This is probably my twelfth attempt at starting - and continuing - a blog. I've gotten excited about things I have to say in the past, but eventually it waned and I abandoned my blog, sometimes with only one post to its name.
Here I am, once again giving this a go. I hope this time it's different.
This time, it's not so much because I have something to say and I want people to read it and be impressed and think, "Wow, she's so deep and introspective, and I wish I could be more like her."
This time it's because I want - no, NEED - to make a record of this life because it's about to change and I want to be able to come back one day in the future and, I sincerely hope, be proud of how far I've come. (I really hope I don't come back and say, "Man, I was so energized but never went anywhere with it. And I'm still exactly where I was when I thought I was about to change things.")
The name of my blog, "Where My Plan Ends," is in reference to a quote I read that said, "Adventures start where plans end." What I'm about to do, what I'm hoping to do, is look at the oncoming changes in my life as an adventure rather than a stressor. I had plans for this life but as with many of my plans in the past, sometimes they need to be set aside.
The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines adventure as "1 a: an undertaking usually involving danger and unknown risks b : the encountering of risks <the spirit of adventure> 2: an exciting or remarkable experience <an adventure in exotic dining> 3: an enterprise involving financial risk".
Yes. This adventure will be exciting, risky, remarkable, and maybe even a little dangerous. I'm not climbing mountains or swimming with sharks here. At least, not yet. But the emotional turmoil I anticipate will happen at time is dangerous. I want to break down my comfortable ways of thinking and existing and whenever you do that, the emotional and spiritual danger is in the loss of what's comfortable and familiar. However, I know the payoff is entirely worth it.
What prompted my desire to make these changes? Three things:
1) A series of simple blood tests that, based on my own knowledge and understanding, tell me I'm prediabetic. I descend from a brief but fully occupied line of diabetics. On both sides. Strike one. I'm Native Hawaiian, an ethnic group whose risk for diabetes and heart disease is outdone by only one other ethnic group in the world (the Pima Indians of Arizona). Strike two. By medical standards, I'm obese. I'm short (5'3") and I'm heavy (196.4 lbs today, by no means the heaviest I've ever been but also nowhere near what I need to be to be healthy). That gives me a BMI of 34.7. Strike three. I was starting to notice some changes in my body and a fellow nurse at the clinic where I volunteer suggested we check my A1c. Since my blood sugar that evening was 86, I was surprised and saddened to learn my A1c was 5.9. Anything between 5.7 and 6.4 is considered prediabetic. I've also started monitoring my blood sugars and they have ranged from a low of 68 to a high of 120, all fasting. This tells me that while I'm still not swinging into the high range, I don't have good control over my sugars and given that a prediabetic person typically only has a window of 3-5 years to get good control before body damage has reached a level where blood sugar requires me to be on medication (glucophage or insulin), I realize that now is the time to pay close attention to all of these numbers and do what I have to do to get them into a healthy range.
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Having fun at the Nature Museum |
3) Because I can. I don't have a lot of money to my name, so there will be no gym memberships, no fancy exercise equipment, no new shoes or fabulous work out clothes. But I still have two feet that can walk and jump and dance and move. I can breathe. I live in a safe place where I can go outside and I won't be shot or kidnapped or attacked. I have the knowledge of good nutrition. I was fortunate enough to attain two higher degrees and learn the ins and outs of nutrition and diabetes nutrition. I was also educated in the consequences of not improving and maintaining my health. I have a jogging stroller, some exercise videos and an old treadmill a friend gave me several years ago that sits in our sunroom. I have all these tools at my disposal, and granted they are few. But I have them. And damnit, I'm going to use them.
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Posing in my fabulous leggings |
Weight: 196.4 Fasting Blood Sugar: 120 Goal for the day: Walk/jog two miles on the treadmill or outside pushing the stroller AND spread the dirt in our vegetable garden.
UPDATE: I walked/jogged the 2.0 miles on the treadmill in 30:40. Eventual goal for the next two weeks: reduce that time to get it under 30 minutes. Ultimate goal: get it to 20.
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