Monday, February 26, 2018

Loose Skin, Knee Sleeves, and 18.1

Hello everyone,

So last Friday was the first wod of the Crossfit Open. It was called 18.1, which of course I have to do scaled. The scaled version is
 20min AMRAP (Crossfit Talk for As Many Rounds As Possible in 20 minutes)
8 Hanging Knee Lifts
10 Dumbbell Hang Clean and Jerks
14 Cal Row.

Scoring consists of counting each rep and cal for a total, for example I complete 8 rounds, 8 knee lifts and 2 dumbbell clean and jerks for total score of 266.

Considering I've only been doing Crossfit since Oct 23, I am very proud of this score and as I am writing this my overall rank in Worldwide Men (40-44) is 15,155/27,582 and in the South West (40-44) 705/1,329 which places me in the 46th percentile.

Sorry, had to get the stats and boring information out of the way. It might seem not the best or even above average, but I am absolutely thrilled! If someone would've have told me 6 months+ ago that I would not be bottom of the leader boards, let alone doing Crossfit, I would've laughed at them and called them crazy. This is a great bench mark for next year and the years after to check my progress. Granted I do use BTWB app to record and track my workouts, but nothing like a little competition and working out with a larger group also competing to get the blood and nerves going!

Shout out to Brendan, Allison and Luke for helping me get this far this fast. Here are their websites for more information on a group of awesome trainers.
http://www.crossfitlasvegas.com/
http://www.6packentrepreneur.com/

A couple things I've learned recently...
1 grip strength needs vast improvement.
2 If considering anything active, knee sleeves are a must.

Back in the dark ages, I played high school football. During the week of our Homecoming game I twisted my right knee, so I sat out a couple of drills and it began feeling up to more exercise (oh to be 17 again physically lol) the very first play, I took a helmet to the outside of my left knee. I couldn't walk for a couple of days. The doctor told me that I had the option of surgery on it, so I asked what were the chances of walking when I was old (40 in my mind at the time lmao) and he said the odds were better without.

If you read my previous blog, I then journeyed to the hefty size of 496 lbs. I recovered better than expected and don't get me wrong I did get knee pain, but it took a lot of it to hurt. So I used it as an excuse to get out of non physical activity. This I feel contributed to my explosion of weight. As I got heavier, my knee pain worsened. As it worsened the more I couldn't do stuff.

Back to the Present.

I do live with knee pain almost daily now.  However, I feel mostly its lessening from making my legs and hips stronger with Crossfit. Once I get them warmed up through various stretches and exercises I am good, but on a ticking clock. The things that affect them the worst are Cleans and Assault Bike. The knee sleeves make them bearable. however I am almost through my 2nd pair since I started Crossfit. Of course they were cheap since I didn't want to over invest if I wasn't going to stick it out, my first pair were $10 from Amazon and some no name brand. The 2nd were $15 and not a name brand, now I am actually looking at $45 knee sleeves from bear Komplex. These ones are highly rated and the grips I bought from the brand are life changers. Still, pulling the trigger for $45 on knee sleeves is a tough thing to do.

Another thing I deal with on a daily basis is Body Dismorphia. The description from Wikipedia is
Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), occasionally still called dysmorphophobia, is a mental disorder characterized by the obsessive idea that some aspect of one's own appearance is severely flawed and warrants exceptional measures to hide or fix it.[1] In BDD's delusional variant, the flaw is imagined.[2] If the flaw is actual, its importance is severely exaggerated.[2]Either way, thoughts about it are pervasive and intrusive, occupying up to several hours a day. 

This for me comes from having lost so much weight so fast. I never recognize myself in the mirror and first thing I always notice is the loose skin from where the weight loss happened. I try to conceal it best I can, but I always see the muffin top in my shirt as well as feel the instant one of my shirt sleeves comes up. Ugh having gone from a 5-6xl shirt to L-XL shirt means a lot shorter sleeves too! My waddle on my neck, I've been growing out my beard to camouflage it. Thank god my pant cover the loose skin on my legs and butt. I feel like a melted candle half the time, and the other half is like who the fuck is that in the mirror. Whenever I do a push up and look down I see the blob that used to be my belly pour onto the floor every single push up. I know I am not longer obese, and that I am carrying 7-10 lbs of loose skin and this puts me in a healthy BMI; its just hard to see my changes. I hate the question "You must feel so much better?" Yes I do physically, except when my knees hurt. Self esteem is a little more tricky, I've spent so much time as a morbidly obese man, its hard to accept that I am anything other than that now. My biggest cheerleader is my Wife and I could've never gotten this far without her, she inspires me and supports; even when I wonder how she can find all this loose skin attractive, which is the same feeling I hate when I was 496 lbs.

Even though the following picture is a woman, it still summarizes a lot, and does help me. 


Jeremy Olson
Podcaster, Producer, Blogger, and now Crossfitter!
LLAP

Friday, February 23, 2018

500lbs to Crossfit Open

2/23/18

Today is the first day of the 2018 Crossfit Open for me.

This is a major milestone for me in my journey to being physically fit.

First we should do a little background on me. Here are some pictures of me from 2011-2014



As you can see I was quite the heavy fellow, in fact my highest documented documented was was in 2012 and the scale tipped at 496 pounds! I initially started on my own to try and lose some weight, which I kept failing utterly and bouncing between the same 15-20lbs so I made an appointment to see about getting a LapBand procedure done. Keep in mind this was still 2012. I made an appointment at Oband and with my BMI in the 50s I was referred to a bariatric surgeon. First things first I was diagnosed with Sleep Apnea and immediately put on a CPAP. The surgeon at the time advised that I would only lose 50 or so lbs with the LapBand and recommended a Gastric Sleeve procedure and went over the details of it. 

This scared the absolute shit out of me!

For more info on it https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleeve_gastrectomy
The reason it scared me so badly was that in 2006 my mother had passed away from complications of a Gastric Bypass. So I went through the motions of the process to get ready for the sleeve, doing the presurgery diet and tests, however after about 4 months of this I had lost 120 lbs on my own. I thought that "Hey I can do this on my own! I don't need surgery!" So I chickened out of my surgery and convinced myself it wasn't fear and that it was confidence that I could do it on my own. 

Fast forward to 2016
At the beginning of the year a friend of my wife began the process herself at Blossom Bariatrics. I checked my own weight and discovered that I was back up to 435lbs, and just could not lose it again. I couldn't keep to any diet or exercise program I tried. My diet was back to eating large amounts of fast food, carbs and sweets. I was easily consuming more than 4,000 calories a day. As for exercise, oh I had a fitbit and tried to get at least 7500 steps a day, but nothing more. Lying to myself about my physical condition had become the norm. So I made the decision to begin the process again and made an appointment at Blossom Bariatrics for June 21. 

My insurance required 6 months from the initial consult to the actual surgery for approval. So I quit soda right away and began working on adjusting my diet. Still had trouble motivating myself for exercise and was not consistent with it. Over this time period I got as low a 427, kept losing and gaining the same 5lbs over and over. My insurance required only that I was below my initial consult weight before getting approval. So with that low of a goal I also really didn't adjust my portion sizes. More importantly I used the time to prepare myself mentally. I researched the surgery constantly include potential complications. My Beautiful and wonderful wife also started the process at the same time. In November 2016 I was approved for surgery by my insurance, got a small boost because of a hiatal hernia. December 1st I weighed in at 427, stopped caffeine and began my presurgery diet of lean proteins and green vegetables. This diet, I learned was to shrink my liver so that the doctor would have a greater chance of success with preforming the procedure.  

My Surgery was scheduled for December 30th 2016. I stepped on the scale at the clinic and weighed in at 401 lbs. I went under and when I awoke, the doctor had advised that 85% of my stomach was removed. The first few days are still a haze, missed New Years Eve, my wife was awesome in supporting me during this time. She had gone through it 3 weeks before me, so that we could take turns caring for our son during recovery. 

Bariatric Surgery is not the easy way out. 

I was on liquids for about a week and then on soft foods like scramble egg (note its not plural) and cottage cheese. I barely got enough water and that was from Beef, Chicken and Bone broth for the most part. I could only sip and take the smallest of bites without major restrictions kicking in. My goals were simple:
In A Day in order of priority
800-1200 calories 
90-120 grams of LEAN Protein 
Avoid carbs
finally good fats (avocado is delish)

In the first few months of surgery it was actually incredibly hard to get calorie and protein goals. I mostly used genepro medical grade protein and mixed it into Protein Hot Chocolate from BariatricPal, Syntax's Nectar Shakes were my primary meals and I would have them several times a day, since the fruit flavored ones were light and thin unlike most protein shakes. After about a month like this I transitioned to including items like tuna salad and protein bars (well chewed). 

I've seen online in a lot of places, especially Facebook groups like RK Living Room and Las Vegas Gastric Sleevers that the first 6 months after the surgery, that the sleeve does all the work for the first 6 months and after that its all on the patient. This is absolutely true! First 6 months, on May 30th I was 300 lbs and loving it, however I noticed that my restriction (Bariatric patient code word for full sooner) was going away. Once again I began to worry and dread gaining weight back. I began walking more and trying to get physically more active. Playing with my son, walking and spending more time outside but without a dedicated fitness routine or program. 

My weight loss slowed and I began encountering several stalls (more bariatric code words, this one meaning plateau or no loss). So in October after discussing it with my, I signed up for a fitness eval at Crossfit Las Vegas, with the owner Brendan Gilliam. My first impressions were...
Omg, this place is huge and I don't belong!
What the fuck do I think I'm doing here?????
Ugh, I am going to embarrass myself so bad among these athletes!
At first meeting I was even more worried when I saw how fit Brendan was! After initial introductions, I changed into my workout clothes and went through the baseline workout. Damn was I exhausted and sore, but the approach Brendan took with introducing me to a wod (Workout of the Day) and scaling back to my fitness level, mixed with more than half the people there coming up to me, encouraging me, chatting with me before and after, and just making me feel comfortable. These factors made me sign up for a basics class for a year long contract. A few more sessions with some gear recommendations from the trainers (which I took and am thankful for!) and I upgraded to the Unlimited Contract, any session and open gym access. No regrets!

3 times a week since October 23rd...

I am down to 225 lbs. and in the best shape of my life. Granted I still get issues with my knees for those nagging football injuries mixed with the damage being morbidly obese causes, but this week I finally decided to take a big leap and I registered for the Crossfit Open! I completely understand that I will still need to scale and I have a long ways to go, but I will update this blog every week for the Open and discuss it, my week in nutrition and fitness subjects for those on a journey to fitness.

Here are some progress pics and recent pics







Jeremy Olson
jeremy@mintygreenproductions.com
Podcaster, Producer, Blogger, and now Crossfitter
LLAP