Posts Tagged ‘weight loss program’

Entrepreneur’s Diet: Report Card for Week 1

Monday, August 10th, 2009

This is my blog, so I get to choose the reporting schedule.  That this first report comes on a day my actual measured weight is in line with my theoretical weight is purely coincidental.

I think this thing really works. 

The parallels to running a business continue to hit home.  There’s all this uncertainty, just like in the daily life of an entrepreneur.  You really don’t know if or when any given deal will be closed.  You generally cannot predict accurately when someone you make  a sale to is going to fork over the cash (unless you have a cash only business).  Same with the weight loss program.  I don’t know if I really could burn 400 calories per hour of bike riding,  the closest estimate I could find at the time.  Maybe I will have better information in the future.  Same with the 2,300 calories per day burned by someone my age and sex living a sedentary lifestyle.  (Sorry for the bolding, I just wanted to increase readership of this paragraph).

There is the key assumption that 3,500 excess calories burned equates to losing a pound of fat.  I think I read it somewhere a long time ago – maybe when I was a kid and was on one of my various (and usally not terribly successful) diets.  Suppose it is really 2,500 or 5,000?

Finally there is the hassle of good record keeping: taking the time to count calories, and recording them by meal.  I use the Calorie King database to look up foods for which there is no nutritional label.  I’ve been measuring stuff like: how much cereal fits in my standard cereal bowl, how much milk I pour on it, and how much sugar is really contained in those two heaping teaspoons (turns out to be a tablespoon).

A lot of the measuring and weighing I just do once, and can then use the information over and over.  A lot of my meals, especially breakfast and lunch, are the same every day, or chosen from 3 or 4 variations.

The exception has been fresh fruit, which varies quite a bit in size from one shopping trip to the next.  And then stuff like cheddar cheese where the portion sizes are hard to equate with the standard serving size.  Who thought that an ounce of cheddar cheese could turn out to be so small?  

We eat a whole lot of fresh fruit – probably 3 to 5 servings every day.  (Laurie told me the FDA recommends 9 servings a day – but who in the world eats that much??).  I’ve been weighing fruit portions recently so I can equate “1 medium pear” from Calorie King with the amount of weight in what I consider to be a medium pear.  Bananas vary a lot in size – the one I had this morning was 3.2 oz, which Calorie King considers to be between extra small and small.  One nice thing about Calorie King is that it is real easy to change units and it updates instantly the total calories and other nutrients (3.2 oz of banana = 82  calories).

My wife Laurie and I have a running battle on what constitutes a small vs. large banana (she prefers the small ones).  I am sure it will drive her absolutely nuts if I start measuring the weight of the bananas to monitor whether I have purchased the latest bunch according to a pre-agreed upon definition of what constitutes a small banana.  This whole food weighing thing is going to be more fun than I thought.

So here are the results of the first 9 days of August.  I was out of town (and without my scales) on August 1st, so I am using 205 as the starting weight, which is halfway between 207.5 on July 30th and 202.5 on August 3rd. 

We drove back to Alexandria from Va. Beach on August 2nd. As a result, I could squeeze in just a short 9 mile ride before we left.  I’ve been riding like a madman ever since, and even did 54 miles yesterday.  So calories burned (Sales) have been above plan, month to date.  Calories consumed (Expenses) have also been above plan, but by a little less than calories burned.  For the first 9 days of the month in total, the cumulative excess of calories burned (Profit) is 10,796.  I did this while averaging 3 hours and 8 minutes a day of bike riding, plus eating and drinking 2,457 calories a day.   I found that including 3 or 4 shots of bourbon in my planned diet (mixed with diet ginger ale of course – 100 calories a pop) made it a whole lot easier to keep to the plan.

My goal, based on wanting to lose 10 pounds for the month, was a cumulative excess (Month to Date Profit) of 10,170 calories for this period of time.  My theoritical weight loss is 3.1 pounds in total.  My actual weight (Total Debt) is down 4 pounds (Cash Flow) to 201 this morning.  You guessed it: my goal is to earn a lot of profit, create positive cash flow, and pay down debt.  All while having fun.

  Energy Food Eaten Excess Cumulative Cumulative Cumulative
  Ouput Calories Cal. Burned Excess Goal Act vs Goal
8/1/2009 3,426 2,540 886 886 1,130 (244)
8/2/2009 2,633 2,200 433 1,319 2,260 (941)
8/3/2009 3,707 2,100 1,607 2,926 3,390 (464)
8/4/2009 3,455 2,630 825 3,751 4,520 (769)
8/5/2009 3,547 2,334 1,213 4,964 5,650 (686)
8/6/2009 3,665 2,793 872 5,836 6,780 (944)
8/7/2009 4,053 2,614 1,439 7,276 7,910 (634)
8/8/2009 3,971 2,252 1,719 8,995 9,040 (45)
8/9/2009 4,448 2,647 1,801 10,796 10,170 626
             
Legend for Entrepreneurs:        
  Sales Expenses Daily Profit Month to Date MTD Profit  
        (MTD) Profit Goal  

 

Here is a sanity check to see if my actual weight loss is tracking the theoretical weight loss based on calories eaten and calories burned:

  Cumulative Estimated Estimated Actual Actual vs Actual Weight Cumulative
  Excess Weight Loss Weight Weight Estimate Loss Weight Loss
8/1/2009 886 0.3 205.0 205 0.0 1.0 1.0
8/2/2009 1,319 0.4 204.7 204 (0.7) 1.5 2.5
8/3/2009 2,926 0.8 204.6 202.5 (2.1) 0.0 2.5
8/4/2009 3,751 1.1 204.2 202.5 (1.7) (3.0) (0.5)
8/5/2009 4,964 1.4 203.9 205.5 1.6 2.0 1.5
8/6/2009 5,836 1.7 203.6 203.5 (0.1) (0.5) 1.0
8/7/2009 7,276 2.1 203.3 204 0.7 (2.0) (1.0)
8/8/2009 8,995 2.6 202.9 206 3.1 3.0 2.0
8/9/2009 10,796 3.1 202.4 203 0.6 2.0 4.0
      201.9 201 (0.9)    
               
Legend for Entrepreneurs:          
               
  Month to Date Estimated Estimated Actual Should be  Cash Flow Cumulative
  (MTD) Profit Debt Debt Debt close to    Cash Flow
    Reduction Balance Balance zero  over    
        (due to Cash Flow  time.    
        timing differences)      
Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
  • email

Weight Loss Program for Entrepreneurs

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

In an earlier post (July 11th) I talked about my Facebook diet and how it enabled me to lose 15 pounds in 90 days.   In the last paragraph,  I went on record:  “My plan now is to try to stay steady for the rest of this month, and then do a major push in August to get below 200.”

It is now August 2nd, and I did manage to stay steady the rest of July.  My last weigh-in on July 30th had me at 207.5, about two pounds less that the July 11th posting.    My goal for August is to lose 10 pounds, and get below 200 for the first time in 30 or 35 years.  Also, I have a chance to weigh less than my brother Hank (198.5 recently) for the first time since I was about 4 and he was 6.  Unfortunately, he just joined a gym and may represent a moving target.  Nothing like the additional motivation from sibling rivalry.

I’ve decided that managing a weight loss program is a lot like running a business,  which is why I am calling this a weight loss program for entrepreneurs.  Amidst a lot of uncertainty, I tried experimenting to see what would work, and what would not.  This is something you are constantly doing when you start and run a business. 

I tried to understand better what I was capable of.  I kept good records so that I could come back and analyze performance over an extended period of time.  It helps to distance yourself from the daily and weekly swings in weight, and take a longer view.  Same thing with a business:  you can’t get too excited over daily swings in sales, but you sure as hell better understand the monthly trends so that you can size the business appropriately.  I feel like I have a good idea now of what is possible. 

Continuing the analogy, I’ve made some investments to improve my performance in the future.  I investigated nutritional databases and found a good one to help me get a better handle on my “expenses” – i.e. the colorie content of the food that I eat  (www.calorieking.com).  I bought a food scale so that I can be even more precise when I need to.  I’ve kept a food diary the last 10 days to see if it is practical to do.  

Finally, I made some projections of future calories burned and calories consumed, to see what it would take to reach my target of losing 10 pounds in 30 days.  I am putting a system in place to monitor actual performance against projections.  Now, I just have the minor detail of actually executing the plan.  This blog and Facebook will have a major role in that.  Making the measures visible and public and powerful motivators.

 Starting on Tuesday, August 4th,  I plan to publish my weight each day on Facebook.  I will supplement that with a detailed blog entry specifying the exercise for the day and estimated calories burned, as well as a log of food that I eat, and the estimated colories consumed.

Based on my age, weight, and gender (55, 207.5, Male), I burn about 2300 calories a day with a sedentary lifestyle.  According to CalorieKing, I burn up about 400 calories  an hour when cycling.  I’ve read that a pound of fat is equivalent to 3,500 calories.  So here’s my analysis and plan:

  • I need to burn 35,000 calories above and beyond what I consume for the month in order to lose 10 pounds.  That’s about 1,130 per day over 31 days.
  • I feel like with some concerted effort, and the flexibility I have from being my own boss, I will be able to do 3 hours of day of cycling.  That equates to 1,200 calories per day.
  • This means that I can eat 3,500 calories a day to stay steady (2,300 + 1,200).
  • To achieve my 10 pound goal for the month, I can eat 2,370 calories a day (3,500 minus 1,130)

Wish me luck!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
  • email