60 yrs and up
Replies
-
alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive by check in. Some good days, some bad days at my house. Chemo is on hold for a week or two, but Kathy's appetite still comes and goes (mostly goes). She sleeps more than she is awake. We see the oncologist tomorrow and we will find out what is in the long term plan.
Holding the line weight wise - losing very slowly. Workouts and walking help to manage the stress, but still going on the occasional binge.
Steve, you're doing absolutely amazingly under these very-difficult conditions.
I remain so sorry that you and your wife are going through this, so sympathetic.
Holding the line on weight is excellent under these circumstances; losing slowly is a big accomplishment. (If you have the emotional energy for it in your already-taxed emotional budget, I think you should feel ultra proud of yourself.)
Hang in there, and feel free to drop in and vent, or whatever may help you at the time. Sending strength and caring to both of you!1 -
alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive by check in. Some good days, some bad days at my house. Chemo is on hold for a week or two, but Kathy's appetite still comes and goes (mostly goes). She sleeps more than she is awake. We see the oncologist tomorrow and we will find out what is in the long term plan.
Holding the line weight wise - losing very slowly. Workouts and walking help to manage the stress, but still going on the occasional binge.
Holding the line weight wise while dealing with everything your family is going through is a win.
Hugs.1 -
healhierhappiness wrote: »Replying to Anns post above this.
Hi Ann
Thanks so much. We will see how this trend of eating goes Today I am still eating chips and dip pretty soon it will all be GONE!! Hoping that 3 pounds does come off I have about 350ish calories in my 1200 cal budget left for today. We are planning on french toast ( 12 grain bread sugar free syrup) some scrambled eggs for dinner. Hoping that will keep me in line more or less, and I stop this food madness!!!!
Thanks
Let us know the aftermath, if that isn't too stressful for you, maybe? If you didn't eat that 10,500 calories over maintenance calories, my money is on the probability that you'll see your weight drop back down fairly quickly. *How* quickly is somewhat individual. For me, it almost never takes more than a week. It can be quicker, or slower.
This personal example might amuse you, dunno:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10603949/big-overfeed-ruins-everything-nope/p1
Full digestive transit, per research, can take 50+ hours. Before that, I'd withhold judgement. Water retention can take longer to clear up. . . how long varies with individual circumstances.
Betting on an OK outcome here . . . which isn't a reason to go crazy on the reg, more like a reason to give ourselves grace if things go a little weird in the rare case, as I see it.1 -
Looks like I haven't done a personal update on this thread lately, so here it is: I fear I'm pretty boring to the casual reader, though my life seems reasonably contented to me.
Doing my usual stuff: Rowing on water M-W-F-Sa weather permitting for about 7k, which takes around an hour including water-drinking breaks and stuff. (This is my joy, plus much of my social life.) Rowing a quad (4 person sculling boat, 2 oars per person) often lately, with my buddies. Common participants are 2 women around 75 y/o, me (65) and another of similar age (retired head of community college massage program), another woman a bit above 60, then some "mere youths" including a new-this-year rower (longtime roller derby athlete) who's probably in her 30s, a 21-year-old recent-college-graduate former NCAA Div III coxswain who's an excellent rower (as many coxswains are, they're just too tiny to row at high levels, since that favors tall people), and a (tall) one-time Big Ten conference champion rower in her 30s who's now a pharmacist locally. One of the wonderful things about rowing is that people of different strengths can row together in boats, successfully, in ways that give everyone a good time. So fun, and I love having friends across age groups!
Monday nights, I've been supervising my rowing club's open rowing time 6-8PM, which is when newer/less confident rowers can come out, get help carrying boats to the water (a 30-45 pound 18-26' boat is awkward to carry solo, even if the weight is manageable), get a few tips on common errors to avoid. As the "supervisor", I'm the pseudo expert: It'll have to do, I guess. 😆
For me, it adds some walking and a little boat carrying; and is a nice quiet time outside (sitting on the dock in a plastic lawn chair), but not what I'd call exercise. Enjoyable, though. There are ducks, geese, some prehistoric looking Great Blue Herons, the occasional deer, mink, egret, or what-have-you. At worst, I'm sitting next to a scenic river: Good stuff.
Most M-W-F, I go to a park after my row, walk for around 5 miles. Recently, I've added a mini-circuit of questionably-effective upper body exercises, using outdoor exercise machines in the park. I do reps until it feels like I'm working, different for each machine. Better doing those, than not doing those, I think?
On the Tu-Th, I often go for a bike ride, something in the 10-25 mile range depending on schedule/weather/energy/inclination. I skipped today because my usual route to the trails is complicated by gravel topping new top-coat, for a couple of miles via any alternative. (Yeah, I coulda put the bike in the car . . . .). The gravel is unstable to ride on, and passing cars toss random bits at me, which is sub-recreational. Sundays are usually intentional rest days, unless I've had other rest days because of weather or something.
This will be a light week for exercise, I hope (?): I'm scheduled for outpatient eye surgery, pars plana vitrectomy, on Thursday. It was scheduled in June, got cancelled due to the surgeon having emergency calls. Hoping it will happen this time, as she says my risk of problems increases with time. Also hoping the less-extreme version of surgery will be possible, as expected: If it's more difficult, I'll end up with needing to be face down for something like 50 minutes out of every hour for the next couple of weeks, which sounds non-fun (one of my friends recently went through that). If all goes as expected, should just be a week off exercise (bad enough in itself, in my personal happiness formula!). Right now, I'm pretty much legally blind in my left eye (20/150 or worse), though I have enough light/shape getting through to have some 3D perception. I'm hoping this may get me a better binocular vision.
I'm pretty much hanging in weight-wise, weight stable around 125 pounds (at 5'5") as intended, after those previous decades of obesity, at the moment. If I drop down a few pounds, I splurge a little; if creeping up, I try to hold the line just a bit below maintenance calories. I'm coming out of a phase where I'd added a few pounds, lost it ultra-super-slowly by intention over around 18 months, hoping to hold around 125 for a longer period. Working at it, but jury's out.
Hope everyone is having a good, productive week, with peace and happiness! 😊4 -
Not Ann you sure made me tired. Good job on keeping moving. My big activity was shampooing area rug and cleaning the hard wood floors lol. At least I didn't sit and read all day. It's so hot still I can't seem to get motivated to get my exercise routine back on track. My go to is walking on my treadmill and yoga so I can be indoors. Living in the country with allergies I don't do well outside other than short time in pool. Everyone enjoy your week. Good luck with your eyes I had similar problems and now have 20/25 for first time since I was a kid. Keep us posted.
2 -
Not Ann you sure made me tired. Good job on keeping moving. My big activity was shampooing area rug and cleaning the hard wood floors lol. At least I didn't sit and read all day. It's so hot still I can't seem to get motivated to get my exercise routine back on track. My go to is walking on my treadmill and yoga so I can be indoors. Living in the country with allergies I don't do well outside other than short time in pool. Everyone enjoy your week. Good luck with your eyes I had similar problems and now have 20/25 for first time since I was a kid. Keep us posted.
Thank you for the well-wishes: It can only help!
My secret on the exercise front: I don't do much of the needful cleaning/yardwork, to the detriment of general adulthood, even though I live alone. (Living alone now - in longtime widowhood - is both a blessing and a curse. I can do as I like, whenever and as much as I like . . . but what I like isn't always the most responsible possible choice.) Good for you, getting after the rug/floor: I'd be a better woman if I did likewise, for sure!1 -
Ann
That is a lot of activity you do, excellent job!!! I am amazed at all of that you do rowing walking biking sure is good for you or anyone!! Hope your surgery goes forward on Thursday and I wish you well with that and you have the less extreme surgery. BTW I have lost one of the 3 pounds I gained back so far. I read your link and I see a little indulgence doesn't sabatoge the whole thing, Thanks for the link Yesterday was a better day, not perfect but better. Good luck tomorrow1 -
Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.14 -
alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.
Hang in there.
Being my husband’s caregiver for the past decade has been one of the most difficult things I have ever done. I don’t think anyone really knows what it’s like until they’re going through it.
I’m glad you’re able to carve out gym time. That’s really good.
Keep us informed. We’re here for you.
3 -
Looks like I haven't done a personal update on this thread lately, so here it is: I fear I'm pretty boring to the casual reader, though my life seems reasonably contented to me.
Doing my usual stuff: Rowing on water M-W-F-Sa weather permitting for about 7k, which takes around an hour including water-drinking breaks and stuff. (This is my joy, plus much of my social life.) Rowing a quad (4 person sculling boat, 2 oars per person) often lately, with my buddies. Common participants are 2 women around 75 y/o, me (65) and another of similar age (retired head of community college massage program), another woman a bit above 60, then some "mere youths" including a new-this-year rower (longtime roller derby athlete) who's probably in her 30s, a 21-year-old recent-college-graduate former NCAA Div III coxswain who's an excellent rower (as many coxswains are, they're just too tiny to row at high levels, since that favors tall people), and a (tall) one-time Big Ten conference champion rower in her 30s who's now a pharmacist locally. One of the wonderful things about rowing is that people of different strengths can row together in boats, successfully, in ways that give everyone a good time. So fun, and I love having friends across age groups!
Monday nights, I've been supervising my rowing club's open rowing time 6-8PM, which is when newer/less confident rowers can come out, get help carrying boats to the water (a 30-45 pound 18-26' boat is awkward to carry solo, even if the weight is manageable), get a few tips on common errors to avoid. As the "supervisor", I'm the pseudo expert: It'll have to do, I guess. 😆
For me, it adds some walking and a little boat carrying; and is a nice quiet time outside (sitting on the dock in a plastic lawn chair), but not what I'd call exercise. Enjoyable, though. There are ducks, geese, some prehistoric looking Great Blue Herons, the occasional deer, mink, egret, or what-have-you. At worst, I'm sitting next to a scenic river: Good stuff.
Most M-W-F, I go to a park after my row, walk for around 5 miles. Recently, I've added a mini-circuit of questionably-effective upper body exercises, using outdoor exercise machines in the park. I do reps until it feels like I'm working, different for each machine. Better doing those, than not doing those, I think?
On the Tu-Th, I often go for a bike ride, something in the 10-25 mile range depending on schedule/weather/energy/inclination. I skipped today because my usual route to the trails is complicated by gravel topping new top-coat, for a couple of miles via any alternative. (Yeah, I coulda put the bike in the car . . . .). The gravel is unstable to ride on, and passing cars toss random bits at me, which is sub-recreational. Sundays are usually intentional rest days, unless I've had other rest days because of weather or something.
This will be a light week for exercise, I hope (?): I'm scheduled for outpatient eye surgery, pars plana vitrectomy, on Thursday. It was scheduled in June, got cancelled due to the surgeon having emergency calls. Hoping it will happen this time, as she says my risk of problems increases with time. Also hoping the less-extreme version of surgery will be possible, as expected: If it's more difficult, I'll end up with needing to be face down for something like 50 minutes out of every hour for the next couple of weeks, which sounds non-fun (one of my friends recently went through that). If all goes as expected, should just be a week off exercise (bad enough in itself, in my personal happiness formula!). Right now, I'm pretty much legally blind in my left eye (20/150 or worse), though I have enough light/shape getting through to have some 3D perception. I'm hoping this may get me a better binocular vision.
I'm pretty much hanging in weight-wise, weight stable around 125 pounds (at 5'5") as intended, after those previous decades of obesity, at the moment. If I drop down a few pounds, I splurge a little; if creeping up, I try to hold the line just a bit below maintenance calories. I'm coming out of a phase where I'd added a few pounds, lost it ultra-super-slowly by intention over around 18 months, hoping to hold around 125 for a longer period. Working at it, but jury's out.
Hope everyone is having a good, productive week, with peace and happiness! 😊
Whole cow! You are a work out machine! You must be pretty healthy to do all that stuff. I have recently been diagnosed with an ascending aortic aneurysm and stage 3 kidney disease....darn wellness exams! Scared to exercise meaningfully. I see a specialist at the Cleveland Clinic next week. Scared about that too. Would love advice from anyone whose been down or on this road!!! Thanks.
In the mean time, row a few Ks for me!9 -
My dad had a AAA repair when he was in his late 70s. He recovered fully. I think the surgery would be better in your 60s though3
-
@AnnPT77 is such an inspiration. Not just for her physical achievements but that she logs every day and so graciously shares her experiences. We ALL could do that. My thing is hiking. My legs told me not doing much for weeks then going on a steep 8 mile hike was not a good idea. So this weekend I'm going to haul my sorry self up 5 miles to a place called...The Hike Inn. The next day hike to Springer Mountain (the southern terminus of the Appalachian Trail and back to the Hike Inn. The last 5 miles are downhill. Piece of cake. HaHa! I'll recover next week.4
-
Drive by check in. Cutting the calories a bit - trying to eat more protein - and being diligent about logging everything. Got a little whoosh going on right now. I'll take it!9
-
After all of you-alls nice comments about my exercise schedule - thank you! - I'm on injured (recovering?) reserve right now, after yesterday's eye surgery. (It was a pars plana vitrectomy/membrane peel, in case there are any ocular tech-heads reading. 😉) The surgery itself went well, and the report from today's post-op doctor visit was also optimistic. I got to take off the eye bandage (need to put it back at night), and was relieved to see full-field vision. It's pretty sore and scratchy feeling, and things are still blurry, still around 20/150 in that eye (sigh!), but the hope is that as swelling goes down and the tissues relax, there'll be vision improvement. 🤞
I admit to feeling grumpy about having to take what looks like it will be 2-3 weeks off, other than walking, right during the thick of rowing/biking season . . . but that's how it is, sometimes.
A note about exercise: I'm pretty active now, but was extremely sedentary - not routinely active - until my mid-40s. After the full 9 yards of cancer treatment (which itself followed not all that long after losing my husband to a different cancer), I was pretty physically depleted, and it sunk in that if I ever wanted to feel good and strong and happy again, I was going to have to really *work* at it.
By that point, I already had some limitations (OA in various spots at least, and probably already at least one torn knee meniscus, though the latter wasn't formally diagnosed until later). I started really gradually, with some yoga classes, and just gradually kept increasing the challenge over a couple of years, until finding on-water rowing as part of a breast cancer survivors team. Rowing, to me, was addictively fun. It was a "gateway drug". I did other kinds of exercise for cross-training (Richard Simmons videos, weight lifting. . .), took adult swimming lessons (because we fall out of these skinny boats sometimes!), and more.
There have been issues along the way (such as tendinitis in my arm, back issues, nerve impingement in a shoulder, . . .), but with good doctors and physical therapists, I've been lucky to have mostly resolved those as acute challenges. In general, the stronger/fitter I get, the fewer problems I have physically, as long as I manage the mix of activities, intensity, and needed recovery in a thoughtful way.
With retirement, and maybe even more so now in the pandemic, it's been fun and easy to add some more exercise volume. Pre-pandemic, I'd pretty much been in a schedule of spin classes twice a week, lots of on-water rowing in summer, a little machine rowing in winter, with some other random things thrown in. During the pandemic, I stopped going to spin classes (my Y was closed for quite a while, at first), but after a while began adding other things, and filling up time with fun stuff that way, especially during good weather. Social events were pretty much nil, so this was an enjoyable distraction. So, here I am now, pretty active . . .
. . . when not in my 2-3 week post-surgical hiatus. I can still walk, so I'll be taking some walks starting in the next few days, when the discomfort and light sensitivity declines a bit more.
I completely get that it's hard to get started with any kind of exercise program, because I've been there, as an obese adult, before that "stage III breast cancer" slap in the noggin. What isn't as obvious, I think, are two things: (1) How big the rewards are (yes, we know they're big in theory, but there's more good stuff to it in practice, I swear), and (2) how much one can really accomplish at most any age by gradual but persistent progress. If you'd told 45-year-old me what 65-year-old me's life would be like, there is no way that young'un would have believed you. And that, just from persistently shopping around for more active things that might be fun! (Ach, I tried so many different classes and things at first . . . !)
So: Hang in there. Good things can happen; gradual, manageable effort leads to surprising places over the long haul!8 -
alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.
Good to hear from you, Steve! I empathize with your situation, and your wife's. I don't want to intrude, but have they suggested any medication or other types of intervention on the more psychological side of things? A certain amount of depression or anxiety comes with the cancer diagnosis, of course. Some of that is for obvious reasons, but there's also some speculation that mood/attitude may be affected at the biochemical level during the cancer experience as well. Good nutrition is a plus on that side of things, for sure, if you/she can get her there, but other things can be useful. I'm far from the only person I know who used some medication during treatment to help with that sort of thing, though it hasn't been common in my life under other conditions.
On another front, personally, I found professional massage very helpful physically, and that has the plus of being enjoyable and basically passive. There can be some limitations on the modality during treatment, but a good MT can work within the guidance doctors offer. I don't know whether that would appeal to her, be affordable as a complementary therapy - just a thought.
Sounds like you're doing good things for yourself, still, and that'll be good for her as well (to see, and of course for you to keep your own tank a little more topped up as a caregiver).
Sending strength and well-wishes to you both!3 -
alteredsteve175 wrote: »
Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.
I too empathize with your situation, and your wife's. She sounds tired and just wants to kick back and take a break. Maybe in a little bit of time say a couple of weeks she will get some wind under her sails and feel more like doing more perhaps. I hope she will and I will say a prayer for her and your health also. It is the caregiver who puts in a lot of hours and time so you too need that much needed break. Maybe a family member could give you a weekend off?? I get it I really do, Ive been there( 26 yrs cancer survivor) and my husband has been there in your shoes. Its not easy but maybe things will turn around for her. God Bless2 -
Ann
That is the same surgery I had and it got better daily. I did have to have follow up injections because I developed macular swelling but they were no big deal. Take it easy and keeps us posted.
Steve, so sorry to hear your wife is struggling with the emotional aspect of what she is going through. Prayers are with you.
For all of you going through life's struggle know you are not alone and stay strong.2 -
Ann
That is the same surgery I had and it got better daily. I did have to have follow up injections because I developed macular swelling but they were no big deal. Take it easy and keeps us posted.
Steve, so sorry to hear your wife is struggling with the emotional aspect of what she is going through. Prayers are with you.
For all of you going through life's struggle know you are not alone and stay strong.
My husband has had to have those eye shots. Or similar. For diabetic retinopathy.
He hated the very idea of it. But when there was no other choice but to let him lose that eye, we bribed him with a six pack of his favorite beer.
It took three shots, but they worked.2 -
I'll come back in 5 years1
-
Hi all back after my holiday so now I need to get back on track! Have a great day everyone.2
-
Ann
That is the same surgery I had and it got better daily. I did have to have follow up injections because I developed macular swelling but they were no big deal. Take it easy and keeps us posted.
Steve, so sorry to hear your wife is struggling with the emotional aspect of what she is going through. Prayers are with you.
For all of you going through life's struggle know you are not alone and stay strong.
Thank you for that encouragement, via your experience. It was painful the first night, but has been settling down. It's still swollen, not too uncomfortable unless I move my eyes more extremely . . . but I look like someone smacked me in the eye! (Not going to share a photo. 🤣) They put a protective long-wear contact lens on it at the doctor's office, because there was a slight corneal scratch, to protect it. They'll take that out at Tuesday follow-up. So, just the 2 kinds of drops 4x a day, and no vigorous activity (that's the hard part!). Thanks for the good wishes: I think they're helping. 😊2 -
the thing about being injured/sick/having surgery when you are older is it is always tough to decide - do I cut calories because I am less active or do I continue with normal levels because my body needs the extra to heal.
What I found when I had the flu a few years back that an indication of how to answer the question above - partially - was my resting heart rate. With the flu mine jumped up almost 10 points which indicated my body was fighting off a virus and needed at a min normal cals to help.
What I found with injury was that my heart rate was not really any higher and since my activity was less I did need to make sure I was not eating at the active level.
Of course everyone has to reach their own way on this but I never know (over 60) what is going to be something more serious or just a small glitch for a day ... it's frustrating. I seriously wish I had appreciated the lack of aches and pains when I was younger.3 -
After all of you-alls nice comments about my exercise schedule - thank you! - I'm on injured (recovering?) reserve right now, after yesterday's eye surgery. (It was a pars plana vitrectomy/membrane peel, in case there are any ocular tech-heads reading. 😉) The surgery itself went well, and the report from today's post-op doctor visit was also optimistic. I got to take off the eye bandage (need to put it back at night), and was relieved to see full-field vision. It's pretty sore and scratchy feeling, and things are still blurry, still around 20/150 in that eye (sigh!), but the hope is that as swelling goes down and the tissues relax, there'll be vision improvement. 🤞
I admit to feeling grumpy about having to take what looks like it will be 2-3 weeks off, other than walking, right during the thick of rowing/biking season . . . but that's how it is, sometimes.
A note about exercise: I'm pretty active now, but was extremely sedentary - not routinely active - until my mid-40s. After the full 9 yards of cancer treatment (which itself followed not all that long after losing my husband to a different cancer), I was pretty physically depleted, and it sunk in that if I ever wanted to feel good and strong and happy again, I was going to have to really *work* at it.
By that point, I already had some limitations (OA in various spots at least, and probably already at least one torn knee meniscus, though the latter wasn't formally diagnosed until later). I started really gradually, with some yoga classes, and just gradually kept increasing the challenge over a couple of years, until finding on-water rowing as part of a breast cancer survivors team. Rowing, to me, was addictively fun. It was a "gateway drug". I did other kinds of exercise for cross-training (Richard Simmons videos, weight lifting. . .), took adult swimming lessons (because we fall out of these skinny boats sometimes!), and more.
There have been issues along the way (such as tendinitis in my arm, back issues, nerve impingement in a shoulder, . . .), but with good doctors and physical therapists, I've been lucky to have mostly resolved those as acute challenges. In general, the stronger/fitter I get, the fewer problems I have physically, as long as I manage the mix of activities, intensity, and needed recovery in a thoughtful way.
With retirement, and maybe even more so now in the pandemic, it's been fun and easy to add some more exercise volume. Pre-pandemic, I'd pretty much been in a schedule of spin classes twice a week, lots of on-water rowing in summer, a little machine rowing in winter, with some other random things thrown in. During the pandemic, I stopped going to spin classes (my Y was closed for quite a while, at first), but after a while began adding other things, and filling up time with fun stuff that way, especially during good weather. Social events were pretty much nil, so this was an enjoyable distraction. So, here I am now, pretty active . . .
. . . when not in my 2-3 week post-surgical hiatus. I can still walk, so I'll be taking some walks starting in the next few days, when the discomfort and light sensitivity declines a bit more.
I completely get that it's hard to get started with any kind of exercise program, because I've been there, as an obese adult, before that "stage III breast cancer" slap in the noggin. What isn't as obvious, I think, are two things: (1) How big the rewards are (yes, we know they're big in theory, but there's more good stuff to it in practice, I swear), and (2) how much one can really accomplish at most any age by gradual but persistent progress. If you'd told 45-year-old me what 65-year-old me's life would be like, there is no way that young'un would have believed you. And that, just from persistently shopping around for more active things that might be fun! (Ach, I tried so many different classes and things at first . . . !)
So: Hang in there. Good things can happen; gradual, manageable effort leads to surprising places over the long haul!
Ann, thanks for your fitness and exercise insights. Wishing you well on your recovery from eye surgery.2 -
alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive by check in. Cutting the calories a bit - trying to eat more protein - and being diligent about logging everything. Got a little whoosh going on right now. I'll take it!
Hey Steve! Sounds like a plan!
2 -
Hi,former SP. 70 yr old Canadian female recovering from stroke and starting to walk again with over 100 pounds to lose.9
-
Hi,former SP. 70 yr old Canadian female recovering from stroke and starting to walk again with over 100 pounds to lose.
Welcome to MFP!
There’s lots of former Spark People people here. Come join us!
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/140805-spark-people-friends
And if you feel motivated, join this group also.
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/141248-disability-fitness-and-weight-management-we-are-here-we-can-do-this
0 -
SummerSkier wrote: »My dad had a AAA repair when he was in his late 70s. He recovered fully. I think the surgery would be better in your 60s though
Thank you for the positive information. I appreciate your support!3 -
HI .. Im 63 (I think . Stopped counting in my mid 50s), retired, draw as my keep my hands busy activity .. I have some physical challenges, but trying to improve them ... one step at a time ... and Im finally tracking my food and trying to back up the ouchies clock ...
I would love to join your group ... (if I can find it ... I seem to get myself lost here ..lol)
Im Sally ... from Wisconsin USA ... hope to meet y'all soon ...3 -
HI .. Im 63 (I think . Stopped counting in my mid 50s), retired, draw as my keep my hands busy activity .. I have some physical challenges, but trying to improve them ... one step at a time ... and Im finally tracking my food and trying to back up the ouchies clock ...
I would love to join your group ... (if I can find it ... I seem to get myself lost here ..lol)
Im Sally ... from Wisconsin USA ... hope to meet y'all soon ...
You can add to groups or click on the small star at the top of the first page on here and when you go into community click on saved ie star and it will send you to this group.3 -
Let's all kick off the week with positivity and have a productive week. My friend always tells me to " eat the elephant one bite at a time" which is good for many things that seem overwhelming like weight loss. Have a great week everyone. Welcome Sally to a group of encouraging friends.2
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 430 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions