Author: Brian

The Wandering Hermit: Lightning Bugs & Guilt

I have a lot of guilt related to Dad.  When I first came to Oklahoma from Alaska, I was in decent enough shape.  I had spent a few years in a retail job where I sat down most of the day, but I still needed to be able to be active.  The first few years, I was able to do a lot of things, from planting a garden that failed to mowing the lawn every week to grocery shopping.  But my health was negatively affected by a cut I got that became infected and I let it be the excuse that let me stop being active and gain a lot of weight.  And when I was just starting to recover from the worst of it, Mom passed and that sent me into a long depression.  And it was doing the same for Dad, only 300 ft away in his own house, but he might as well have been halfway around the world.  It’s true: everyone grieves alone.  When Dad’s health started to decline, and he was diagnosed with cancer, I was a very sick person.  I had no business helping to take care of someone else when I could barely take care of myself.  Dad wanted me around more, but it was hard to walk and hard to get down the steps.  It took a lot out of me to go up to his house that I limited those trips, which understandably bothered him.  I had not yet identified myself as the problem.  My nephew had, and I know he had a lot of issues regarding me.  I can’t blame him; he was correct.  I just wasn’t ready to hear him.  I could have made the changes I needed to make to help out more—help out better.  Would that have meant Dad would still be here?  Probably not.  He died of issues stemming from his cancer, and I doubt I could have lost enough weight to make his cancer go away.  But I could have been there more, and I do feel a lot of guilt about that.

I wanted so much to get my walk in this morning before 6:00am.  It was an arbitrary goal, but I did make it.  And that was including my ridiculous distraction trying to get a good video of lightning bugs.  I’m convinced they know when they are being recorded; they would all be lighting up in chorus, but as soon as I touched the red button there was darkness, except for one slowly blinking—a crumb for me.  That took me out of my walk enthusiasm initially, but I had only just started, so I was able to pick it back up an finished at 5:59am.

My legs are noticeably smaller than they used to be, but plagued by issues.  I think they have a tendency to respond negatively to hormonal changes.  Some days, they’ll be just covered in rashes or in pimples or they’ll be dried out.  I never know what kind of day it’ll be with my legs, and I’m really interested in not thinking about them all the time.  I don’t know if that will ever be my reality, but I would love that.

I’ve been making my housemate Justin’s meal plans, and it’s going fairly well.  He’s not 100% in it, as he still will add this or that to the day, which is honestly fine, but he’s definitely the type to give himself permission for a big thing since he was allowed a small thing.  It’s a different thing doing his meal planning because he thinks of himself as being on a diet which will eventually end.  I’m trying my hardest to make it so sustainable for him that he won’t want to stop, but he does love fast food french fries and if I don’t work them into a meal plan he will just end up eating them anyway.  For next week, I will try to incorporate that.  What I am trying to stress to him is that he can eat whatever he wants, but he needs to track that.  If he wants to mindlessly eat, he needs to eat a different way.  It’s perfectly fine to do that as well, but fast food is not on that plan.

Dad didn’t understand nutrition, and probably intentionally.  I never saw him as old, but he seemed to start thinking of himself that way.  He was never good at eating healthy foods honestly, but in the last few years he seemed to think it no longer mattered what he ate.  He was happy to just eat all the junk food and did.  But that also isn’t exactly true.  While Dad’s actions indicated a sort of indifference to his own life, as well as his frequent statement “I’m ready to go see your mama,” during his first meeting with the oncologist at the VA, things we very different.  It was August 2022, and he had just received the cancer diagnosis.  When we went into the meeting, I fully expected him to not want to fight, but he told the doctor he wanted to live and wanted to do whatever necessary to treat it.  Lifestyle changes are hard, and I was hard on him during those last few months.  But I also wanted him to live.  In the end, he couldn’t outrun cancer like he had hoped.  In the end, it didn’t matter if he had gorged himself on étouffée and apple pies.  But I can’t help but wonder how things might have been different if I had lost this weight ten years ago.  Would my parents have tried out my way of eating?  Would they have been healthier as a result, or was it just too late to turn back the clock?  There are so many things we can never know.

[Walk #91]

Daily Log: 16 June 2024

Weight: 266.0 lb/120.66 kg

Exercise: 2.44 mile/3.98 km walk (5:06am–5:59am, ☁️72ºF/22ºC)

Mood: Great

Food: 1271 Calories

  • Italian wedding cake iced coffee
  • Italian wedding cake oatmeal with blueberries & black grapes
  • russet potatoes, sweet & spicy baked beans, steamed cauliflower, steamed broccoli, jalapeños, hot sauce, mustard
  • Happy Belly SF Pink Lemonade

The Wandering Hermit: The Day After a Lumpy Friday

Yesterday started out strong, but I ended up not feeling my best most of the day.  I had chosen to not have any caffeine, and I think it just caused me to be a lump.  I barely did much at all after my morning walk.  I do need to remember that it is okay to have days that are intentionally not productive.  It helps everything settle.  I have plenty of days when nothing seems to get done, but those are typically days when I’m using the mental energy to try and stay busy, but this or that thing keeps getting in my way.

It was another warm morning—foreboding.  I was hoping to move some stuff today, but I’m worried about the heat.   I can’t stay too worried about the heat; we have to get everything out!  I’ll do my best to make the biggest impact I can today, even if that means not taking things to storage.  Brent is going to be here Wednesday?  I’m not exactly sure, but next week anyway and I’d like to have him feel better about the process.  I have thoughts on that, but they aren’t worth exploring.

I tried listening to a podcast this morning, this time The Stephanie Miller Show, something I have listened to at home for years… although not in a while just because I have so needed a break from the firehose of politics.  I enjoy the show, and it had its moments, but I didn’t like it as much for walking.  The most successful bits were story driven, and I think the podcast I choose to listen to in the morning should just be a story.  I think those who recommended audiobooks are on to something.  I haven’t yet tried them, but I will do that soon.  Tomorrow morning I’ll probably be back to music though.

[Walk #90]

Daily Log: 15 June 2024

Weight: 270.2 lb/122.56 kg

Exercise: 2.38 mile/3.83 km walk (5:17am–6:07am, ☀️74ºF/23.33ºC)

Mindfulness: TBD; journaling (throughout the day)

Mood: Very Good

Food: 2026 calories

  • Italian wedding cake iced coffee
  • Italian wedding oatmeal with blueberries & grapes
  • vanilla protein shake
  • rice cakes & guacamole

The Wandering Hermit: Warm Walks & Good Apps

This morning was beautiful, but a little too warm for as early as it was when I set out.  It was a warning to keep the A/C running and stay inside today.  But it was an invigorating walk, and it ended with running into Justin who had decided on his own to go out and walk.  He was doing the area between the mailbox and Fairgrounds Rd, back and forth.  I’m not sure how long his walk was, but I was so proud to see him out there doing it without my prodding or involvement.  Good job, Justin! 

Why didn’t I do this sooner?  I’ve been craving a system to do my journaling and to keep track of everything in a centralized way.  For a long time, I used Notes to do everything.  It’s still full of writing and links and notes to myself.  But Notes has limitations and as I started adding things like a daily health log and a journaling habit, it became increasingly clear that I needed something that could handle that information a little better.  I worry about using third party apps and blogging websites.  They are often better, but they also have a habit of shutting down and leaving the users with no place to go.  It’s annoying to have to rebuild a following.  That’s why I started my own websites years ago, and I still think they are the best place for my thoughts, even when the readership is low.  But they aren’t the solution for my daily needs.  I’ve been using Day One for two weeks now, and so far it is nearly perfect for most of what I do.  There are some significant things it cannot handle, but I also understand why it has those limitations.  Primarily, formatting is extremely basic on Day One, lacking even the ability to center text.  For 99.9% of applications, I imagine that is fine.  For me, a writer who likes to play around with justifications and spaces, it is a hinderance.  But I still have my trusty TextEdit to use, and pairing the two is fine for now.  I don’t love that the work I already have will have to be formatted incorrectly or not added to the compiled journal, but it is what it is.  No app is perfect; this one is just better than the others I’ve tried.

[Walk #89]

Daily Log: 14 June 2024

Weight: 270.8 lb/122.83 kg

Exercise: 2.50 mile/4.02 km walk (5:25am–6:19am, 🌥️72ºF/22ºC)

Mindfulness: TBD; journaling (throughout the day)

Mood: Excellent

Food: 1892 calories

  • peanut butter cup protein shake
  • Happy Belly SF Pink Lemonade
  • Burger King Impossible Whopper
  • salad: iceberg lettuce, guacamole, hot sauce
  • russet potatoes, steamed carrots, jalapeños, chili beans, stewed tomatoes

The Wandering Hermit: The House Next Door

I’m trying to shift my thinking.  A few weeks ago I was happy in my ignorance about my future.  I’ve been there before; sometimes it’s nice to just know that you’re about to let the wind take you and to not be all that concerned with the outcome.  But as soon as I was presented with a plan, I started to settle on it and when it looked like that would no longer be possible, I felt like something had been taken from me, forgetting how recently I had been content to ride the wind.  So, let’s reset and regroup.  I’m not interested in the kinds of stress I was allowing in.  I need to remember myself.

I do not know where I will end up once we sell the house and move on.  And at this point, I’m not sure I want to know.  This morning I was thinking about how much I’ll miss living out here in some ways.  It’s not my dream, and it is very inconvenient to me, but it is nice and peaceful.  We are on the corner of Fairgrounds Rd & Burris Rd.  The house across Fairgrounds is nostalgic to me.  My grandpa used to take us on drives on the gravel roads of Payne County on this side of Stillwater.  We might end up driving through Glencoe or Pawnee or Morrison before returning, but that house was one of the landmarks I remember from then; it’s one of the few things that has been the same for all these years.  Most of the houses out here are much newer.  It was at first a little surreal living across the street from that house.  It’s almost like having an old imaginary friend move in down the street.  It existed in my mind, but I had no reason to drive out here before my parents moved here, so I didn’t know if my memory was real or if it was all a creation of my mind.  It’s not a particularly interesting house.  There’s nothing fantastical or noteworthy about it, but for many years it was just a part of those moments spent with Papa, and more recently it’s where the people with the horses that like to escape live.  And soon I’ll leave this place and I won’t see it all the time.  And I wonder if I’ll still remember it fondly or if it has lost its meaning.

I think walking has been good for me.  Sure, it’s been great for my physical health, but I think it has helped me mentally.  It is often over-emphasized that walking is good for mental health, but it’s not wrong.  It seems to allow my brain to sort things out.  I wonder if there is something unique about the action of walking or is it the traversing of a distance.  I’m going to be joining a gym soon and doing my walking there much of the time; I wonder if I will see the same benefits in mental health or if I need to be out in the world.  I used to do an hour of walking daily at a gym in Anchorage, Alaska.  I wasn’t in the same place mentally when I started, so I don’t know that I noticed any shifts.  After spending years depressed, anything was going to feel monumental, but the walking has helped quite a bit.

I’m not sure what to do to get started with running, but I am interested if it is possible.  I tried it for a minute during my walk, but felt like it was too jarring when I hit the ground.  Maybe I’m just not used to it, but it was unpleasant.  It felt doable in general otherwise.  It didn’t hurt or cause my to not be able to breathe, which had been my primary concern.  I’ll look into it.  It seems weird that I couldn’t just start running.  I feel unequipped.  But I also am slightly amazed that I’m even interested in trying it out.  I keep saying it, but it is true: I cannot believe that one year ago I could barely walk at all and now I want to walk everywhere.  

[Walk #88]

Daily Log: 13 June 2024

Weight: 270.0 lb/122.47 kg

Exercise: 2.37 mile/3.81 km walk (5:34am–6:23am, 🌙69ºF/20.5ºC)

Mindfulness: TBD; journaling (throughout the day)

Mood: Excellent

Food: 1600 calories

  • Italian wedding cake iced coffee
  • steamed Brussels sprouts, russet potatoes
  • steamed green beans, black eyed peas, chili ready tomatoes, hot sauce
  • russet potatoes, chili beans, steamed broccoli
  • Happy Belly SF Pink Lemonade

The Wandering Hermit: Hold onto the Bird, but Don’t Pick Up the Sky

Discipline.  I keep repeating that to myself, holding onto it like a bird struggling to fly away from my grip.  I don’t know if I’ve always craved discipline, or if my newly rekindle relationship with myself is fueling some changes that make me want to structure my life a little more.  It’s like I want to add supports to prop everything up just in case it starts to slip again.  

I set an alarm for the first time in years.  I don’t actually need an alarm to wake me in the morning, but sometimes I sleep until almost 6:00am, but then I feel disappointed that I didn’t start walking at 5:15, so I just set an alarm.  I have been thinking about structuring my morning more as a schedule I have to follow rather than a loose set of activities I want to accomplish with no real set times to get those things done.

My schedule, roughly, before today

4:30am–8:00am: wake up (normally between 5:30 & 6:30)

morning:  outdoor walk

after walk:  shower, weigh-in, coffee, breakfast, writing

some time during the day:  meditation probably, food logging maybe, more writing, etc… lots and lots of etc and misc.

Honestly that has been working for me, especially as I got more and more into taking care of my body.  I wasn’t been so regimented about the whole process, but I am increasingly wanting a great deal more discipline and structure.  I’ll try to work on outlining something in the next day or two.

The dawn felt delicate today, like I needed to handle the sky gently so as not to damage it.  Yesterday felt robust and sturdy in retrospect.  Was it the color of the light breaking over the horizon or the clouds or if it was all an illusion based on my own state of mind?  It’s so difficult to know for sure where the feeling came from, but I didn’t dare pick up the sky at all.

[Walk #87]

Daily Log: 12 June 2024

Weight: 269.4 lb/122.20 kg

Exercise: 2.36 mile/3.80 km walk (5:18am–6:08am, 🌙62ºF/16.5ºC)

Mood: Great

Food: 1011 calories

  • peanut butter cup iced coffee
  • vanilla protein shake
  • chili beans, iceberg lettuce, jalapeños, guacamole
  • steamed broccoli, chili beans, iceberg lettuce, hot sauce
  • Happy Belly SF Pink Lemonade