Mind versus Body

July 3, 2010

This morning, Trainer Rob tried to kill me. He tried to make me cry.

Okay, so I’m being melodramatic. He wasn’t trying to kill me, or make me cry. But I felt like I was on the verge of both. He was pushing me. He sees that picture I posted yesterday every time I work out. He says things like “awesome recovery” and “great progress” with regards to my heart rate. Today, during our 5th session, he pushed me harder than ever, and I really, really had a hard time.

Was he being mean? No. Did I (temporarily) hate him? Yes.

You see, he would jack up the treadmill to some insane incline at some insane speed and I would have to keep up. My body, still hovering around 400 pounds, really doesn’t like this. My mind, knowing that I’m around 400 pounds, is scared shitless.

With the treadmill, you HAVE to keep up. You either keep up, jump off, or fall off. My body hasn’t ever been pushed like that before- even when I was thinner. Even though the sprints were only 1 minute each, my body and mind just weren’t in sync. My mind was SCREAMING for my body to stop, then Trainer Rob is telling me NOT to stop, that I can do it. There were a few times today when I gasped for air and said “please, no!” when he would up the speed or incline. I just KNEW I was going to fall off- my legs buckling under my weight and out of pure exhaustion, and my ass on the gym floor.

To add insult to injury (or non-injury, as it was), he had me get on the stair climber. WTF? The stair climber? My mind was terrified of getting on that thing. My body was tired from the treadmill. He put it on the slowest rate possible, and I got on. I hated it. Even at the slowest speed, my heart rate was in the upper end of my “medium” zone. Again, just like the treadmill, you HAVE to keep up on the stair climber. You either keep up or fall off. Again, my mind was so scared of falling off because a 400 pound person surely CAN’T do this. He sped the machine up for my minute sprint. I fought my mind the entire time. My mind was telling my body that I couldn’t do it. The fear was palpable. The fatigue in my legs was indescribable.

Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in getting back up every time we do.
-Confucius

I did it.

I did not fall off.

I did not die.

I did not cry.

When it was all said and done, the cramp in my side faded, and that puking feeling went away. I did it.

It’s been about 5 hours since that workout ended, and my body is already sore all over (we also did a couple of weight training circuits). My legs feel like jello. I’m waddling around like a penguin. But I feel great.

What is the lesson in this? Sometimes, our brains need an off switch. We build up these walls of “I can’ts” and “That will hurt” and “that’s impossible” and all of this nonsense for why we don’t do certain things. 400 pound people can’t jog sprints. 400 pound people can’t do stair climbs. 400 pound people can’t hold plank position. 400 pound people can’t be fit.

Today, my body (and Rob) proved me wrong. This 400 pound person CAN do all of those things, and CAN be fit. Instead of crying tears of utter fear and pain as I wanted to earlier, I now want to cry tears of joy that progress is being made. This is just the beginning.

____________________________

On another note, I went to the doctor yesterday for some follow up blood work. He tested my thyroid again, and ordered several other tests to check out hormones and insulin and such. Hoping the results will come back quickly, but it could be a couple of weeks before I find out anything. Doc thinks there might be something else that might be holding my body back from releasing the weight. We’re also still monitoring the pitting edema. I’ll keep you posted.

Happy 4th of July to my US readers. I’m off to a cookout with hubs and the in-laws.

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  • http://lessofmimi.wordpress.com Melissa Fritcher

    AWEsome post! You just had a Biggest Loser last-chance workout. LOL. WTG, Emmie & Rob. Keep up the fantastic work. Looking forward to the results of your blood tests. Take care & have a FABU 4th!!

  • Mary

    Emmie you're a WARRIOR!! I'm proud of you for stickin' it out and being amazing :)

  • http://twitter.com/yeelynnc Yee-Lynn Chen

    i feel for you.. i worked out with my trainer yesterday and my entire lower body is in serious pain today. it hurts when i sneeze :(

  • Suzy

    Congratulations on not missing a beat and ending up on the floor! You can do it! Sincerely understand your fears. And quite impressed with you conquering them.
    Make a deal with Trainer Rob….You'll give it your super-duper best…but if you come flying off of something, HE has to catch you!

  • Suzy

    oops, that should've said “OR ending up on the floor”

  • http://colormeuntypical.blogspot.com Untypically Jia

    You're slowly inspiring me Emmie. Slowly because of me, not you. Slowly because I'm terrified of working out because my brain tells me that something will go wrong. That I'll injure myself. That I won't be able to do it. Tells me this because I'm 250 pounds. You're doing so much better than I ever have, Emmie. I'm looking forward to feeling like you feel right now.

  • http://www.skinnyemmie.com skinnyemmie

    Haha! I told him if I puked on the treadmill, he had to clean it up.

  • Brittany

    Good job Emmie!

  • http://www.lauralynnec.blogspot.com LauraLynne

    it's amazing the limits our brains try and put on ourselves – you've really hit a key issue for me here. I've been backsliding lately – it started with the scale reading 199. It seems like since then, my brain has rebelled – I don't DESERVE to be in Onederland…or at least that's what my brian wants me to think.
    I'm glad I read your post – it will be pivotal in me snapping the heck out of it! Thank you for inspiring me.

  • http://colormeuntypical.blogspot.com Untypically Jia

    PS: gave you a Beautiful Blogger Award over at my blog!

    http://colormeuntypical.blogspot.com/2010/07/id…

  • Evelyn

    I wonder though sometimes with trainers pushing some of us larger people – our bodies take A LOT of pounding on the joints if you are doing really super intensive stuff – that we really can be hurting ourselves in the process of losing the weight. I've had a trainer push me so hard that I couldn't move for the next 2 days when less intense would have been better and I could have worked out the next 2 days as well. Then again if the doctor says high intensity forms of exercise are fine at a particular weight then that's ok.

  • http://www.skinnyemmie.com skinnyemmie

    I completely understand what you mean, Evelyn. Good news is that my trainer is actually really protective of me not getting hurt. If I tell him I tweaked something or something feels not right, he'll stop (not that it's happened before, but he constantly reminds me of this). I woke up this morning (the morning after) and feel great- not even as sore as yesterday. We all need to watch ourselves closely to make sure we're not REALLY pushing ourselves too hard and risking injury.

  • All_home_cooking

    For your REALness, I've given you an award on my blog. Stop by and see it. And thank you for your honest blog. http://cookathome2010.blogspot.com/2010/07/awar…

  • KCLAnderson (Karen)

    YOU ROCK! And I am glad to see (below) that you and Trainer Rob are being careful not injure yourself…it can sometimes be a fine line between pushing yourself to make progress and hurting yourself!

  • Evelyn

    It's so important to be aware of your body, most definitely. I had a genius of a trainer once (read – sarcasm) who was into boxing as a workout for me. I never had done it before so I tried it and ended up injuring my whole shoulder area because he didn't keep the boxing pads in the proper location for a non-boxer workout. I couldn't lift my arm or move it around for some months. My favorite clueless trainer moment is when they tell me to lie on my back and put my legs straight up and lift my lower body. Hmm I am most definitely a pear shape with a bubble butt so #1 lying on my back is completely uncomfortable (not all of it touches the ground) & #2 I'm going to crack my spine trying to lift the area with most of my body weight!

    Ah well, every upwards & onwards to health & fitness! :)

  • http://she-fit.com She-Fit

    Sounds like you have one awesome trainer… seriously! A great trainer doesn't let excuses get in the way. A great trainer will push you to achieve your goals no matter what it takes. Way to go on pushing through and not giving up.

  • http://www.anonymousfatgirl.com anonfatgirl

    Your experience reminds me so much of mine when I was working with a trainer for the first 3-4 months of my journey that it's uncanny! Congrats to you for keeping on keeping on and for working so hard. You should be very proud of yourself!

  • Pingback: Extreme Kickball and Inches Lost — Skinny Emmie Weight Loss Blog

  • http://www.chibistruggles.blogspot.com Chibi Jeebs

    Wow! What an awesome lesson – I think I need to print that out and carry it around with me for quick, easy reference when my brain is telling me that I can't do it.

    Go, you! :)

  • steff! (www.steffsays.com)

    congrats on the workout. our bodies have the power to do amazing things…even when our minds think otherwise. :)

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