The Biggest Loser – Season Eight – Finale

December 10, 2009

It’s over.

  • Congratulations to Danny on winning the whole thing.
  • Congratulations to Amanda for winning America’s vote for a 2nd time.
  • Congratulations to Antoine and Alexandra for getting engaged on TV during the Biggest Loser finale. Just like every little girl’s dream! And congratulations to Antoine on resisting the pressure from NBC to insert a little product placement and say, “You know, Alexandra, they say every kiss begins with Kay. Will you accept my proposal by accepting this ring from Kay Jeweler’s? Since 1916 America’s #1 jewelry store, Kay Jewelers.”
  • Congratulations to Rebecca for winning the at-home competition and proving me eerily prescient when I said in the first post on this series that she was going to be the hot one come finale time. Although the blond hair is a mis-step.
  • Congratulations to Tracey for still seeming disturbing and crazy despite her success losing the weight.
  • Congratulations to Sean on the birth of his daughter who he named after Jillian. Much better choice than naming her Dr. Huizenga.

Miscellany

December 8, 2009

Christmas

It’s the most wonderful time of the year! That’s because it’s the time of year where I don’t actively think much about trying to lose weight.  That area between Halloween and New Year’s is the time when I think you shouldn’t worry too much about that kind of stuff. I realize that amounts to taking 2 months off every year, but ideally you want to someday take all your time off from actively dieting without gaining the weight back, so this two months is good practice.

I took this picture outside of Macy’s last night. We haven’t really had any snow in New York City yet, but it’s still a great time of year to be in the city.

Raw Food

I heard an interview this morning with somebody who was promoting the raw food vegan lifestyle. Which — if it’s not self-evident — means not only eating vegan, but not cooking anything. The argument is that our body wasn’t meant to digest cooked food and therefore it requires too much energy. That’s why you get tired in the middle of the day, they said. I don’t think I buy that. If eating cooked food made people sluggish and worn out, wouldn’t our ancestors have noticed it the first time they started eating cooked food? And wouldn’t they all have died out because all the slow, cooked-food eaters would be getting pounced on by mountain lions while the raw foodies would be sprinting through the plains.

Can any raw food proponents send me an email and answer that question? I’m not trying to be combative, I’m just curious. If we’re not supposed to eat cooked food, then why did we, as a species, almost universally start doing so?

Biggest Loser

Season Finale tonight. Get your bowl full of Extra Sugar-Free Gum and Jennie-O turkey meat and enjoy the show.

The Biggest Loser – Season Eight – Ep. 12

December 3, 2009

Apparently there was an episode last week, but my DVR didn’t record it, so as far as I’m concerned, it doesn’t exist.  We only have one episode left. Do you have your votes in for who you want to be the third finalist? Seriously? Well, that’s admirable. I would have a hard time putting a vote in for that given that I didn’t vote in the last presidential election. My apathy has to be consistent.

About this episode:

  • It was the homecoming episode which I’m sure local poster-board manufacturers look forward to all year long. I’m not sure it’s necessary to hold up a sign when you’re one of 18 people in a crowd. I feel like you could just pass your well-wishes along verbally. My favorite is when they have a sign that says, “Michael is our Biggest Loser!” because outside of the context of winning this show (which the person clearly didn’t), that’s an insult.
  • While I was watching this episode I began to wonder if this show is predictable or if human beings are predictable, because the time spent at home for each contestant seemed to follow the same pattern: Excited to be home, tears for how much they’ve changed, talk about giving up, strain on the relationship, etc.  Everyone seems surprised that they can’t find 6 hours a day to work-out.
  • We were overwhelmed with product placement this week. We heard about: Extra Polar Ice Gum, The Biggest Loser Wii game, Jennie-O Turkey, The Biggest Loser Resort, Biggest Loser protein by Designer Whey, and Subway party platters (which Bob suggests you bring with you to any party you’re invited to so you’ll have something to eat). And really, what says to your hostess, “I appreciate the weeks of planning and days of cooking that you put into this party,” more than showing up with the world’s most mediocre sandwiches because you’re too scared to eat her food.
  • I will also count the return of “celebrity chef” Curtis Stone as product placement, because he brings nothing to the program.
  • Are we supposed to be left with the impression that Liz and her bountifully mustachioed husband aren’t going to be together much longer? Because that’s certainly what it seemed like. She was much happier to see some of the returning contestants from last season than she was her husband along the marathon route.
  • Speaking of, I know it’s supposed to be a testament to the contestants will and commitment that they can run a marathon with little training, but it ends up just making me think, “Oh, I guess running a marathon isn’t that difficult.” I’m horrible.

I’ll pulling for Amanda in the finale, just because she seems like the biggest underdog, but I will put my money on Rudy.

A Course in Self-Discipline – Week Three

November 30, 2009

So now it’s week three, the final week of the course in self-discipline.  Here’s what you need to do:

Day One - Go to the store and buy your favorite brand of chips or cookies or whatever snack you really like. Go home, open it up and eat one serving size. Leave it on the counter and do not touch it again the rest of the week.

Day Two – Skip breakfast then go into your favorite fast-food place for lunch. Get one small thing to eat and a water and leave.

Day Three – Set your alarm for 3:3o in the morning. Wake up, do two jumping jacks, go back to bed.

Day Four – Bake some cookies. Wrap two in foil for yourself and then give the rest to a neighbor or co-worker.

Day Five –  Go to an all-you-can eat buffet (a cheap one). Fill up your plate just once. Eat it and go.

Also, gather up all your old diet books and donate them to the public library.

Day Six – Do one sit-up a minute for 60 minutes.

Day Seven – You made it, congratulations. Have your favorite meal to celebrate. A lot of books will tell you not to celebrate weight-loss or sticking to a weight-loss plan with food.  That’s because they think you’re too weak to be able to enjoy a nice meal without completely going off the deep-end. But I disagree. You can have a good meal and then go back to whatever your weight-loss plan is as soon as you set down the fork.

Also, if no one else in the house has eaten it in the past week, throw out whatever it is you bought on day one.

There you have it.

See how it builds? In week one you practice doing random things you don’t want to do. In week two you practice doing thing you don’t want to do that may have some emotional weight to them. In week three you practice doing things you don’t want to do that have some relationship to your overall goal. So if your goal is to stop smoking then in week three you’ll spend one day not smoking after you eat (or whenever it is people smoke) or going out drinking and not smoking. Or whatever, I don’t know, I don’t smoke.

What you want to do is to put yourself in the position to fail, and then when in that position, make the choice not to fail.

You might say, “Well sure, I can put myself through these little tests, but that doesn’t mean I’ve developed any self-discipline.” I understand that logic. But here’s the deal, everything is just a series of little tests.  Waking up 20 minutes early to walk a mile every day is a daily test. Getting a single doughnut as opposed to a half-dozen is a test you might deal with once a week. But now you can look back and say, “I can wake up a little early to get in some exercise. Hell, one time I woke up in the middle of the night to do two jumping jacks.” Or, “I don’t have to eat everything they have at this superbowl party. One time I went to an all-you-can-eat buffet and just had one plate of food.”

I know the argument will be, “Why practice eating one doughnut? Why have one serving of the snack-food you know you shouldn’t have any of. Why not just practice not going to the doughnut joint or buying any junk food.” Because, I don’t want you to be scared of food. I want you to have mastery over it. Even if it’s a complete struggle for you, you can still master the impulse.

I may have used this analogy before — and whether I have or haven’t I know I’ve thought about it before which is pretty disturbing. If I have to have a pedophile living next door to me, I want the one who has dealt with the impulses and is now able to be around children without acting out on those impulses. I don’t want the guy who has locked himself away so that he doesn’t see any kids and that’s what keeps him from acting out. That guy is weak. And as soon as it happens that he has cracked the door open to get the newspaper at the exact moment my son is walking by, then POOF, there goes Junior’s pants.

Self-discipline is about having the impulses but not acting on them (or, in the case of exercise, not having the impulse but doing it anyway). I want you to be able to walk into Taco Bell and just come out with one or two things. I don’t want you hiding from high calorie food and subsisting on just lettuce and puffed rice and one day when you pass a Taco Bell you end up raping a burrito. Got it?

Well, I will find no greater summary than that last statement. I hope my attempt to codify the manner in which I kind of organically improved my own self-discipline will help others or give them something to think about. If you have any questions, send me an email.

 

 

The Biggest Loser – Season Eight – Ep. 10

November 20, 2009

I don’t have time for a proper write-up, but for the sake of completion I wanted to make a post.  It was make-over week! But then again every week is make-over week on The Biggest Loser one would think. It was an okay episode. Nothing too exciting. At one point Tim Gunn from Project Runway (who was assisting with the make-overs) said to Rebecca, “You look like a movie star!” I was hoping and praying he would follow that up with, “The girl from Precious.” But no luck.

 

 

A Course in Self-Discipline – Week Two

November 19, 2009

In week one the goal was getting yourself to do things you had no desire to do, but they were all random, meaningless gestures. This week you are going to do one thing per day that you have been putting off. These are 7 things that you know you should do, but you haven’t been able to get yourself to do for at least a month.

Now, I can’t tell you what these tasks should be because I don’t know you. But they should be things you’ve put off for some time now. Some examples:

  • Household fixes you’ve been putting off: changing a light bulb or a smoke alarm battery, fixing a wobbly table leg, tightening a screw that is keeping a cupboard door from closing correctly, cleaning out a junk-drawer, taking down that out-of-date calendar.
  • Write a letter to someone you haven’t communicated with in a while that you don’t want to lose contact with.
  • Make a doctor or dentist appointment.
  • Drop off old clothes at Goodwill

Make your list.

You might assume this would be an easier assignment than last week when you had to do 7 meaningless tasks, but I find it’s not. There’s no psychological weight to meaningless tasks, and they’re novel, so they’re easier to do. But making an appointment with a doctor or doing things to take care of your home can have meaning to you beyond the action itself. And that meaning can get in your way much more so than the actual difficulty of the task will.

So don’t think about why you should do the task. Don’t think, “I should go through these magazine and throw out the ones I will never read again. I don’t want to do it. But if I don’t do it, nobody else will. And then we will have magazines all over the place and the house will look like a shit-hole. And then my mother-in-law will visit and think I’m not good enough for her son. And then I’ll question this whole stupid marriage.” You don’t want to fall in that hole of critiquing yourself or trying to justify things or finding faults and flaws in things — you just want to throw out the fucking magazines. So instead your thought process should be this, “I should go through these magazines and throw out the ones I will never read again. I don’t want to do it… but getting myself to do things I don’t want to do is my new thing so I’ll just go ahead and do it.” Try to think of nothing else about a task other than that you know you should do it but don’t want to. The goal here is that hopefully one day your desire not to do something will be your cue to actually do it.

Look, I’m not a self-help guy, and would never want to be. I’m just trying to break down a technique that I came to organically in my life. It would be great if this helped someone else out too. But if not, I hope it’s at least an interesting thought experiment.

So, in week one you do 7 pointless things you don’t want to do.

In week two you do 7 productive things you know you should do, but still don’t want to do.

In week three you will apply this technique to whatever your specific goal is. For the purposes of this blog it is weight-loss.

The Biggest Loser – Season Eight – Ep. 9

November 12, 2009

It was a double-elimination week this week on The Biggest Loser. And given some of the big numbers people were putting up, it looks like the contestants were doing some double-eliminating of their own –laxative style– if you know what I mean.

Also:

  • It being a double-elimination week, the trainers were plotting ways to keep Shay in the game because she “needs to be here.” (I’m looking forward to them getting the news she got booted next week.) I was kind of hoping they would go out of their way to sabotage some of the other players. I was expecting some bizzarro-world versions of their typical product placement to screw with the others, i.e., “You know what’s a great substitute for Extra Sugar-Free Gum? Fudge.”
  • Speaking of product placement. This week Bob told them all about how great and nutritious Lara Bars. But if they’re so great, why did he wait until week 9 to mention them?
  • If I was ever going to go on this show I would drink a gallon of uranium before the first weigh in. A gallon of liquid uranium weighs around 144 pounds. Then you pee it out a little later and just like that you’ve lost almost 150 pounds in your first week on the ranch. And as far as I know, science has never said you shouldn’t consume uranium. Wait… let me wiki that… okay — check that — apparently it will kill you. Never mind.

A Course in Self-Discipline – Week One

November 10, 2009

Ok, so self-discipline is all about being able to get yourself to do things you don’t want to do. So to work on that we’re going to do some things we don’t want to do. The first week is devoted to doing things that serve no functional purpose whatsoever. These activities aren’t going to help you lose weight, or affect any area of your life other than your self-discipline muscle. In most other respects they are completely useless. That’s okay. Some of this will probably seem childish because doing something for no reason is the type of thing children do. But just try to get past that this week. Next week we will focus on doing things you don’t want to do that are actually beneficial in some way.

So here’s the plan:

Day One – With your feet together, stand in one spot without moving or shifting your weight for 5 minutes. Realize that this simple act is something you’ve probably never done before unless you’ve worked as a human statue.

Day Two – Buy a bag of sunflower seeds. Count the number of seeds in the bag.

Day Three – At some point today, put the palm of your right hand on your forehead. Keep it there for 15 minutes.

Day Four – When you’re out somewhere, find someone you don’t know, who is not physically attractive to you, and who is not wearing a jacket you like. Say to them, “I like that jacket.” This will be very easy for some of you to do, and very difficult for others. That’s okay.

Day Five – Take a shower. At the end of it, turn the water to cold and stand under it. This will be unpleasant. Stay under the cold water and say the pledge of allegiance at a normal pace, then you can get out.

Day Six – Get a metal spoon and put it on the table. Stare at it for 5 minutes and try to bend it with your mind. Don’t let your mind wander. This is not about looking at a spoon while you think about your day, this is about concentrating for 5 minutes on bending the spoon. This is a particularly useless exercise because psychic powers don’t exist. It doesn’t matter. Try it anyway.

Day Seven – Get a sheet of paper and write this sentence 100 times, “I don’t want to write this sentence.” Fold it up and put it in your wallet or purse.

At the end of the week you will have done seven things that you did not have any natural inclination to do. Good job. That’s how it starts.

The Biggest Loser – Season Eight – Ep. 8

November 6, 2009

On this, a very special episode, the Losers go to Washington, D.C. to make a difference! Or, as Danny said, “We gotta get the word out that being obese is not the way to go.” Well, if you say so, Danny. I’m not quite ready to take that polarizing stance myself. But I guess that’s why they brought them to DC: to hold a mirror up to society. Or to hold their fat-pants up to senators (I’m going to start travelling around with a super larger pair of pants to hold up to senators and other people when I meet them and say, “These used to be my pants.”)

Also:

  • I really thought (read: hoped) that when Tracey got the boot she was going to pull out an uzi and spray everyone with bullets. I could see it behind her eyes. I loved her logic behind screwing everyone over which was, “I had to make those moves to stay in the game.” Listen, bitch, you left halfway through because you made yourself a target early on. You were the least threatening (because you had the least weight to lose) and could have floated to the end. I’m fine with you being crazy, just stop trying to justify it.
  • JetBlue, Subway, and Extra Sugar-Free Gum, all got in on the product-placement this week.  My favorite is always the Extra gum one. At this point they seem to be willing to imbue this gum with any magical properties they want. On this episode the claim was that it made a good ice-cream substitute. That was seriously their position. My hope is that next week they say, “You know, Thanksgiving is right around the corner. A lot of people are going to be filling up on turkey, mashed potatoes, stuffing, and pies. But just one stick of Extra Sugar-Free Gum….”
  • “We’re going to the White House (where we won’t see the president).” The biggest pump-fake of the season next to, “Here’s Derek Jeter (on the jumbo-tron).”
  • During the challenge they played this god-awful, corny song by Miley Cyrus. I like when singers or bands decide to write “inspirational songs.” It’s such a clearly calculated move. It’s like when Aerosmith is like, “Ok guys, I guess we should write a prom theme.” Do people really get inspired by a song that’s blatantly telling them to get inspired? If so, I’m going to get into the inspirational song-writing business. Here’s my first single:

Take Flight

Verse 1
There’s that thing you want to do
But you don’t know if you can
You question yourself and your abilities
Well here’s your new plan

Verse 2
Believe in yourself and believe in your dreams
And nobody can stop you
Have faith and take a look in your heart
Can’t nobody top you!

Chorus:
This bird has a broken wing
But it’s still gonna fly
To the to the tippy top of the tree
Surrounded by angels and possibility!

Verse 3
They say life’s a struggle
There’s just pain then you’re done
But you know life is a camping trip
And you’re in a sleeping bag of fun

Chorus:
This bird has a broken wing
But it’s still gonna fly
To the to the tippy top of the tree
Surrounded by angels and possibility!

Bridge:
Fly, fly, fly, fly, fly, flap those wings
Soar, soar, soar, soar, soar angels sing
Achieve, Achieve, Achieve your dreams

Chorus:
This bird has a broken wing
But it’s still gonna fly
To the to the tippy top of the tree
Surrounded by angels and possibility!

Spoken word section:
Hey baby, I know you got dreams. And you’re gonna achieve those dreams because you’re a bird with one wing but you’re still gonna fly. Fly high little bird. This world is yours. Because you know how to persevere. You’re like Thomas Edison when he made all those light bulbs that didn’t work. But then he made the one that did work. And it glowed so bright. Just like you, sweet baby. You’re like Thomas Edison and I’m gonna make love to yoooouuuuuuuuuu.

Chorus:
This bird has a broken wing
But it’s still gonna fly
To the to the tippy top of the tree
Surrounded by angels and possibility!

(repeat and fade)

The Newlywed Game and Self-Discipline

November 3, 2009

I had a revelation last week while watching The Newlywed Game. Yes, I know, who hasn’t.

It was The Newlywed Game that is currently on the Game Show Network with Carnie Wilson as host, and it was “Celebrity” Week. The definition of “celebrity” on the Game Show Network is stretched farther than the waistband on Carnie Wilson’s yoga-pants. The celebrities in two of the episodes I saw included four former contestants from The Biggest Loser. They all looked… fine, certainly better than they did before they started The Biggest Loser, but it was clear that they had gained back some of the weight. In some cases, a lot of the weight. And then I looked at Carnie Wilson, who got her stomach stapled years ago and is now pretty damn big again. And I was reminded of Oprah (who you may recall I wrote a letter to about a year ago) and her declaration that she was going to give up her weight-loss battle. Oprah, of all people, who has every resource imaginable (including someone to cook healthy food for her!) can’t figure out a way to work this shit out. And the Biggest Loser people who have access to amazing personal trainers and learn everything there is to know about diet and nutrition and have the added pressure/incentive of walking down the street and everyone saying, “oh, there’s the guy who used to be fat.” They don’t seem to be able to keep it together. If these people who have been given all the tools  for success can’t lose weight, or can’t keep it off, what chance do you have? What can you bring to the table that Oprah can’t? Nothing! Oprah can buy and sell you 1000 times over. Her favorite things are cashmere sheets and gourmet macaroons. Let’s be honest, your favorite things are double-ply toilet paper and Cheesy Gordita Crunches at Taco Bell. Oprah bests us in every category but one. And this one category is the only thing necessary to lose weight: self-discipline.

Yes, I know it blows that that’s the answer, but it’s just a logical progression. If it’s not about having the right personal trainers, personal chefs, exercise equipment, knowledge, or motivation — what’s left? Just you, and me, and our ability to get ourselves to do things we don’t want to do.  Self-discipline.

There are hundreds of thousands of weight loss tips,diets and exercises online and in books, and yet there is almost nothing written about how to gain self-discipline. After my Newlywed Game revelation last week I listened to an audio lecture by a guy named Brian Tracey called The Miracle of Self-Discipline. It didn’t tell you how to gain self-discipline, it just told you what to do once you have it. “Get to work an hour before everyone else and leave an hour after.” Uhm, no thanks. Then I read a book called “Self-Discipline in 10 Days” which was a pretty typical self-help type book, and those tend to make feel sick. And it didn’t say much about how to get self-discipline.

So, that’s the question: how to acquire self-discipline. Well, just like anything, you acquire it by practicing it. This is not a new concept to me. This blog was started on the notion that unnecessarily challenging yourself was beneficial to the process of losing weight. The psychologist William James said, “Do every day or two something for no other reason than you would rather not do it, so that when the hour of dire need draws nigh, it may find you not unnerved and untrained to stand the test.” Doing something for no other reason than you’d rather not do it is the basis of practicing self-discipline. In this old post I mentioned some challenges one could take on to work on their self-discipline in regards to weight-loss. Those exercises gave me the idea for a step-by-step course on self-discipline that I will post starting next week.

The idea being this:

- You will practice doing things you don’t want to do.

- You will begin to see yourself as someone who is capable of doing things you don’t want to do.

- The next time you find yourself alone with a pizza, wanting to eat the whole thing, and not wanting to stop after 2 slices you’ll say to yourself, “Yes, I don’t want to stop eating this. But I know I should stop. And I’m capable of making myself do things I don’t want to do, so I’ll stop now.”

- The habit of self-discipline grows. (That’s the theory.)


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