Three months of bad habits
Well I let it lapse. My liver scan and blood test showed I’d got a moderately fatty liver and no hepatitis-anything. My doctor seemed unconcerned. Didn’t see a need for me to come in. Instead just a quick chat on the phone saying carry on with the diet. I did for a couple more weeks, but started to let it slide.
Then 3 months later (3 weeks ago), I get a call from my good friend Paul. He’s just caught up with this blog (he’s about 3 months behind). He assumes the liver damage blogging is current and phones me up. Oh, did I mention he’s a GP? He’s Dr Paul.
I bring him up to speed and he has a thouroughly different attitude to my GP. Thing is he’s a mate, he’s looking out for me, and I can hear in his voice genuine concern about my moderately fatty liver.
I’d assumed from my doctor’s attitude that there wasn’t really anything to worry about. Dr Paul however ensured that I wasn’t left with this misconception. Dr Paul made it very clear to me that this is a situation which needs FIXING not leaving. That it needs more than just ‘being healthy’ for a while. It needs reversing!
So I need to do more than just be good. If I want to have a chance of reversing this and have a reasonable life expectancy, then I need to get fit, stay fit, and have an excellent diet for at least 5 years. I guess inside I already knew that really. My GP’s attitude gave me an easy reason to hide from an uncomfortable truth.
The best friends are the ones who help you face things rather than enable the hiding. Thanks Paul
So Paul and I decided between us that a rowing-machine had the best chance of actually getting used. So that very night I ordered one. It’s remarkably easy to take action when the action is browsing the internet and typing a credit card number! But as Anthony Robbins says “never leave the site of setting a goal without taking an action”. Mind you he says cabbages have energy measured in hertz. He’s either gullible or mad, but he still says some useful things too! A few days later the rowing machine arrived and so my wife names her and we now have “The good ship Polyanthus” moored up in the garden room.
Since then I have re-discovered the pleasure of exercise. I used to love working out in the gym when I was in my late teens (with Paul as it happens), but that was high-weight low-rep muscle building exercise with competition between mates being an important factor. Now I’m loving aerobic exercise!
Dr Paul gave me the great mental image of blood pumping through my heart and liver and ‘clearing away’ all the accumulated fatty deposits. So heart rate and pumping blood and breathing deeply are important.
I’ve used the rowing machine 8 times in the last 3 weeks. Building it up steadily with a target of being able to do a 30 minute workout. The machine has a ‘heart’ program where you set the target heart-rate and workout duration, and it varies the ‘load’ to keep your heart-rate around what you’ve set.
I’ll be adding a “ships log” to the blog and a graph to show my workouts. To summarise, I’ve done about 11.5 miles, and burned about 600kCals. In a 30 minute work out I’m hitting about 2.3 miles, 194 kCals and loving every minute of it.
So more news no habits, exercise and eating coming to you regularly. And a big thanks to my mate Paul.
