It’s NOT dog food or Days 6, 7, and 8

The last few days, eating wise, have not been exciting.  I’ve been eating lots of salads and leftovers. We ate at Eat ‘n Park last night, where I had a veggie burger and onion rings.

On Sunday, I did make one new recipe, which  is the Vegetarian Swiss steak.  This is a seitan based food with tomato sauce, onions, peppers.  I did not have any green peppers, so I didn’t use, but I think it would have benefitted from them.  I also left out the mushrooms.  I am the one vegetarian in the world who does not like mushrooms.  ;)   I get asked that all the time “How can you be vegetarian and not like mushrooms?”  Um, us vegetarians like LOTS of things.  I don’t like broccoli, cauliflower or uncooked carrots either.  Or pears or grapefruit.  If this makes me weirder, so be it.  :)

Sorry, off on a tangent there ….

Here is how the Swiss steak looked right out of the oven.

And here it is on my plate looking a little less dog foody:

But I promise … it was tasty and the recipe makes a lot and I ate this for four days and now I am tired of it!  But it is a great source of clean protein and very low carb.

And here is a photo of the Roasted Red Pepper Soup which is less digusting looking.  I didn’t want to leave you with that other image in your memory.

On another note, exercise has been a little more exciting to report on.  I finally feel better and on Sunday, I worked out for the first time in a long time.  I ellipticalled for 30 minutes … which caused me to have a mini-migraine.  On Monday, it was full blown migraine, so I only did my PT … and Monday is the day that I go to the facility, so it was a long session.   Yesterday, I cleaned up around the house and I did a cardio/ab workout followed by my at-home PT.

I’m excited about exercising again, and interested to see what my hip will and won’t permit me to do.

That’s all really for now!

Days 4 and 5 and some great news

We will start with the great news.  It’s about my cat Indy.  For those who don’t know, I’ll explain the problem quickly.  Indy is a big, fluffy black cat, who is 14.5 years old.  He always, always eats (with the exception of a 3 month stint of anorexia a few years back) and he never, ever vomits.   In October and November, he had had three separate incidents of vomiting and pooping everywhere, and not eating.   These would last one day and he’d feel better the next day.   After the third episode, I took him to our regular vet, who saw nothing on exam, so we sent for blood testing.  The results of that showed pretty severe liver problems.  For example, the ALT was 499 and the normal high is about 100ish.  A follow-up x-ray showed nothing but a bit of arthritis in the spine.

He was referred to a veterinary internal medicine specialist, where he received an ultrasound, which was also inconclusive, and a fine needle aspirate of the liver was sent out for cytology.  At this point, we were looking either at cholangiohepatitis or cancer.   And the cytology didn’t help.  The first order of business was to treat for the cholangiohepatitis, which is a long course of antibiotics.  If the liver enzymes stabilize, then its likely the hepatitis and NOT cancer.

Thursday, I received a call from the veterinary center and guess what?  His ALT was down to 160!  Yay!  The antibiotics are helping.  Not that I needed bloodwork to tell me that, as he has returned totally to his kitten like antics and his very very large appetite.  :)

Now for the Vegan Challenge.

Saturday was my weigh in day and I was down 2.2 pounds.  Yay.

Friday food was good.

*Breakfast was oatmeal with maple syrup and pecans

*Lunch was leftover couscous confetti salad

*Dinner was out and I had bbq seitan pita with fries and a salad

Saturday, well, I did remain vegan except for some accidental mayo, but healthy wasn’t as strong.

*Breakfast was hash browns and an English Muffin

*Lunch was at Burger King … a BK veggie and small onion ring

*Dinner was Domino’s pizza … no cheese, extra sauce and black olives, onion and spinach

But that is not overcomerable (is that a word?) … I will do better this week for sure, and I hope to make a return to doing cardio.

Yay!  I’ve figured out how to insert pictures!

My 21-Day Vegan Kickstart Challenge

It’s a new year.  I thought I would start it off by doing something a little different.  Resolutions are boring.  I mean, who doesn’t want to get fit, lose weight, get organized, etc.  We all do!  It’s the rare person who can claim to be all of those.

I only knew that I wanted to try to eliminate dairy.  Why?  Well, there are many reasons, but the one that makes the most sense is because I am allergic to the milk proteins casein and whey.  Let me tell you … casein and whey are hidden in everything!  And the other MAIN reason is that as a vegetarian, it only makes sense to progress into this way of eating, for me.  I already refuse to wear leather, suede, wool or use products that have been tested on animals.   If you want to get into it further, you can certainly find reasons why many experts are saying that it is not good for us, and you can certainly find out how dairy is an even crueler industry than eating the cows that dairy comes from.

And because I was giving up the dairy, I stepped it up to eliminate eggs and to try to eat as many whole foods as possible to try to ease up reliance on convenience foods.  I think that switching to whole foods, foods that come from nature, that I actually have to cook and/or prepare, will be the key to my finally reaching my goal weight.

This style of eating is also just naturally low in sugar.  I am not deliberately eliminating that.  If I find something vegan and has sugar, I will consider it.  And I don’t mean fruit.  Fruit sugar is another thing altogether.

To help me with this challenge, I decided to follow the guidelines and recipes of the 21-Day Vegan Kickstart by the Physician’s Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM).  You can find information about it here:

I tried to start on Monday, but although it was vegan, except for some butter, I don’t count it since I relied on what I had and not on whole foods.

On Tuesday, I made the Confetti Couscous Salad.  I had to adjust it, as I thought I had raisins and cabbage, but I had neither.  Well, I had cabbage, it was just not edible.  I deliberately left out the carrots and substituted dried cranberries for the raisins.  This was absolutely yummy.

Wednesday, which was even better, I had oatmeal for breakfast, for lunch I had the couscous salad leftovers (and I still have more!) and I made the Carrot Red Pepper Soup, without the carrots, so essentially it was just Roasted Red Pepper Soup.  This was very easy to make and very tasty … but needed some spices … maybe some Italian seasoning.  I also made the “Southern” Beans and Greens.  I put Southern in quotes, cause I am quite sure that in the South, it ain’t vegan!  My beans of choice were organic Pinto and my greens were kale.  I thought these were really good.  This mixture could also be wrapped in a tortilla (thanks for the idea Christy) or served with rice, which is what I had for lunch today.

I don’t aspire to follow the food plan to the letter, but I am definitely staying vegan, whole foods and using the recipes on the plan.   I’ll be eating out a little this weekend, but I will be doing my best to stick to whole food, low fat, and vegan.

It’s only been three full days, and I can tell you I feel better already.  My stomach doesn’t feel all pouchy and full.  I feel lighter.  I hope to take off a few pounds at the end of this as well, especially once my cough goes away completely and I can exercise again.

Adios, my friends and readers, I’ll be back tomorrow with a more complete list and maybe some photos and other updates.

*I was actually directed to this particular challenge by my very beautiful, talented and intelligent friend, Emily, a Holistic Health Counselor and owner of Triumph Wellness.  Her blog is listed in my blogroll.

Not Shooting From the Hip

I’ve been experiencing hip pain for about three years now.   It first became apparent during training for the Gasparilla Tampa Bay marathon, which was held in February of 2007.  But I would just rest and then be able to run.  Only a few times has it affected my ability to run regularly.  The first being when we did the San Diego Marathon in June of that same year.    It bothered me while training for the Pittsburgh marathon in 2009, but I still was able to run that race and some half marathons.  But during training, I had many days of having to walk it out and not run at all.

I FINALLY broke down and saw a doctor.  A sports medicine orthopedist.   That day, she did some strength tests on me and I had an x-ray that showed nothing except some arthritis.  Because of that, I needed to get an MRI, which I scheduled for November 11.   Long story short, the Monday before we were to go to Vegas, I heard from my doctor who gave me the verdict that I had a hip impingement, which was irregularly shaped bones.  She said a lot of stuff that I quite honestly didn’t catch, but caught the important stuff.  Start PT, there is a surgery that is an option that is essentially shaving bone, no running and see her in about six weeks.

Ack!  What????  I did indeed call for PT that very day and scheduled my first session for the day before we left for Vegas, where we were doing half marathons, Matt running, me walking.   Of course, I did a lot of research, made myself ill.  I found a blog of someone who went through this and is doing well on the surgery.  I joined a yahoo! support group for people with this condition … FAI (femoracetabular impingement).    What I learned is that there are two main kinds of FAI … one where the femur bone has a bony protrustion or some mis-shape, which is called CAM and the other is the acetabulum, called PINCHER and some people can have two.  There seem to be mixed results on the surgery, but most people ended up going for the surgery because they could not control the pain.  They couldn’t run, go to yoga, bike, nothing.  But after surgery, supposedly one can return to these activities if the surgery is successful.

Do I even need to say I was scared? And running?  I had all the emotions.  I was sad that I might not be able to run again.  Then relieved.   Somewhere in there, I became alright with it.  Then I wasn’t.  Then I thought if I could just run a little.  It didn’t have to be training all the time.  A 5K or a 10K would be great.  Just back and forth and back and forth between the emotions.  Finally decided that I wouldn’t use running as a reason for getting the surgery.  That would have to be a benefit.   I was quite honestly more upset about the fact that all of the FAI sites said no yoga.  I haven’t been to yoga in a very long time and I need yoga for much more than “stretching”.   Yoga is more important to me than running.

I’ve been faithfully going to PT twice a week (except for the two times this stupid cold has kept me at home) and doing my at-home exercises.  My therapist, Valerie, is very nice and smart.  She told me that as soon as I feel up to it, I can exercise and do anything except run, jump or strengthen the legs, as the PT is doing that for me.  That includes yoga “as long as it doesn’t hurt”.

Tuesday, 1/5, I had my six week checkup with my sports medicine doctor.  I, unfortunately, didn’t have a lot to report as far as fitness gains, as I haven’t done any real exercise since walking the half marathon on 12/6.  But we talked in more detail and as it turns out, all of my gloom and doom and worries were really overblown.  I’m glad I did the research, I won’t say that that was a mistake, but as it turns out:

*My impingement is so slight that it isn’t even really anything she would consider as needing surgery.  I have the CAM type, and it looks like one side of my femur is straight instead of curved.  It’s probably bilateral, as well as the arthritis.

*She feels my arthritis is the biggest problem.

*My pain is multi-faceted and includes tendonitis as well as the muscle weakness.  The tendinitis is on the right side, not the left and that is why the impingement and arthritis are not troublesome on the other side.

*There is a SMALL chance I have a SMALL labral tear, which is something that needs surgically corrected, but at this point, we are not going there.

*Might need a psoas release for full elimination of pain (no thank you!).

Basically, the treatment for the arthritis and the tendinitis is what I am doing … stop the activity that caused it (running), go to PT to strengthen, use heat, and other pain control methods, including yoga, which was highly recommended.  :)   Low impact cardio and weight control.

When I asked her about running again someday, not because I wanted to run marathons again, but just for fun and shorter distances, and she said that I might be able to do that again.

So that is where I stand.  And I do honestly feel good about things now.  And very thankful that I won’t need to keep getting those steroid shots in my hip!  They are not very comfortable.