I’m a journalist at heart.
I spent most of the first 17 years of my career—plus four years of
college—inside a newsroom.
Being a journalist can lead to a very sedentary lifestyle. It can also
lend itself to some bad decisions when it comes to food.
I can recall many all-you-can-eat pizza buffet lunches in college, as
well as late-night runs to the local convenience store for two-for-a-dollar
“Death Dogs” and Jolt Cola. I have many memories of evening shifts in the
Montgomery Newspapers sports department where we’d order a couple pizzas and
Cokes at 8:30 PM and snack on it throughout the night.
And over those 17 years, those decisions were compounded by poor choices
at home and lack of exercise. And I got heavier and heavier.
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| With my daughter Sydnee at her bat mitzvah in April 2016. I weighed about 325 pounds, was unable to button my jacket or the collar of my shirt, and my wedding ring no longer fit on my ring finger. |
I’d tried numerous times over the years to shed the weight. Sometimes,
a diet-and-exercise plan would last two weeks. Sometimes, a week. Sometimes,
until dinner. And despite all the places where I should have been able to find
the motivation to lose weight and get healthy, I kept coming up short.
When my nephew went skydiving to celebrate his 18th
birthday, I told him that I’d lose weight to get under the 250-pound weight
limit and go skydiving with him. It never happened.
As both my daughters’ bat mitzvahs approached, I knew there would be
rounds and rounds of family photos that I wouldn’t want to see myself in if I
looked the way I did. I couldn’t drop the weight.
Most importantly, I watched as my father suffered—and continues to suffer—through
diabetes, two heart attacks, renal failure, and myriad other health issues
brought on by poor eating habits and lack of exercise, and I couldn’t even find
the proper motivation knowing that I was walking down that same path.
Sometimes, the motivation comes from a place you wouldn’t expect.
In March of 2017, an all-staff email appeared in my inbox at AlphaBioCom. Our company president was inquiring if
anyone was interested in joining him in the Philadelphia Half-Marathon or Marathon in
November. A few days later, he stopped by the editorial department to follow up
on his email. After asking the rest of the department, he turned to me.
“Craig, are you in?”
“I’m sorry, have you seen me
lately?” At this point, I was tipping the scales at about 323 pounds.
“I’ve seen people twice your size do it.”
“First of all … no, you haven’t. Second of all … I could probably walk 13 miles.”
“Great! You’re in.”
Shortly thereafter, I let my wife know that in eight months, I would be
competing in the Philadelphia Half-Marathon. Up to that point in my life, the
closest I’d ever come to a marathon was watching three seasons of Game of Thrones in a week-and-a-half. I don’t recall the exact words of her understandably supportive
response, but I do remember that it included “insane” and “heart attack.”
We in the editorial department joked about it for a few days before a
thought popped into my head. “You know, I don’t want to embarrass myself. Maybe
I should at least try to get into a
little better shape.”
I’ve never been able to follow diet plans, point plans, and the like. But
I found that I was able to take tips and habits from others, and it turned into
my own plan. And I started doing a lot of things I never thought I’d do.
I started drinking protein shakes for breakfast, and spent time on Sunday nights preparing
lower-calorie and higher-protein meals to pack for lunch every day. I had a
consultation at my gym with a trainer who suggested that I add some weight
training before my cardio activities. I downloaded at-home workout videos and
began waking up early to run through a video each morning. I bought a fitness
tracker to keep me motivated to hit 10,000 steps a day and used its app to help
keep track of my calories. And perhaps most shocking of all, I purchased
compression pants.
My exercise plan was simple: Hit my 10,000 steps every day. Get to the
gym at least three times per week, and on the days I didn’t get to the gym, do
a workout video in the morning and walk around the neighborhood at night.
I learned some important things along the way:
- Slow and easy is the way to go. At 323 pounds, there was no way I could start training for the marathon right away. For the first several months, I worked on my cardio by walking in the neighborhood or on a treadmill, or used the elliptical at the gym. It wasn’t until I lost 40 pounds or so that I began running.
- You’ve heard this one before, but, it’s not about dieting, it’s about changing your eating habits. Cutting out certain foods simply doesn’t work for me. I need the occasional pizza, burger, or handful of potato chips. I just made sure I was eating at the right times, burning off more calories than I was consuming, and practicing portion control. And if I cheated … which I did … I didn’t beat myself up over it. I just tried to do better the next day.
- Sometimes, you’re going to look stupid. I always avoided the elliptical because it looked so silly. But it gave me the relative motion of running without the pounding on my knees and feet. I made sure to do the workout videos only when no one else was home because I was embarrassed for anyone to see me. After a while, I stopped caring. It became more important to get in shape than to look silly to total strangers who didn’t care anyway, or to my family, who hopefully understood that I was doing this for them as well as for myself.
- There may be nothing more important than having an accountability buddy. When I downloaded the same workout videos that a colleague was using, I was greeted every morning with, “Did you do the video last night?” When I didn’t, I heard about it. It kept me honest, and kept me motivated.
At a doctor’s visit in early April, I weighed 320 pounds. When I went
back in late June, I was at 282. Three months later, I was down to 261.
There were, of course, setbacks along the way. On August 5, in my first
5K, I came out of the run with a fractured elbow (don’t ask). That derailed my
weight-training and workout videos for several months. And in mid-September,
some issues with cramping in my right calf forced me to cut down on the cardio for
a few weeks.
Still, I kept focused, and while my weight went down, my cardio and
endurance went up. I dropped well below “pre-diabetic” and “morbidly
obese” levels for the first time in numerous years. My blood pressure and cholesterol
went down.
And on November 18, following a week filled with a lot of self-doubt and
nerves, I lined up with eight of my coworkers and ran in the Philadelphia
Half-Marathon. We ran when we could, walked when we needed to, and three hours
later, I crossed the finish line of an event that nine months earlier, I could
never have even conceived that I could have finished.
I do not enjoy exercising. I do not feel
energized and powered up after a workout. I do not go to the gym because I want to. I go because I know that I have to. Every time that I go to the gym
or the park, I do so against every desire telling me that it’s far easier to
sit on the sofa watching TV. And every quarter-mile I run, every step I take, I
do so through a conscious effort to continue running when every bone in my body
tells me to walk the rest of the way, or just stop completely. My fitness
tracker may give me a goal to aspire to, but getting there is a challenge,
every day, every step.
Nor do I ever foresee a day where my food preferences will change. I
will always take a pepperoni pizza over a low-calorie wrap. I will always prefer
a handful of M&Ms or Doritos to a handful of grapes. So I need to remain vigilant
that I am making the right decisions when it comes to what, when, and how
much I eat.
***
I entered 2017 weighing nearly 325 pounds. I was tired all the time,
always felt stuffed, and hated the way I looked. I enter 2018 about 70 pounds
lighter, with more muscle and energy, less joint stiffness, and I sleep better
(mostly because I no longer snore, so I’m not awoken multiple times at night by
my wife telling me to stop snoring). And as I look ahead to 2018, I’ve got a
few more firsts I’d like to accomplish. I’d like to try skiing and ziplining,
and my nephew is now 28, so I’m hoping that the next time he’s in
town, we can finally book that skydiving outing that's a decade overdue.
As for the continued motivation from my workmates, we’re eyeing another
half-marathon, a Spartan Sprint or mud run, and many will join me as I return after a
five-year hiatus to the ACS Bikeathon this summer.
***
You never know where inspiration is going to come from.
As recently as one year ago, the thought that I could run in a
half-marathon was just as incomprehensible to me. Yet I’ve got a ringing
Liberty Bell medal that proves that I accomplished just that.
We all hope to find jobs where we can have an effect on others, and
maybe make the world a little better. If we’re really lucky, we become better
ourselves. I found a job three years ago that has helped me to become a better
editor and a better manager. I never expected that it would also help me become
a healthier—and better—person as well. And whether my colleagues helped me
directly or indirectly—whether they are aware of their influence or not—I hope
they know that I am eternally grateful for their help and inspiration.
And that I continue to curse their names with every step that I run.
If anyone is interested in more
detail on my regimen, I'm happy to share if it helps others. Please feel free to email me here or leave a comment below. I want to note,
obviously, that I am not a doctor or a fitness trainer. What worked for me
might not work for you. All I know is that if someone as lazy as me can go from
couch potato to half-marathon, you can too.


Your story is amazing, well done. Sharing yr story with a friend who's on the same path. Xxx
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