Well This Is Embarrassing
joshuak30
Posts: 110 Member
On February 18th, 2017, I created a post where I identified my goal for a full year. Here I am (nearly) a year later, and I've missed the mark in a bad way.
2017 was not a failure, though. Not by a long shot. I'm frustrated that I didn't stick to my plan for the entire year, but I still made huge strides and accomplished some major personal goals. Unfortunately I wasted the 4th quarter of the year and undid my body composition progress almost entirely.
My 2017 goal was to finish the year somewhere around 15% bodyfat, 160 pounds, and doing consistent weight training. Instead I'm 168 pounds and closer to 20% bodyfat, and not weight training at all. In fact I haven't lifted a barbell in over 200 days. Woops.
The good news is that I crushed my cycling goal for the year. 3050 miles, about half commuting to work and half just recreational rides. That's a huge win for me, because I've discovered I love it and can do it all year long. The calorie burns are great, the fitness is great, and I genuinely have found a hobby I can do for pretty much the rest of my life.
What I learned is that with two 1-year-old girls in my life, I don't have the time and freedom to go lift weights at my very-easy-to-access gym. Not lifting for most of the year while cycling a lot has meant that my fitness has been great, but my muscle mass (particularly upper body) has decreased significantly. I really miss lifting weights! So much so that I started to lose motivation in improving my cycling performance because I was generally unhappy not weight training.
The takeaway from this year is that I need strength training. Cycling alone is great, but not quite enough. I light of that I have started assembling a home gym, and expect to complete it in the next week or two. I will have a full squat rack, Olympic barbell and weights, and a bench. I'm excited to be able to add weight training back into my life!!
2018 goals:
No weight goal. No weight goal!! This is kind of a big deal for me. I've always been a bit too focused on the scale number, to the detriment of composition. This year I really am going to stop worrying about the scale number. Too many times I've told myself I can't really weigh less than 160 pounds. Not any longer. This year it's about the real goal...
Visible abs. Definition. Maybe not resting definition, but they have to show at least when I flex. You can't fake it, you can't trick the eye; you either have them or you don't. I don't care if I have to drop another 20 pounds to have them. Gonna do it.
Cycling 4000 miles. This is a fair jump from my 2017 mileage, but I expect to bike commute with more regularity, which will add up the miles quickly.
Weight training! With my home setup I intend to lift three times per week.
My strength goals:
Bench press 1x my bodyweight for working reps,
Squat 1.5x my bodyweight for reps,
Deadlift 2x my bodyweight for reps.
Overall I'm excited and optimistic for 2018. I've learned more about what keeps me going in fitness and health through the experience of success and failure in 2017. I've made strides in understanding how to achieve the goals I really care about, and moving past my own mental blocks to actually do what's needed to reach those goals.
I will weigh in daily (to assist with accurate calorie counting), take weekly progress photos, and measurements biweekly. I will make a concerted effort to post my progress to actually see the changes and be accountable to them.
2017 was not a failure, though. Not by a long shot. I'm frustrated that I didn't stick to my plan for the entire year, but I still made huge strides and accomplished some major personal goals. Unfortunately I wasted the 4th quarter of the year and undid my body composition progress almost entirely.
My 2017 goal was to finish the year somewhere around 15% bodyfat, 160 pounds, and doing consistent weight training. Instead I'm 168 pounds and closer to 20% bodyfat, and not weight training at all. In fact I haven't lifted a barbell in over 200 days. Woops.
The good news is that I crushed my cycling goal for the year. 3050 miles, about half commuting to work and half just recreational rides. That's a huge win for me, because I've discovered I love it and can do it all year long. The calorie burns are great, the fitness is great, and I genuinely have found a hobby I can do for pretty much the rest of my life.
What I learned is that with two 1-year-old girls in my life, I don't have the time and freedom to go lift weights at my very-easy-to-access gym. Not lifting for most of the year while cycling a lot has meant that my fitness has been great, but my muscle mass (particularly upper body) has decreased significantly. I really miss lifting weights! So much so that I started to lose motivation in improving my cycling performance because I was generally unhappy not weight training.
The takeaway from this year is that I need strength training. Cycling alone is great, but not quite enough. I light of that I have started assembling a home gym, and expect to complete it in the next week or two. I will have a full squat rack, Olympic barbell and weights, and a bench. I'm excited to be able to add weight training back into my life!!
2018 goals:
No weight goal. No weight goal!! This is kind of a big deal for me. I've always been a bit too focused on the scale number, to the detriment of composition. This year I really am going to stop worrying about the scale number. Too many times I've told myself I can't really weigh less than 160 pounds. Not any longer. This year it's about the real goal...
Visible abs. Definition. Maybe not resting definition, but they have to show at least when I flex. You can't fake it, you can't trick the eye; you either have them or you don't. I don't care if I have to drop another 20 pounds to have them. Gonna do it.
Cycling 4000 miles. This is a fair jump from my 2017 mileage, but I expect to bike commute with more regularity, which will add up the miles quickly.
Weight training! With my home setup I intend to lift three times per week.
My strength goals:
Bench press 1x my bodyweight for working reps,
Squat 1.5x my bodyweight for reps,
Deadlift 2x my bodyweight for reps.
Overall I'm excited and optimistic for 2018. I've learned more about what keeps me going in fitness and health through the experience of success and failure in 2017. I've made strides in understanding how to achieve the goals I really care about, and moving past my own mental blocks to actually do what's needed to reach those goals.
I will weigh in daily (to assist with accurate calorie counting), take weekly progress photos, and measurements biweekly. I will make a concerted effort to post my progress to actually see the changes and be accountable to them.
8
Replies
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Can the girls go to babysitting at the gym so you can lift weights? Or do you have weights at home to use while they nap or are busy with their dad or uncle or at play dates?0
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Awesome goals! Soon enough you'll need to get those baby weight sets for the girls to join you! Bring your girls up with barbells in their hands and nothing will stand in their way!1
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Congrats on the great progress you've made. I find that sometimes I set too many overlapping goals or goals that are too ambitious for my circumstances. It's ok to readjust as needed. The important thing is to keep moving forward. It sounds like you've learned from 2017 and are prepared to commit to 2018!2
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Thanks for the encouragement!
My goal was to go to the gym after I got home from work and fed the girls their dinner (my wife would stay home with them, she never minds that as long as I am there to put them to bed) but what I found was that...I never actually did that. Leaving the house once I'm home for the day is just a huge mental hurdle for me. Not sure why.
Anyway, my solution is to build the home gym. Simple but enough equipment to let me do that things I love - squat, deadlift, bench press, etc. And yes, I totally intend to get my girls into lifting! :-)6 -
Utilise your girls like Milo of Croton.....
Great perspective on 2017 and great ambition for 2018. Good luck.
You should join the monthly cycling challenge thread, it's a bit quiet in the winter months.3 -
Life is such a work at balance. You made wonderful achievements last year. I love your idea of a home gym.
After a few surgeries and gaining weight I have just recently started cycling again. I love it. Love my new road bike.
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I totally should join the cycling challenge group. I've looked at it a few times, might be nice to have some other folks to talk to about it.0
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Starting photo:
0 -
Stats:
Starting Weight: 168.4 lbs
Chest: 38"
Waist @ Navel: 36.5"
Hips: 40"
Thighs: 23"
Hopefully sharing actual measurements and photos regularly will help me stay disciplined.0 -
Weighed in at 165 this morning. I don't trust my old scale anymore; the fluctuations are just too big for how I'm eating and exercising.
In light of that, I'm sandbagging just in case and sticking with my weight on Thursday: 167. Progress picture tonight!0 -
Turns out my scale is totally fine. I checked it with a 25-lb weight, and it was dead on. So my weight is 165 after all!
I've been dealing with a stomach illness, and felt (and looked) bloated and terrible yesterday. So no progress picture.0
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