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Next Diet

I spend a bit of time every week looking for new diets to try. I prefer ones that are obviously dumb, especially if there’s some gimmick to them. Sure, I could go on Weight Watchers or Jenny Craig or something, but there’s no real punch to those companies. They’re ultimately just a more structured way of getting you to eat healthy and normally. I have no real desire to eat healthy, at least not particularly. People usually write as if eating healthy and eating to lose weight are synonymous, and while they frequently are, they don’t have to be. My Coca-Cola and McDonald’s diet may have been the most successful one I’ve tried on this site so far, but it certainly wasn’t particularly healthy. So I spend a good amount of time on Google just thinking of a food I like and putting it in quotes with the word diet at the end to see what comes up. So I might search for “hamburger diet” or “potato chip diet” or “Cheetos and Kool-Aid diet” and see if there’s anything out there like it. 

If you do any diet searches on Google, it won’t be long before you see an add for the Fat Loss 4 Idiots, also known as the Idiot-Proof Diet.   When I saw this diet I thought, “Hey, this might be good, I’m an idiot. In fact sometimes I’m downright retarded.” And then I went through the checklist in my head to see if I truly was an idiot:

  • Have I lost a game of checkers to a dog? [Check!]
  • Have I called 911 because I was “trapped in my bath-towel”? [Check!]
  • Have I eaten 2/3rds of a piano-bench before I realized when the the hostess said the hors d’oeuvres were “over there” she was pointing to the dish of deviled eggs on top of the piano? [Check!]

Yes! I’m one of the world’s great morons. This is the diet for me. As further evidence of how dumb I am, I shelled out $39 for this diet.

So this is what I will be going on for the next 14 days (the cycle of the diet is 11 days on, 3 days off, so I will be doing one full cycle). They say you can lose 9 pounds every 11 days, they don’t mention how much of it you gain back in the three days you’re supposed to take off at the end. We’ll see.

Subway’s Jared — Creepy Tool

If you were reading when I was doing the Subway Diet then you know I have an unbridled and unfounded hatred for Jared, the Subway guy. I just think he’s an oafish boob, and he bothers me with all his lurching around and stiff, charmless commercials. I just recently uncovered more evidence that Jared is, in fact, a huge creep. It’s a little gross, but you can read it here.

Graham Diet – Summary

175 years ago, Sylvester Graham, inventor of the Graham cracker and old-time diet kook, told us we could be healthier and less beholden to our sexual desires if we would only follow his diet. Now I have put it to the test and I have good news and bad news for the ghost of Mr. Graham.

First, I lost about 5 pounds over the four diet. That’s the good news. The food was so universally unappealing that I had pretty much no desire to eat. The Graham crackers themselves weren’t bad at all. But I have a feeling they’re not exactly the same as the ones Sylvester was rolling out all those years ago. Mine were sweet and chocolatey and sometimes in the shape of teddybears.

The bad news is the diet seemed to have no effect on the frequency or intensity of my sexual arousal. In honor of Sylvester Graham I remained chaste throughout the duration of the diet, but the thoughts still existed, if not the deed. In fact, by the end of the four days, Graham himself was starting to look good to me. I’m so ashamed.

So hey, if you’re looking to drop a few pounds I think the diet would work for a little while. And if you want to indulge in some hot erotica, you’d love Graham’s sexy book: A Lecture to Young Men on Chastity. Which contains such steamy gems as…

“Hence, therefore, SEXUAL DESIRE, cherished by the mind and dwelt on by the imagination, not only increases the excitability and peculiar sensibility of the genital organs themselves, but always throws an influence, equal to the intensity of the affection, over the whole nervous domain ;—disturbing all the functions depending on the nerves for vital energy, which is thereby increased upon, or distracted from them—and if this excitement is frequently repeated, or long continued, it inevitably induces an increased degree of irritability, and debility, and relaxation generally throughout the nervous and muscular tissues, and especially the nerves of organic life. And hence, those LASCIVIOUS DAY-DREAMS, and amorous reveries, in which young people too generally—and especially the idle, and the voluptuous, and the sedentary, and the nervous—are exceedingly apt to indulge, are often the sources of general debility, effeminacy, disordered functions, and permanent disease, and even premature death, without the actual exercise of the genital organs ! Indeed, this unchastity of thought—this adultery of the mind—is the beginning of immeasurable evil to the human family : and while children are regularly, though unintentionallytrained to it, by all the mistaken fondness of parents, and all the circumstances of civic life, it is but mockery in the ear of Heaven to deprecate the evil consequences ; and folly, little short of fatuity, to attempt to arrest the current of crime that flows from it.”

Oh Sylvester, you dog!

Graham Diet – Day 3

A lot of you who want to get your waist and libido in order are eager to hop on the Graham Diet. So here is the diet as I am doing it. With any luck you can drop a few pounds and not feel so tempted to engage in some heavy petting with the McMichaels boy behind the toolshed. That’s right, young lady, I saw you.

Breakfast:
2 Graham crackers
1 Grapefruit
1 serving of unsweetened oatmeal

Lunch:
2 Graham crackers
1 peach
1 cup green beans
2 slice of whole-wheat bread

Dinner
2 Graham crackers
3/4 pound boiled potatoes
1 cup Peas
1 Apple

The only thing you’re allowed to drink is water.

Good news! You are allowed to cheat on this diet. And by that I mean you’re allowed to have as many of Graham’s dreaded cucumbers as you want.

Yum!!! Sounds good, huh?

I will report back soon on the diets effects.

Graham Diet – Day 1

Okay, here are the fundamentals of the Sylvester Graham diet as I’ve picked up from the 1835 book, “A Defence of the Graham System of Living: Or, Remarks on Diet and Regimen” by Sylvester Graham.

Today I’ll talk about the eleven categories of food. These categories are taken directly from the book.

1. Animal food, such as the flesh of quadrupeds, of  birds, and fishes; sometimes the germs of animals, as eggs; and the animal secretion called milk, subsequently converted into butter and cheese.  - Graham doesn’t like these one bit. He writes:

“It is only by softening and disguising dead flesh, by culinary preparation, that it is rendered susceptible of mastication or digestion; and that the sight of its bloody juices and raw horror does not excite intolerable loathing and disgust. Let the advocate of animal food force himself to a decisive experiment on its fitness, and, as Plutarch recommends, tear a living lamb with his teeth, and, plunging his head into its vitals, slake his thirst with the streaming blood; when fresh from the deed of horror, let him revert to the irresistible instinct of nature that would rise in judgment against it, and say,
‘Nature formed me for such a work as this!’”

So he’s saying that because we have to do a lot of preparation on the animals that we eat, man must not be made to eat animals. I guess that makes sense, but by that same logic, no amount of preparation can be done to asparagus to make me want to eat it, so does that mean I’m not meant to eat asparagus? Maybe.

I like when people say we shouldn’t eat meat because we weren’t made to eat meat. Even if that were true — and there’s no real evidence we were made to do anything at all– the fact is we do eat meat. Doesn’t the fact that we’ve done it for thousands of years seem to indicate that it is in our nature to do so? Or did the American Beef Council hold a lot of sway a few trillion years ago?

Well, regardless, for the purposes of this diet, animal products are off limits.

2. The germs or seeds of vegetables, such as wheat, rye, barley, oats, beans, peas, chesnuts, walnuts

These are okay with Graham, but you can’t have things made with white flour. And he prefers unleavened bread to regular bread.

So in regards to just these first two categories of food we’ve looked at, I realize that if I want to have a sandwich at anytime over the next few days, it’s going to have to be on unleavened whole-wheat crackers with no animals products. Outstanding.

3. The seed-vessels of vegetables, such as apples, pears, peaches, grapes, strawberries, blackberries

Graham doesn’t have a bad thing to say about any of these “seed vessels” except for one. And you women know what it is, what with your filthy impure thoughts of your Brad Pitts and Kirk Camerons. I know exactly what seed vessel you’ve been abusing when hubby is away. That’s right: the cucumber.

“The Cucumber belongs to the same class of fruits,  and is decidedly one of the most pernicious and dangerous articles of diet in common use. It is eaten in a green and unripe state, which alone would constitute a serious objection to its use. It contains an acrid principle, which is very unfriendly to health; it is quite destitute of any nourishing qualities, and is scarcely soluble in the stomach: and yet, this unripe, watery, indigestible production is esteemed a luxury. All who value health and comfortable feelings will find it to their advantage to avoid the cucumber.”

4. The roots of vegetables, such as potatoes, parsnips, beets, carrots, turnips, radishes

These are all considerd to be good by Graham, so they are in the diet.
 

5. The leaves of vegetables, such as cabbage, lettuce, spinnage

Hey, here’s a twist. Graham doesn’t really like these vegetables all that much. Finally here is a subject we can both agree on.

6. Water

Water sucks, of course. It’s tasteless and boring so Graham is a big fan of it. On the diet I will be drinking nothing but water.

I’ll group together the last five: 

7. Infusions, of animal and vegetable substances, as soup; of vegetable substances, as tea, coffee
8 . Fermented liquors, such as the various descriptions of wine, ale, beer, porter, cider
9. Distilled liquors, as brandy, gin, and spirits.
10. Narcotic substances, as tobacco and opium.
11. Condiments, as pepper, mustard

Listen, if you can’t have cucumbers on a diet, you sure as shit aren’t going to be allowed opium. Weight Watchers doesn’t even like you having opium and you’re allowed to have chocolate cake on weight watchers.

Here is a quick sampling of Graham’s opinion on some of these subjects.

On Tea: “It would be a great proof of patriotic spirit, in this country, if the use of this exotic drug [was] … altogether abandoned…”

On Coffee: “It leads people of a sanguine temperament, and particularly females, to the long train of fashionable nervous diseases.”

On Fermented Liquors: “No greater curse could have been inflicted upon society than the introduction of fermented and distilled liquors. “

On Condiments such as Pepper, Mustard, and Ginger: “[They] are highly injurious, being some of the most powerful of the class of artificial stimulants.”

That’s right. Pepper and mustard are some of the most powerful stimulants. I’m sick of leaving my apartment only to find some rowdy teenagers huffing Grey Poupon. Where are their parents? That’s the question I’m asking. When did this become society’s problem? Think about it… won’t you?

Okay, so it looks like the diet is going to consist mostly of graham crackers, fruit, and boiled potatoes. I’ll break it down into the specifics of what and when I’ll eat tomorrow.

Next Diet

As a red-blooded, American male I have bigger concerns than just my weight. Oh sure, some people are bedridden because they’re too heavy to get off the mattress — there’s a diet for that. But what if you’re bedridden due to chronic self-pleasuring? Where’s the diet for that? What can you do if you’re plagued with impure thoughts? I’ll tell you what you can do. You can eat graham crackers, that’s what.

So for the next four days, the diet I will be going on is inspired by Presbyterian minister and dietary reformer, Sylvester Graham. Dead 156 years today, and just as irrelevant as ever.

Finally! A diet that will not only give me some extra room in the waistline of my jeans, but also a little more space in the underpants.

Make Discipline Your Ally

I’ll be starting up a new diet in the next day or so. I’ve come to the point now where I’m losing as much weight inbetween the fad diets as I am when I’m on them, so at this point I’m purely doing the fad diets for shits and giggles. Depending on the diet the quality and frequency of the shits may vary, but the giggles are always hearty and plentiful.

One very positive benefit of all the diets I’ve tried is that my willpower has been exercised to a point where sticking to a diet, or anything I’m consciously trying to commit to, is no longer an issue. If I have to, for instance, only eat bananas for a couple days, my will takes over and it’s not all that difficult. It’s not pleasurable, by any means, but it’s not hard either.

I think the key to the whole thing is this, you have to learn to make discipline your ally. We spend a lot of time fighting the restrictions we place on ourselves. We reflexively fight discipline even when it’s self-discipline. It’s weird, but it’s also something that’s so obvious we never even thing about it. You might think, “I want to walk 2 miles a night.” And you’re physically capable of it, you can make the time to do it, you don’t even mind walking that much, and yet you can’t get yourself to go do it. It should be weird that we can’t get ourselves to do something we want ourselves to do, but it’s not. In fact, we tend to get impressed when somebody actually does something they wanted to do. “Can you believe that Carl actually flosses his teeth every night? I don’t know how he does it. He’s more machine than man.”  So, I think the key is to get in the mindset where you embrace your own self-discipline. Of course, the question is how do you do that and I’m not really sure about that yet. I’m still working out the details. I know I’ve come to that place in my mind, but I’m not sure just yet what brought me here.

One thing I know is that you have to be really careful of what diet books you read and ideas you follow. I was looking in the bookstore this weekend for a new fad diet and I noticed that all of the diet books seemed to be about how to compensate for your weakness. “We know you’re a fat slob,”  the books say, “so here are some tips and tricks to deal with your weak, defeated soul. Here are some easy  but effective exercises and here are some foods you can eat that will keep you full without too many calories. Because if the exercising isn’t easy and you don’t constantly feel sated, then you’re going to go out and swallow some McDonalds extra value meals because you are too fat and weak to handle temptation, deprivation, and strain.” The books tell you that you need to remove any bad or unhealthy food in your house so that you can live in a “no-fail” environment. But wouldn’t you rather be someone who can just choose not to eat your spouse’s cookies rather than someone who only doesn’t eat them because they aren’t in the household? I think instead of trying to make things easier on ourselves we need to constantly challenge ourselves so that we can be confident we will make the right choices regardless of the situation.

  • Go to your favorite fast-food restaurant, walk inside, go up to the counter, buy a bottled water then leave.
  • Buy a bag of potato chips, sit down in front of the tv, open the bag, eat six chips, fold up the bag and put it back in the cupboard. Then forget about them. If you can’t forget about them, pretend to forget about them, it’s all the same. Don’t eat another chip from that bag, let the rest of the family eat them or let them go stale.
  • Bake a batch of your favorite cookies, set one aside for yourself, wrap the rest in tinfoil and give them to a friend or neighbor.

Doing these types of things will be much better for you than swapping skim milk for 2% milk or buying those pills that “trap the fat” in your body so you can’t digest it. You’re exercising your willpower and you’ll be able to see yourself as someone who has ability to make these types of decisions for your yourself in the future, regardless of the situation.

You might say, “But I’m weak, I can’t do those things.” Well, then you’re F’d, I don’t know what to tell you. If you think you’re too weak to control yourself then you probably will screw up any diet you try. I think it’s very unlikely in anything except the very worst chemical addictions that a person is not ultimately in control of the choices he/she makes. I suggest you try changing now. It’s a good time of year for it. Autumn is coming. We’ve only had a couple of cool nights in New York City so far, but you can tell the weather is changing. I can’t wait because it’s my favorite season. It’s a good time of year to redefine yourself if you feel you need to. They say that autumn is the springtime of the mind*, and I’ve always found that to be true. I’ve rambled on a bit here, I hope some part of what I said resonated with someone.

* Well, I just googled that phrase and apparently they don’t always say it. Maybe only I do. Regardless, it’s still the truth for me.

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