One Week Left

One week left until Day 90, and I can’t wait to get to it so I can start Power 90 Masters series and get rid of the next 30 pounds. As of this weekend, I hit 31 pounds lost, and I bought a new belt that will hopefully take me through the end of P90M.

In other news, Infinte Suns is seeing some progress again, though in a different form from the original MMO. It will be single player, and for the moment, will be essentially just a game where you fly your ship from station to station, trading or doing simple missions to gain money to buy new ships and weapons. Eventually, probably in IS2, it will have RPG elements like player stats and a skill tree, an optional storyline, more complicated missions, NPC’s that talk to you, etc… The goal, however, for the first iteration of Infinite Suns is just getting the basic game mechanics done and polished.

Day 77

There are two weeks left to go, and as of today, my weight loss stands at 29 pounds. I’m going to try to really push it and see if I can’t get that number up by doing an extra workout in the morning, probably just some light cardio (like bike riding) or something.

It’s hard to believe that the end of this program is so close. On Day 1, Day 90 seemed so very far away, almost like forever, but now that we’re down to it, it’s easy to see that 90 days really isn’t that much time. It doesn’t seem quick when you’re first starting out, but by the end you wonder where the time went, especially if you stick with it every day.

And that’s the key. Don’t slack off. Just do your workout every day, eat as clean as you can, and in no time, you’ll see results. But you have to work at it every day if you want to be fit and healthy. You can’t just lose a bunch of weight and then go back to your old habits or you will become the old you. It has to be a total lifestyle change.

After Day 90, we’re going to take a “break” from the heavy workouts for a week or so before getting into the Power 90 Masters series, which is on it’s way. I’m sooo looking forward to some new workouts. If there’s one unfortunate thing about power 90, it’s that there’s not enough variation in the routines to last 90 days without some amount of boredom toward the end. In fact, this last week, we substituted some other cardio workouts for the Sweat 3-4. For the last couple weeks, I think we’re going to rotate the three cardio workouts (Sweat 3-4, Power 90 Fat Burning Express, and Jillian Michaels Banish Fat Boost Metabolism). JM’s workout really kicked our butts because it was so different from what we’d been doing. Sweat poured off us in buckets.

Day 71

So I missed out on telling you about Day 60, at which point, the weight loss total was 23 pounds. But today was something much more momentous to me. I blew past the 200 pound barrier reaching 198.4. Probably the first time in 10 years that I’ve been under two hundred pounds. Total weight loss is now 27 pounds.

It’s tough going, really, trying to lose a lot of weight, but it’s totally worth the effort. I remember, back when I started, how few pushups I could do, and how few crunches, and the lack of weight on the weights. I’ve mentioned my starting pushup counts and ab rep counts, but I started out using five pound weights for all the sculpt exercises (presses, curls, etc…). Now I’m using 15 pound weights for almost everything (I still go down to 10 pound weights for two exercises), and I’m thinking I’m in need of some 20 pound weights. Last week, I regularly did 115 or more pushups in each sculpt workout (129 once).

If you’re sitting in front of your computer reading this, and you’re not spending 30 minutes a day exercising, and a typical meal is half a large pizza or a pound of chicken wings or large amounts of some other food, all it takes to lose weight and get your body back is 30 minutes of exercise and trimming the number of calories your eating. Just cut your portions in half and make sure you eat five times a day. Three meals and a couple of snacks. Your body was not designed to handle sloth and gluttony. It was designed for movement and scarcity. We live in a culture and a time that encourages the former – fight it and be what you are supposed to be. A lean, living machine.