Thursday.

The toddler has his 18 month checkup today … one month late. I dread these. He usually recovers from the shots really well and he handles it like a champ, but I always feel so sorry for him. He’s so unsuspecting.

When I visited the herbalist earlier this week, she informed me that I have a pretty major calcium deficiency. This is due to about 10 years of drinking lots and lots of caffeine in the form of Starbucks, tea, diet soda and energy drinks. I didn’t bother to tell her that I’ve spent a lot of money on fat-burning diet pills as well. She was shocked enough at my coffee consumption.

I was instructed that I am only to have ONE cup of coffee at the most per day, no other forms of caffeine and drink lots of water. I also have 4 different supplements that I need to order from nature’s sunshine. I rebelled against the herbalist’s instructions this morning had 4 cups of coffee. I just want to hurry up and use up the rest of the coffee in my fridge so I don’t have to hear it calling to me anymore. I figure I’ve been “peeing out my bones” for 10 years now, so a few more days won’t make a difference.

I’ll miss you, my friend.

Dentist.

I’m going to the dentist for the first time in like 8 years tomorrow. I’m not looking forward to it. I have a major phobia.

When I called to make my appointment, I was shaking. I made it clear to the receptionist I have fears that will need to be addressed with some sort of dental drug.

The only reason I’m going now is because I made an agreement with a friend. She kept her part of the bargain, unfortunately. So … off I go. I keep telling myself this is yet another way I can set a good example for my child. Dental health is important.

What I do NOT have to tell my child is how many happy drugs it actually takes to sedate me to the point that I will open my mouth for them to see inside.

Counting Calories SUCKS

I hate numbers. I hate counting. I hate anything that requires precision. And I LOATHE dieting.

I feel like I should be good at dieting, but I’m not. I’m pretty terrible at it, actually. I think I might be one of those ridiculous people who don’t “count” the bites they took while cooking (a lot of bites), what was put in their cup of coffee this morning (a lot of half & half and real sugar), or even realize they just ate a few handfuls of Blast O’ Butter popcorn out of their husband’s bowl without even thinking about it. I do all of these things, yet expect immediate results when I start a new regimen.

CALORIES CONFUSE ME! What does this even mean? Seriously.

Sometimes I think to myself that it’s silly to worry about a few extra pounds. I should just enjoy myself, whip up more Paula Deen recipes, park my butt on the couch, unbutton my too-tight jeans, and maybe take a nap. But the fact of the matter is, heart disease, diabetes and thyroid problems run in my family. I don’t want my dislike of counting and my love of full-fat cream ruin my future health and quality of life.

It’s time to woman up, learn how to count calories (UGH), force myself to work out, and be disciplined enough to follow some sort of long-term plan. Is it possible to be the kind of mom who cooks such good food that the kids look forward to coming home to it, even after they grow up and have families of their own — while at the same time looking amazingly great? For their age? I mean, without some assistance from a plastic surgeon?

I’m skeptical. But … time will tell.

It’s Too Early…

It’s 5:25 a.m. and I am about to work out with this woman …

 … Mari Winsor. She’s probably in her 60’s, and her body is amazing. I can’t hate her, because she could be my grandmother.

My pants are tight. Too tight. At first I blamed it on the holidays, but now that it’s March … I no longer have an excuse. It’s time to DO something. Yesterday, I got up the nerve to actually weigh myself and see how bad the damage is. I never would have had the guts, but Husband left the scale out so I hopped on before I put it away.

The verdict was not horrible, but not good either. I always think it could be worse. I also always rationalize whatever is happening by telling myself, “I’ve had a BABY, after all.” This is silly, since that was quite some time ago. Like the holidays excuse, it’s no longer valid.

GOAL: I would like to lose about 20 pounds before Maverick’s 2nd birthday which is September 3rd. I think I can do it!

Survival.

I’ve decided that there is no possible way to prepare yourself for life. Your choices are:

1. develop survival skills, or,
2. suck at life.

My set of skills seem to change with each decade. I recall coping in my teen years by eating a lot of comfort food. A lot of french fries, bagels with cream cheese, ice cream sundaes, and pizza. I was fat. I don’t think food is the answer.

Then, in the first half of my 20’s I slept. A LOT. I wish I would have kept track of how much I slept. It was sick.

In the second half of my 20’s, I met Husband. I think this is when my life truly began. It was fun. Ridiculously fun. I drank a lot of coffee and energy drinks. I basked in newlywed bliss. Then about two years later reality started to hit me and I have been scrambling ever since to achieve the right balance of skills … lest I go off the deep end. Here are my current keys to survival:

1. Google.
2. Epsom salt baths.
3. Coffee. I’ll always drink it, and it’s the highlight of my day.
4. Deep breaths.
5. Smiling even when I don’t feel like it (which is often).
6. Taking the time to make myself presentable EVERY SINGLE DAY.
7. Cooking a lot of food on Sunday.
8. http://www.allrecipes.com/
9. Southern Living magazine
10. Keeping up with house cleaning so it doesn’t overwhelm me.
11. Netflix.