Saturday, August 10, 2013

Positive Peer Pressure and Learning from the Best

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The training is over and oh boy am I mentally wiped out. It was described as a 4-day intensive (on CBT), emphasis on the intensive. The training ran Tue-Fri and on Tue and Thur we went from 8am - 9pm! On those days lunch was provided. I'd decided to eat whatever was served, figuring they'd have some healthy items and I could do a smaller portion of the entree if it was unhealthy. Well, pretty much the whole thing was low on the healthy, high on the comfort scale. The first day was lasagna, pesto pasta, salads drenched in dressing, garlic bread...you get the idea. Oh, but there were steamed veggies, so I loaded up on those and did the best I could with the rest.


The worst part was no protein other than the cheese in the lasagna. I'd packed my own snacks so that helped the day's overall "healthy food" quotient.

So we were running behind on the schedule just before the dinner break, which was from 4:30 - 6:30. It was getting on to 4:45pm when I mumbled, "Come on, I need the whole two hours" when a woman at my table, Diane, said, "You going to exercise?" Yep! I didn't realize we had a whole two hour break on those long days but when I saw the agenda that morning I was so glad I'd packed my gym bag for just such a scenario. Anyway, I had a plan to pay a day-use fee at a gym around the corner but Diane said she found a nearby path and planned to go for a run.

"Want some company?" She was up for it!

Hi Diane!!
After we got all the "I'm so slow" stuff figured out (turns out, we're both slow) we decided to run together. The path is part of The Bay Trail and runs along the water. Between the views and the breezy conditions, it was perfect for running. Thanks Diane! We did a quick warm-up and then ran for 35 minutes. I didn't have my Garmin so no idea how far we went but I can't tell you how much better I felt afterward. There's not much that can't be helped by a run.


Oyster Point - South San Francisco, Bay Trail
A quick change in the park bathroom and then off to find dinner. I ended up getting taqueria food - grilled chicken, black beans, avocado, pico de gallo and a little cheese. The portions were huge so I about half and was full. I felt bad tossing out the rest of the food but couldn't really save it either.

That night I was lucky enough to bunk up at my friend Joan's house about 15 minutes away. She greeted me with a glass of wine and by the time I'd gone to bed an hour or so later I'd polished off a second glass as well as a few slices of french baguette with cheddar cheese. Oh, I forgot to mention the desserts at lunch - chocolate chip cookies and bite-sized brownies. Had one of each.

I was up and back at the conference at 8am the next morning. Brutal! Wednesday was only 8am - 4pm and we were on our own for lunch. They had lunchtime presentations all four days and they were all very interesting (hypnosis in teens/children with anxiety, attention bias modification in body image, etc) so I chose Vietnamese - bbq short ribs, white rice, salad - and ate during the lunch presentation. I also had snacks for Day 2 that I'd packed in advance so I was covered on that.

I drove home after the days' training and had a couple evening appointments for my private practice. It was particularly exciting to do some clinical work after all the intensive training. The direct practice work was particularly interesting after two days' of studying this stuff. Then home for a late dinner - Papa Murphy's pizza - in which I ate probably twice as much pizza as I needed. I noticed a comfort-eating trend during the four days of the training but just tried to be gentle with myself given all the mental energy required. I had to stop at the store on the way home from my office and ended up buying and eating two small chocolate bars (Nestle Crunch Girl Scout flavors - Thin Mint, Peanut Butter Creme - who's the marketing genius that came up with that idea?!). At least I thought they were small. Funny how I'd kind of forgotten about that until now.

uh oh, no socks!
Back up at the crack-of-dawn on Thursday to make the 8am start time. Another long but fruitful day of training. This time the lunch provided was make-your-own sandwiches, an improvement on the day prior. I went against normal protocol and put mayo on my sandwich :/ Mayo is such a waste, I didn't even notice it. Wish I'd packed an avocado. Moving on. It was getting close to the 4:30pm dinner break when I noticed my mind drifting toward reasons not to go for another run, "I'm tired, some rest would be nice," etc, etc. Knowing Diane was going provided just the positive peer pressure I needed so I went to change. Oh no, no socks! I would've run in the little peds I had on but fortunately Diane had some socks to loan me. Whew! Because of the mental drain of the training we decided to run alone. Another beautiful run, bumping along to my run playlist and feeling some of the mental stress from the last three days melt away.

After the run I did some pushups, squats and lunges to round out the workout. I felt a million times better and was SO thankful I'd not flaked out on myself. We changed back into our professional clothes and then had to hustle to find dinner. We ended up with Japanese, I had a spicy tuna roll with avocado and a seaweed salad. Yum!

After lunch a woman from another table did something interesting. She walked over to our table and set down a half of a Snickers bar and a cup filled with chocolate almonds and some other treats, "I have to get these away from me." That's great, of course I am totally understanding of that. But that meant they were directly in my line of site. I found my attention kept going back to the chocolate so after a few minutes I got up and put a piece of paper over it. Out of sight, out of mind worked in this case and I was no longer distracted by her chocolate. I'd done enough damage the night before.

Thursday night I was lucky enough to have a hotel room directly across from the conference center. The evening session had been particularly challenging and I left feeling entirely drained. Fortunately there were a few participants staying at my hotel and I was able to process a bit with them. It was nice to hear we were all feeling challenged by the material and practice of the methods, which allowed me to go a bit easier on myself. The two glasses of wine didn't exactly hurt either.

Back at it at 8am for day 4, the last day. I'd had oatmeal and coffee at the hotel but then had a half-bagel with cream cheese at the conference, and more coffee. The dense materials and the long days caught up with me; I was exhausted.  I felt like I could fall asleep at my table, which I saw quite a few people actually doing. Lunch rolled around and again, I went for comfort. Diane and I drove to downtown and saw Thai - perfect! I had a combination lunch plate - basil eggplant and yellow curry with brown rice and a salad - and we ate that during the lunch presentation. After lunch I pepped up and felt alive again, which meant a better focus during the second half of the day.

Lots of hugs and smiling faces. By the way, it only looks like I'm kicking my leg up in this picture, there's a chair in my way so I had to put my leg on it :)

My table-mates from the training - we all survived!

With David. I love this picture!
So the training was with David Burns, MD - a genius/pioneer in the field of psychology, specifically in CBT. I felt so grateful to learn from him over the past four days. When anyone takes a picture with him he asks you to tickle him so he can smile. It worked! I love both our smiles in this picture.

Well, that's the last four days. I had my normal cereal for breakfast, along with a slice of toasted cinnamon bread (Greenlees - entirely evil) with butter, and my coffee. Carrying on with the comfort foods...writing this post is helping motivate me to get back on track. The unusually yummy foods over the last four days were great, but it's back to regular life now, and I need want to stop with the high-calorie stuff. I know if I keep eating this way I'm going to feel like crud.

I'm hoping to get out for a 4 mile run today. Miguel is working so it will have to be a late afternoon jaunt. Tomorrow I'm hitting the bay for another Swim with Pedro. Shelly and I are carpooling, which is just the pressure I need to make sure I don't make any excuses to skip it. I love positive peer pressure, especially when it comes to exercise!!

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I am a licensed clinical social worker with a private practice offering Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) for weight loss and maintenance. I have an office in Marin County, CA and I'm also available to see people via Skype. To learn more please visit my professional website at www.michellefunez.com

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Triathlon, Oh How I've Missed You.

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This is going to be a quick post. I'm sitting in a conference room waiting for a 4-day intensive CBT training to start. That means this might be my last post for the coming week. The week has been stellar so far, though it's only Tuesday morning so that helps. But my motivation is high, which always makes everything easier. Yesterday I went to the gym after work, doing my strength training routine - back/biceps/PT exercises - before heading home and getting on my bike for the 5-mile ride on my training plan.

I had hoped to finish up the ride before dinner but in the end I got home just when dinner was starting so I knew I'd miss it. Miguel was very supportive of my getting the ride done, he knows I'm pushing to get some traction with my training plan. I hopped on the bike and because I was so pressed for time I didn't take any of my normal "stuff" - no Garmin, no heart rate monitor - nor did I remember to take the basics, like water. But I was only riding 5 miles so I was fine.

So I'm on my bike heading down the street, wind in my hair, feeling like I'm gliding when I thought, "Oh triathlon, how I've missed you." I do enjoy running but man have I missed the multi-sport. It's just so fun! I guessed on a route that turned out to be 5.4 miles - perfect!

Post-ride smile!
Back home and I had dinner - red beans and eggs. I was still hungry so I munched on this and that as I made the kids' lunches. There was a huge bag of Kettle chips leftover from camping last weekend. Despite not being my favorite I found myself repeatedly dipping in them. So I wrapped them up and put them in Miguel's trunk outside. That did the trick.

I had some brussells sprouts that were starting to wilt so I cooked them up and they hit the spot. About halfway through trimming off the ends I got frustrated and just threw the rest in. Turns out the ends cook up just fine and I hardly noticed they hadn't been trimmed. I might be eating more brussells sprouts in the future because the trimming sometimes stops me from buying them. Yay!

After getting the kids' lunches done I started in on my own food. This 4-day training is likely going to involve some "bad" snacks and I don't want to be hungry and at the mercy of conference food. So I packed an apple and Greek yogurt for my morning snack and a string cheese and sliced turkey breast for my afternoon snack. And I made a commitment to myself to skip the provided snacks. Lunch is also provided and barring fried twinkies being the entree, I'll be eating the served lunch.

Today's schedule goes until 9pm so I likely won't be getting any exercise in, though I did pack some running clothes just in case the opportunity presents itself. Ok - the conference is getting started so I have to run...have a great week!

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I am a licensed clinical social worker with a private practice offering Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) for weight loss and maintenance. I have an office in Marin County, CA and I'm also available to see clients via Skype. To learn more please visit my professional website at www.michellefunez.com

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Swim with Pedro and a Training Plan

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Well, well...the SF Chronicle article sure is a lot of fun. But life goes on even when you're a cover story so it's back to the routine here today.

I've been stalling and procrastinating making a training plan for the Santa Cruz Triathlon Olympic coming up on September 29th. As of today the race is only 8 weeks away! Enough with the stalling or I'm going to stall on the race course. I had considered joining an organized training group but because of my schedule I would have easily missed half of the training sessions. It just didn't make sense financially.

So late last night I finally took some time to create a training plan. It was complicated by life, of course, and by the various group swim/run/bike opportunities in the area. I've figured out my open water swim plan (more on that in a moment) and have some fun options for group rides and runs, including track workouts.


Week
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thur
Fri
Sat
1 (8/4 – 8/10)
Pedro Swim
Strength
5 m bike

Run?
Strength?

Rest
4 m run
2 (8/11 – 8/17)
Pedro Swim
Strength
8 m bike
Rest
Run
Strength
Bike (mtn?)
strength
Rest
Rest
3 (8/18 – 8/24)
Rest
Strength
10 m bike
Strength Track?
Rest?
Track
Strength
Bike (mtn?)
strength
Rest
Pool swim
4 (8/25 – 8/31)
6 mile run
Strength
15 m bike
Strength Track?
Rest?
Run
strength
Bike (mtn?)
strength
Rest
Pool swim
5 (9/1 – 9/7)
7 mile run
Strength
10 m bike
Strength Track?
Rest?
Run
strength
Bike (mtn?)
strength
Rest
5 m run
6 (9/8 – 9/14)
Pedro Swim
Strength
15 m bike
Strength Track?
Rest?
Run
strength
Bike (mtn?)
strength
Rest
Swim?
7 (9/15 – 9/21)
8 mile run
Strength
18 m bike
Strength Track?
Rest?
Track
Strength
Bike (mtn?)
strength
Rest
6 m run
8 (9/22 – 9/28)
Pedro Swim
Strength
20 m bike
Strength Track?
Rest?
2 m run
Bike (mtn?)
strength
Rest
Rest
9 (9/29 – 10/5)
Triathlon
Rest
Strength Track?
Rest?




10 (10/6 – 10/12)
10 mile run






11 (10/13 – 10/19)
11 mile run






10/20
Half-Marathon







You'll notice a fair number of question marks...just means I have options or complicating factors that make it unclear how it will play out in real life. It's nice to have a plan, heck it's crucial because without it I was doing nothing, but it's good to keep in mind that it's a guide and not absolute. How my body responds and how it interfaces with my other obligations are factors I can't necessarily predict right now.

So you may have noticed that in today's box was Swim with Pedro. Who's Pedro? A pretty cool guy actually. He's been putting on these weekly SF bay swims for a long time and has done an amazing number of open water swims himself. Read this article to learn why he's one of those people that most folks would call "crazy". Anyway, one of his swims is every Sunday morning at 10am at Aquatic Park in San Francisco and being in need of some open water swim time, ideally with others, even more ideally with coaches, it's a perfect fit.

I arrived a bit early and before long I met a fellow triathlete, Shelly. She's also training for a triathlon, identified herself as a slow swimmer like me and also lives in the North Bay...nice! I'd forgotten my phone in the car so she took all of the pictures in this post - thanks Shelly! I was still so excited about the article that I had it with me and showed her. She suggested I have a t-shirt made with the cover screen printed on it. Not a bad idea, not bad at all.

The view of the water from our vantage point.
Before too long the business of a group swim was underway. I'd paid my $15 online the night before and brought my waiver as requested.

Getting the low-down from one of the (kilt wearing) coaches (Jake) before the swim.

My hands were marked with a number in case something goes really wrong (and I wore my new RoadID too) and I used wax earplugs for the first at the suggestion of the coaches.

Lucky #7 - not dying today!
We were also given bright green swim caps to wear so the coaches could identify us in the water. Aquatic Park is a popular place to swim so there's more than a few people out there at any given time. Anyway, I changed into my wetsuit and a little after 10am Pedro gave a preparation talk. He's one of those people with an easy-going, encouraging attitude that just puts you at ease. Though he urged safety precautions too and gave us the lowdown on the currents (the "flood" and "ebb" - new terms to me).

Pedro (in the blue shirt) getting us prepped. Notice the little swimmer girl, so cute!
There were probably 5 coaches (yellow caps) and they broke us into three groups. Group 1: newbies (I chose this group). We stayed with Pedro and got prep talks and small swim assignments, swimming back to shore several times for more tips. Group 2: Experienced but slow (this is the group I'll go with next time and also the group Shelly swam with). Group 3: Experienced and faster.

Ready to go! Made it easy to spot me :)
Group 2 swam along the perimeter of the pier on the right but swam back and forth on the inside, not dealing with the heavier currents on the outside. Group 3 swam around the pier, dealing with the heavier currents. They had coaches out on paddleboards and in the water. Pedro stayed on shore. And then we were off! Pedro had us newbies swim to certain bouys and back, each time sending us on a slightly longer swim, and each time talking to us briefly about currents and stroke when we got back.

One of the guys in our group panicked and was out of the water almost as quickly as he got in. Pedro must have given him a good pep talk because he got back in and was fine the rest of the swim. When we were done I asked him how he felt and he said, "fine, once I figured out I wasn't going to die." I love it! Oh, did I mention how warm the water was? An unusually warm 64 degrees! I wasn't complaining.

with Pedro!

The coaches accounted for all of us after the swim and I got changed to head back home. While changing I started feeling really cold. I got so excited when I saw my mug of hot coffee in my bag. I realized my feet were almost completely numb (and an odd yellowish color). Pedro said it was because I am not accustomed to it and that it will get better, plus, he added, "some people just have that problem." First time for me and hopefully it doesn't happen again. Walking back to the car I felt like I was walking on wooden blocks, but it went away once I was warmed up.

[update: here's my 2nd Swim with Pedro post if you want even more info]

The rest of the day was a whirlwind - picked the kids up at the soccer field, took them for frozen yogurt (and had some myself but skipped the toppings), then to a quick meeting with boot camp guy (what? yes, I might do some boot camps in the coming month, more on this in another post) and back to meet up with Miguel. He took the kids while I went for some me time - I had a late lunch of a kids' taco kit at Chipotle while I got a mani-pedi and then did some much needed bra shopping. I know it's probably TMI but most of my bras are too big. Found some cute ones and thought about how not-uncomfortable bras are when you're not overweight (and have small-ish breasts like I do now). Ok, this is getting too detailed. Moving on...

So the article is resulting in my private practice work going up and I took some time after the kids were in bed to prep for the coming week. I might get up for boot camp in the morning, though the fact that it's almost 11pm doesn't bode well for that. If I do, I promise to explain myself in my next post.

Before I close I have to thank you all for the showering of congratulations I received about the article both on my Facebook page and via messages. I am so lucky to have such an amazing group of people reading this blog. Thank you!! I hope you also had a great weekend and make the most of the coming week!

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I am a licensed clinical social worker with a private practice offering Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) for weight loss and maintenance. I have an office in Marin County, CA and I'm also available to see clients via Skype. To learn more please visit my professional website at www.michellefunez.com