Posted by: Scribble | 19/05/2008

Keeping very quiet

I know I’ve been embarassingly quiet and absent from my Diet Diaries series lately. Yes you’ve guessed: I made a complete mess at the beginning of my ‘never diet again’ stance! BUT I have to tell you, I have made progress in the last two weeks and have lost 7lbs! Not bad is it? So naturally I am buoyed up with success and back on my route to looking at least reasonable for my neice’s wedding in June. It’s going to be a bit tight as I only have around 5 weeks left so I really have to push myself hard.

There’s nothing like losing a significant amount of weight to give you renewed enthusiasm though. I think I shall write a book on the subject and join all the other ‘know-alls’ when I reach my target and I decided today to make a note of the meals I eat and their calorific content. I was struck by this idea at lunch time after such a delicious lunch that only totalled 250 calories and consisted of hard boiled egg, tomato and cress with a tiny teaspoon of mayo all mixed up and eaten with two crispbreads. I could have added lettuce, cucumber, celery etc and made it a bit bigger but didn;t fancy that as I’ve eaten such a lot of salad this week, but had I done so, it would have been even more filling.

Mostly I am eating salad and fruit which is very easy to do with this lovely weather we have had lately. Somehow it is so much easier to eat salad in the sun!

I’m releived to have got my mind back on the job. I really do want to make this the final diet. I have done it all before and then put the weight back on and its so depressing. I’ve learnt a few things though, this time around, surprisingly. I’ve realised that just because I can still get into my jeans it doesn’t mean I haven’t gained weight, just that the jeans have stretched gradually each day and even though they shrink in the wash, they NEVER go back to their original size. The pair I’m wearing now are a size 14 according to the label, but I know I have stretched them up a size and I didn’t really notice. Unbeleivable really. I twigged in the end, one day, by looking in the mirror and seeing a fat face stare back at me and I noticed that my shirts felt tight and some wouldn’t close in the middle. Fortunately I did notice before I put all the weight back on that I lost last year for my lovely trip to Norway, so this time there is a little less to lose, though it still seems quite a lot. Foolishly, I have left myself little time to complete the task when I had ages at the start. Seems I need to be under pressure to get going properly!

I’m also having my hair done. Not something I do very often. About once a year actually. I have three weeks to go before that so am hoping I will have dropped down a bit and that my face will not look so fat since, when I made the appointment, I had an idea for a style that would look good only if my face was slimmer – oops! I do hope it is by then otherwise I shall look worse. My poor neice will shuffle me to the back of the wedding photos hoping I won’t be seen, or at least not all of me!

Thing is I’ve had a few unrepeatable experiences over the years in my quest to be slim and stay slim. One such disaster was the time I contemplated joining a gym. In an effort to encourage me, my mother kindly paid for a year’s use which forced me to pluck up the courage to actually go. I’d long since been put off gym’s having seen skinny, fit looking people in them and rarely anyone overweight or unfit. I dreaded going and on the evening in question as I put on my unflattering leggings and pink baggy T shirt I had a couple of whiskies for dutch courage. This turned out to be very unwise. I arrived at the place and dutifully signed in and was told that as I was a new member I would have to go through an induction phase. This meant showing me what all the equipment was for, which was just as well, as I hadn’t got a clue. After completing the paperwork and handing over the fee, I entered the actual gym area and lined up with the other newcomers.

It was clear from the start that some of them resented this compulsory induction as they were clearly regular gymies, just not at this particular one and they were itching to get going. Boredom and irritation written all over their sullen faces. ‘Yes I do know what the equipment is for, you can see how fit I am, just look at my six pack, how do you think I got that then? I really shouldn’t have to stand here as if I’m a newby’, I could see them thinking. Feeling rediculous around the fit fanatics, I suddenly got an inapropriate fit of giggles and worse cracked a joke that wasn’t funny and brought a mixture of glares and disdainful looks from the pros. I was feeling so nervous and felt completely out of place in this Mecca of physical perfection which made me more giggly and hot, (it was a hot summer evening) and I was already in a sweat before I started. It was a relief when the induction was over and I was left wondering where to start and which machine would make me look the least stupid.

I decided it was probably fairly safe to have a go on the running machine since it didn’t have complicated bits that needed adjustment, for I felt sure I wouldn’t manage any of that. I could just imagine myself getting stuck with a hundred weight left by the body builder before me and being too shy to try and take off the weights with fingers fumbling uselessly. So I got onto the running machine, checked out the controls that made it faster or slower and gaining confidence in its simplicity, I started off. A fast walk and then a run, gradually increasing the pace seemed ideal and I happily trotted along, pony tail swinging, along with flabby bits, really feeling quite pleased with myself. I felt somehow safer now, that I didn’t stick out so much and slyly glanced around to see what other device I might be able to manage, planning exactly what I was going to do and where I was going, in advance, so I could go unnoticed smoothly to another machine. So all going fine until I wanted to get off. I managed to slow down to a fast walk but couldn’t see how to actually stop the wretched thing. I decided I was going slow enough to jump off, but as the ground met with my foot, I realised I’d been going much too quickly and fell into a heap on the floor. God how embarassing. I hardly dared look around to see how many people had witnessed this ungainly sight. My face was, by now, bright red and glistening with sweat and burning from the whiskey I had had earlier (which may also have had something to do with the fact that I lost my balance). I finally pulled myself up, dizzy and feeling such a fool. No one came to help and somehow it seemed all the worse because they didn’t. They all studiously ignored the catastrophe with the exception of an old man who was on the running machine next to mine. He didn’t stop but he did say that he’d done the same thing the first time he’d tried out the wretched thing. Not much comfort really.

After that, all I wanted to do was leave but felt I would look even more stupid, giving up so easily. They’d all be thinking, ‘there goes another twit, don’t know why she came in the first place’. So I found a machine that you sit on (can’t fall off) and grab some weighted handles and pull them together. Something to do with building up your upper arms I think it was. It was jolly difficult too since it was set for the extremely muscley, man- woman that had used it before me and I couldn’t risk meddling with unfamiliar tension adjustments. I lasted a few minutes and moved onto something that did the same for your legs and tummy, again I can’t be sure, I’d long since forgotten what the induction man had told me and didn’t dare ask again.

So as you can see, the experience was enough to put me off for life. I did feel guilty that I never returned and wasted my Mum’s money. Nothing is worth that kind of humiliation! This time around exercise takes the form of keeping up the garden and walking Skinny who is also definitely rotund. She is becoming a real pig. She searches for the scraps I put out for the chickens, whereever I put them she sniffs them out. She has also taken to jumping up on the kitchen counter and stealing the cat’s food too. In response to this, I have cut down her actual meals which in turn makes her ever more vigilent in finding other sources of food! Catch 22 really! Walks with her are at least lovely in the summer and gardening is at least productive and anything is better than that awful gym.

Posted by: Scribble | 19/05/2008

The Hare and the Dog

 
 
The dog stood on three legs, the right front held high and bent at the knee. One ear was pricked upright pointing forward while the other turned fractionally backwards straining to pick up the sound of her prey. She surveyed the ground ahead, lit from behind by the faint early morning sun as it leaked a pale wash across the dew tipped land. She felt the merest warmth on her ink black silky coat but the hunger in her belly urged her to make quick work of this mornings hunt.

The nostrils of her black moist nose flared as she breathed in cool air, allowing the powerful sense to pick up the crucial information from invisible thermals. Catching a mixture of smells she stood dead still, frozen, while her brain translated the information. At lightening speed, too small to be measured, she quickly discarded the smell of the domestic animals in the far off farm yard and focused on a tantalisingly brief hint of the one she was seeking. Homing in on its phantom frailness she surveyed with blue black eyes narrowed to pin pricks the direction from whence it came. Her intensely sharp hearing picked up the distant sound of movement ahead. In one fluid moment, her senses came together as one, muscles spasmed and rippled along the sleek lines of her flank galvanising the powerful legs into action. With agile speed, barely touching the ground, she flew towards the unsuspecting hare.

The Hare lifted his head heavily from under the shallow ledge of earth where he had been fitfully sleeping. He sniffed the air briefly with a wiggle of his short little nose and listened with his long brown ears; the black feather tips blew in a light wisp of a breeze. He sensed no danger. A weak sun began to melt the stiffness of the cold spring night out of his old bones. He was glad that winter had receded and that now the sun began to warm the hard earth and allow the sweet young shoots to make their frail way out from the darkness.
He felt weary despite the onset of warmer weather. He had not thought he would survive the cold winter, the frozen ice turning the ground to stone and making what little food there was, impossible to dig out. He was old now and had lived through many hard years. Where once he was agile and possessed of an innate knowledge of the land and how to avoid all its dangers, he now felt forgetful and surprised that he had not already been killed by the thunder like bang that stemmed from his most feared enemy. Many times he had escaped the thunder which felled others of his kind; racing away from the fearful noise of cries and dogs and foot falls, hoping he could reach safety his heart bursting in his chest, the blood pounding in his ears and the ever present fear. Once safe, he would listen with heavy sadness to the sound of others not so lucky; their unique, eerie cries of agony as they struggled against death that would surely end their pain.

On this watery thin morning he knew in his heart that his time was near. He knew he no longer had the will to fight for his survival. His wits were dulled with age as well as his body and he felt a sense of cruelty that the very senses he needed to keep alive were deserting him. His beautiful long ears no longer had the range of hearing so necessary and his nose seemed always to be running blocking this vital sense which identified the vile odour of danger. He picked listlessly at the bright new grass and found he could no longer taste the pure sweetness of its young growth. With heavy heart he lay a while resting and felt the earth yield a little and enfold his soft form.
He saw the beauty of a single dew drop atop a blade of grass glisten in the morning light, in soft focus because of its nearness; he heard the comforting sound of the awakening birds and felt a certain safety at the earliness of the hour.

The dog saw the old buck come into view ahead and was thankful that this would be an easy kill. She was too hungry to chase far and wide after a younger animal. She sped in a circuitous route her hind legs springing the knee joints up to her flanks, front legs outstretched ready to break, before in a swift fluid movement she turned with accurate precision to catch the old hare in her strong jaws. With a quick flick of her head the hare rose up and over the dog’s nose until its own weight snapped its neck. Instantly it was over. The dog sat down to her meal.

The hare’s eyes closed as he dozed and all at once he felt himself lifted into the air, he looked directly upwards to the blinding warm light of the sun which enveloped him kindly into its peacefulness. He was finally at rest.

Inspired by Skinny three’s predecessor.

Posted by: Scribble | 11/05/2008

Where has England gone?

Yes I know I have been away for a while from my blog, very naughty and lazy of me. The trouble is this marvellous weather tempted me into my garden and there i have stayed. But back to business now.

So the question is, where has England gone? I don’t mean literally, I mean, that you almost never hear anyone refer to it anymore. It is always either, the UK, UKay (urgh!) or Britain. No one talks about England and the English. Considering the largest land mass of the British Isles is actually England, it seems strange. Usually it is either expats or foreigners who refer to us here as the ‘UK’. I’m really getting offended by this turn of events. Can all we English start standing up for ourselves. We can do this in particular when asked to fill in forms where amongst the enormous and growing possible ethnic minorities in this country, we cross out ‘white British’ or worse ‘other British’ and put ENGLISH. Thank you. We are becoming practically an endangered species.

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