Posts Tagged ‘weight loss’

In which I am stunned by the rapid onset of middle age.

Monday, August 11th, 2008

I woke up this morning, and realised that I’m suddenly in early middle age. On the bedside table were three sets of prescription pills; something that I have ever only really associated with – you know – old people. I can’t be old. I’m not married, and have no children. I’n my imagination, I’m still just approaching grown-upness. Apparently, like Binkie Huckaback, I am in fact an ageing juvenile.

Despite not being very sporty, or taking great care of myself, I’ve always been fairly fit and strong. I fancifully attribute this to my genetic past; I like to thing that my ancestry is equal part displaced desert tribes and farmers. Whatever the case, despite my none-too-clean-living twenties it seemed that I could do what I liked and never really count the cost.

But today those pills told me that I’m not the man I used to be.

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To be fair, things have been creeping up on me for a while. A badly-healed broken collar bone from my early twenties is getting a little arthritic these days. Torn cartiledge in my left knee makes a nasty snapping crackling and popping noise. But nothing, I thought, more than the usual dents and scratches you’d expect; stuff that could be hammered out, and polished over.

But things have begun to change.

About five years ago I was diagnosed with Meniere’s disease: a nasty inner-ear problem which creeps up unexpectedly, and leaves me faint and nauseous with dizziness for a couple of hours; and which often keeps me light-headed and disoriented for days at a time. At the time of diagnosis, I decided that – since there was no actual cure – and the lifestyle changes that the specialist suggested were so seemingly onerous – that I would follow the habit of a lifetime, and simply tough it out.

This seemed to work for a while; but recently I found myself in a New York hotel room scared to move, or eat, or indeed do anything that might bring on another attack. The first real attack came on during a new business pitch, after which I was laid up for four days – missing all the meetings and training sessions that had been scheduled for that trip.

So a month ago, out of a sense of duty to myself and my employers, I went back to the specialist, and actually listened to what she had to say. I still don’t like it very much, but I’m going to give it a go.

I’m on a low-salt diet. I’ve always been a bit of a gourmand; and taking salt out of my diet is quite a challenge. I’m also supposed to be off caffeine and alcohol (although I’m taking the whole alcohol thing a little less seriously than I should.)

To strip even more salt out of my body, I’m taking a course of diuretics. I think I’m taking the same brand as my grandmother. This does not make me feel more manly. Two every morning

Because the diuretics and the diet also leach out potassium, I’m taking potassium replacement pills. Two tablets, three times a day.

The Meniere’s attacks are generally brought on by tiredness and stress. The blue pot contains some diazepam that I got from a hotel doctor in San Francisco after a severe combination of jet lag sleeplessness and what seemed like anxiety attacks. They’re more there for reassurance than anything else.

Insomnia’s been one of those things that bothered me for as long as I can remember. In my twenties and early thirties, I found that this meant that I had longer to work on things or to party. But in my late thirties, it’s a drag; particularly as I travel a bit, which means my body clock’s all screwed up anyway. My GP has prescribed me sleeping tablets – I don’t take them every night, but again – it’s reassuring to know they’re there.

I’ve been through a bunch of tests as part of this process. The blood tests in particular have highlighted some new and interesting problems. For example, it seems that I have a propensity to gout; yet another pin in the balloon of my gourmandism. I can’t wait for that. Furthermore, I have high levels of the wrong kind of cholesterol; and either I’m an alcoholic (which I’m sure I’d have noticed), or I’m actually dangerously overweight.

Until recently, weight loss and fitness used to be nothing more cosmetic issues for me. Now they’re a more serious problem. Of course, this makes them much easier to deal with.

I’ve decided that – while I get started at least – I’ll try using this blog as one of the tools to help keep me on track. What was previously merely an intellectual problem has now become personal and subjectively experienced.

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Posted in life | 3 Comments »

Mapping the social graph of weight loss groups

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

These are the graphs from some research on weightloss groups on Facebook. I’ve processed the data so that:

1) the size of dot is related to "total number of friends" – this only works where a user’s friends are publicly visible – quite often they aren’t, and I haven’t checked to see what the incidence of this privacy setting is generally and specifically

2) all isolates (i.e. those users who have no (public) personal relationships within the group have been removed.

personal weightloss support group

This is the network graph of relationships on a personal weight loss support group. A college student set this up to support her own goals. She told me: " For my group, I just started it out by inviting all of my friends and then some people joined the group who found it in a search, I think. I am amazed by the amount of support I receive from random people who encourage me to keep on going. There are some spammers on the group who are just there trying to sell stuff and that gets annoying, but I know I can’t avoid them."

unofficial weightwatchers support group

This is the network graph of relationships on an unofficial weightwatchers group on Facebook. You can see that there are hardly any member-get-member relationships here. My friend Valery (who has a professorship in this sort of thing at Wharton) says:
"It’s very common that organizations and interest groups become foci for personal networks. In fact, I believe that joint activities are the prevalent mechanism of tie formation. "

But it doesn’t look like it here. Looks to me that – while people may form relationships around special interests – they don’t mirror these on Facebook. Say I suffer from Meniere’s Disease (apparently true) and I participate in a Meniere’s support forum (not true at present), I don’t necessarily make those people my Facebook friends…

blog-related support group

Another example of the "not many personal relationships" graph for a weightloss support group on Facebook.

How do people get information on weight loss? After a few interviews, I think the answer is like this:

1) Influencers are "pull", rather than "push" resources (I’m thinking of going on a particular product, so I mention it casually to several friends to gauge consensus/temperature. One or more of them tell me "oh yes, I’ve heard of that", and one tells me "yes, My friend tried that, and lost 20lbs") This is not an active market. Most people won’t be evangelizing, and evangelizing behaviour may even appear suspicious.

2) That said, people trust strangers to an extraordinary degree. Friend-of-friend endorsement is readily accepted, as is the anonymous commentary on boards & groups. Bloggers are slightly less trustworthy, it seems – because most of them have an axe to grind.

OK — so this really isn’t v. scientific. But compare this to the map of green issue member-get-member activity and you’ll see a huge difference.

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Posted in networks | 4 Comments »