything, including just that.  So, this blog is to talk about my first week without cheese and I want to warn you in advance that I’ll be candid about the effects of this week on my body to help others who may experience the same.  As always, I’m not a doctor or dietician, so the experiences are mine and may not reflect all of society.  So here we go.

Unlike giving up sugar and flour for the first time, I never felt cravings for cheese during this week.  Maybe I’ve just gotten to a point where I can give things up for a month and my mind just goes along with me now.  There were not longings or dreams about the dairy delight.  I will say that food that I used to enjoy with cheese seemed blander, so I found myself using more spices than typical.

The biggest difference came with my bowel movements, that started coming more frequently and seemed to not give me as much notice as before.  Looking back at the week, I feel like the amount of cheese I ate, (which was a lot), acted as a binding agent that kept things moving at a slower and more controlled pace.  Without that binding, some foods seemed to process through me much quicker than that they had in the past, especially those higher in fiber.  After five days, I stepped on the scale and found that I lost almost 8 pounds, which was quite shocking to me because I didn’t feel much different than a week before.  Sure, I had gone to the gym 4 days that week, but I had never seen those results in the past.  As I reflect on it, I’m imagining that I had multiple days’ storage of waste in my bowels, but it had all been coming out with nothing bad going in.  Sort of like cleaning out a clogged drain, even though I never felt like I was constipated to this point.

If this concept of bowel storage freaks you out, then you might not want to research it, because it’s a real thing and you probably have a few pounds worth of food still working its way through your intestines as you read this.

While I liked losing the weight, as the week progressed I found the downside.  Irritable stomach pains based on what I ate and a sensitivity to some high fiber foods, which seemed to flow right through me.  As a person who’s been on a regular bowel movement schedule my entire adult life, the randomness of needing to poop was not an exciting side effect.  But, like any new eating pattern, I am quickly figuring out my balance of food intake and what it does to me shortly after.  This has also made me think more about portion control than ever before, which has also contributed to my positive weight results.

I tried to do some research and provide links, but everything I can find was more on the other negative effects of dairy or the horrors of the dairy industry.  I’m not trying to disparage the industry or get you to hate cheese, because I’m sure I’ll go back to its loving arms after the month of May.  This challenge is giving me a better understanding of my body before giving up cheese, during the process, and then as reintroduce it later.  Sorry to be so graphic about my bowels, but I don’t mind embarrassing myself a little if it helps you out.
​

All the best!
John Graham
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Even though I miss the dairy delight, I'm learning quite a bit about myself this month.

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    John Graham operates FIGID Press and works closely with new creators to help them realize their goals.

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