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October, 2009:

Day Four: EA Sports Active 30-Day Challenge

Here’s the daily scuttlebutt pertaining to my ample butt. My weight bounced back up by 0.2 pounds. Seems like a blip. I’m not super concerned.

October 10th, 2009 - Wii Fit Plus Weight

Apparently this wasn’t enough of an increase to trigger one of the balance board’s guilt trips. You know, the ones where you must confess all your dietary sins to an anthropomorphic step stool.

I did okay in both the balance and agility challenges. Much to my surprise, this was my Wii Fit Plus age…

Wii Fit Plus Age - October 10th, 2009

I thought I understood how Wii Fit age was calculated, but now all bets are off. I gained weight, managed to stand on the balance ball without falling over, and sat on a few numbers. Based on this criteria, I’m in the best shape of my life. Of course, I don’t consider the Wii Fit age to be a useful indicator of anything. I treat it as a novelty. Still, it is a fickle mistress indeed.

EA Sports Active

After putting it aside for quite awhile, I’ve gone back to EA Sports Active. Upon starting the 30-Day challenge, I got to choose between these two handsome young folks who were vying to be the guide on my fitness odyssey.

Kimmy Gibbler or Barack Obama? Take your pick.

The game doesn't name them, so I call this pair Kimmy Gibbler and Barack Obama.

The trainers are supposed to be inspirational motivators, but they inevitably become the focus of my rage during events like inline skating and alternating side lunges where the game doesn’t seem to be very good at detecting movement.

I actually got the hang of inline skating after awhile (The trick is, don’t jump when it says jump), but the motion detection on the lunges seems wonky. Left lunges take longer to register than right, which throws off your rhythm, and if you wobble at all you can fail the rep. I’m just getting started though, maybe in time I’ll get used to the way that the game wants me to move.

With the workout set to high intensity, this game is a lot more strenuous than a Wii Fit. I was out of breath a few times, and dripping with sweat. In spite of the fact that my thighs were reduced to quivering goo toward the end, I still managed to do pretty well.

EA Sports Active - Day One Results

Hey! what's that crack about walking the track? I was running! Jerk.

To add insult to exhaustion, my avatar looks like Roy Orbison.

EA Sports Active - Me & Roy

Fitness Sites: Sparkpeople vs. Traineo vs. Daily Burn

When I first began this project I was using a google docs spreadsheet to track my progress. While the spreadsheet served its purpose, it was tedious. It felt like work. And this made me dread the inevitable data entry task each day. I wasted a lot of time trying to come up with a front end that made it simpler to use, and looking for ways to generate relevant charts and graphs.

I should have figured that there were already quite a few sites that offered just that. The main ones that I’ve encountered are Sparkpeople, Traineo, and Daily Burn (formerly Gyminee). I’ve joined all three to try them out. All of them will get the job done, but they each have their own unique upsides and downsides.

Sparkpeople

This is the first thing you’ll see when you login to sparkpeople.

Spark People Front Page

As you can see, there’s a lot to take in. For me, it’s a little overwhelming. There are so many topics competing for my attention that I don’t really know what’s most important.

Cool Stuff

Structured Meal Plans

Sparkpeople is the only one of the three sites to provide a detailed meal plan for free. Each day the site automatically selects a healthy breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snack and you can even print a grocery list for the week. You are free to substitute any food in the plan for a similar one that you may prefer. Most of the foods are so simple that they don’t require a recipe, but for more complex meals there is an entire section of the site devoted to healthy recipes.

Structured Workouts

Just as it does with food, Sparkpeople automatically selects a workout routine for you. As with food, you can swap routines, or remove exercises that you don’t care for. Each exercise is accompanied by a demo button that takes you to a more detailed description of the exercise, and an animation demonstrating it. While it would be nicer if these instructions were inline, it is great that they’re available.

Nichey Communities

Spark people features community groups called Spark Teams that cover an astonishingly broad range of subjects. Do you suffer from anxiety and depression? Cheer up, there’s a spark team for you! Erectile dysfunction? Over to men’s health team my friend. Joined this week? I ended up in a team for people in their thirtysomethings with 25-49 pounds to lose. Now that is specific. Most of these communities appear to be active, with fresh posts just about everyday. If you’re interested in topics like “HELP!!! I’M OBSESSED with MY BOOBS!!!” you will find them here.

Achievement Points

Just like Xbox achievements, you earn points for completing challenges. The points earn new trophies on your profile. They can also be spent to play a Wheel of Fortune type game where you can win T-shirts, water bottles, gift certificates, and stuff like that. You earn points by completing a wide variety of challenges, everything from posting a message to the forums to completing a fitness goal. It provides a good incentive

Not so Cool Stuff

Confusing Language

The site uses a lot of custom terminology that I wasn’t familiar with. When I was setting up my account it asked me to choose three goals for my “Fast Break”. I didn’t have any idea what a Fast Break was, so I just picked three goals that seemed interesting and achievable. Turns out that Fast Break is the first stage of the Spark Diet. Pretty much everything on the site is saddled with the “Spark” branding; Spark Mail, Spark Team, Spark Points, Spark America… okay, we get it.

Confusing Navigation

I found it difficult to find what I was looking for on the site. There are drop down menus overlapping other menus. Color coded zones that didn’t make any sense to me. A long sidebar full of data that I didn’t understand, or wasn’t relevant to what I was looking for. There is a ton of great content on this site, and I’m sure its difficult to organize it all. But I often found myself haplessly clicking around with no idea where I was going. I eventually switched to navigating purely by the search bar, which was pretty good at returning the page I was looking for.

Obtrusive Ads

Unlike Traineo and Daily Burn, Spark People does not appear to offer a premium service. Instead, all features are free to all users. This is great, but it comes at the cost of large intrusive advertisements. Most are relevant. Mostly food related. But for the most part they are animated, and often compete with the site’s graphics. Some people may not be bothered by this at all. But I’m easily distracted, and these ads made it difficult for me to concentrate.

The Ads take up so much space, the content rolls off the page

The Ads take up so much space, the content rolls off the page

Sort of Clunky

Throughout my experience with the site, I ran into little bugs and glitches. A few times while using the site I got the message that I was logged out, then after I hit the back button on the browser I was logged in again. The highlight on the search bar doesn’t line up correctly. The link text is different colors and formats all over the site. Sometimes links are underlined, sometimes not. Sometimes they’re orange, sometimes green, sometimes blue, and so on. I can be a bit of a design queen, so when little touches like these are overlooked, it lowers my opinion of the site as a whole. It may not bother you at all.

One Size Fits Most Spark Diet

Sparkpeople assumes that I want them to come up with a diet and exercise plan for me. It provides easy opt-out options, but then you’re left with an overcomplicated food and exercise tracker.

Overall Impression of Sparkpeople

If you want to improve your diet and exercise habits and don’t know where to start, Sparkpeople is a good resource. It’s not the most intuitve site in the world. You’ll have to learn to work with its quirks and make frequent use of the search bar. But if you stick with its 18 week program I imagine you would be well on your way to reaching your goals.

Traineo

Here’s what you’ll see when you first log in to Traineo

Traineo Login Page

It’s a nice clean interface that focuses on just the information I’m most interested in – my progress over time. The whole experience is very clean and straightforward. But as you can see, it doesn’t offer the richness of content that you’d get from Sparkpeople.

Cool Stuff

It Supports the Wii

Traineo is the only site of the three that has explicit support for the Wii. Wii is built into its activity tracker. Somehow without ever specifying which game you were playing, Traineo is able to generate a value for calories burned over time. But let’s not pick nits, this is a mainstream fitness site that includes Wii in its default workout tracker. That alone was reason to be very excited.

It Supports all Sorts of Crazy Activities

Beyond Wii, Traineo is also set up to track domestic activity, child care, vacuuming (distinct from domestic activity), and even the ancient art of Tae-Bo. You can pretty much find a way to convert whatever you’ve been doing throughout the day into a traineo activity and get some calorie burning affirmation out of it.

Custom Logs

By default the site tracks weight, activity, and food. But you can add custom data to track by adding “logs”. It’s very simple, you just choose the thing you want to track, and then the unit you want to track it in (e.g. inches, pounds, fathoms, whatever). It then generates a graph over time just like it does for your weight. You can use this to watch your Wii Fit Age go down, track your heart rate, or just about anything else you’re interested in.

Not So Cool Stuff

Food Tracker is Too Simple

The food tracker doesn’t allow you to enter individual foods. It just presents a slider for calories and a slider for diet quality. While this is a very intuitive interface, it fails to give you the tools you need to calculate the number of calories you’ve eaten or the quality of your meals. That means you’ll need to do it manually in a notebook, spreadsheet, or another website. I found this really frustrating because I felt like the site was asking me to make a best guess, which isn’t the kind of tool I wanted.

Activity Tracker is Too Simple / Weird

The activity tracker lets you choose an activity, how long you did it for, and how difficult it was. Based on that it assigns the number of calories it thinks you burned. It’s not a bad system, some exercises don’t really map well to time. For instance, what does five minutes of push ups mean? It doesn’t account for resting between sets, the number of reps in a set, what kind of push up you were doing, etc. Oh, but you actually don’t have to worry about push ups because they’re not on the list of activities.

Activities in Traineo

Kettlebells, musical instrument playing, parkour, sex, and snorkling are all activities that you can track on this fitness site. But not push ups.

Community Seems to be Dying Off

While there are a lot of diverse interests covered by the Traineo communities, posts to the forums seem to be infrequent. It’s not uncommon for a week to go by, or longer before a new reply is posted. Most of the discussion appears to come from the “Plus” members. It makes sense that these are the members who would be most invested in the site, and most interested in keeping the conversation going. There’s nothing wrong with that, but the spotty participation from new members makes me feel like there’s a fair amount of churn.

Overall Impression of Traineo

Traineo is a sleek site that is extremely easy to use and rewards you for the physical activity that you’re probably doing anyway. For simple weight tracking and ballparking your workouts and nutrition it’s more than sufficient. And it has a Wii activity built right in, which makes it very appealing if you want to track your time spent in Wii workouts. Couple that with the logs and you can track your Wii Fit/Sports Age, scores, etc. It’s a great Wii companion site.

Daily Burn

And finally, here’s what you see when you log in to Daily Burn

Daily Burn Log In Screen

Looks an awful lot like Traineo, doesn’t it? I liked the simplicity of Traineo’s log in screen, and I also like the (almost identical) screen on Daily Burn.

Cool Stuff

Front Page

That graph on the login page shows your body weight by default. But you can choose to show lots of other information on it as well. It can graph calories burned, reps of specific exercises, distance run, or whatever else is of interest to you. Like Traineo you can add custom stats, but only if you have a pro account. Also, you can update your weight without ever leaving the front page. So if that’s all your interested in tracking, you never need to go any deeper into the site.

Food Log / iPhone App

Daily Burn tracks individual foods using a fairly robust database of generic foods, name brands, and store brands. Most items have complete nutritional data, and if not it’s easy to edit an item to update its entry for future use. It’s also easy to add foods that are missing from the database. Best of all, there is a food scanner app for the iPhone that can use barcodes to update your food log. If a food is in the database, but not linked to a barcode you can update it right from your phone. This makes it easy it track exactly what you’ve eaten in a day.

Workout Videos

The site offers a number of workout plans created by users and staff. Each is rated by users, so there is some quality control on the user submitted content. Many of these workouts include not only helpful descriptions of how to do the exercise, but inline video as well. These demonstrations make it a lot easier to try something new. For exercises without a video attached, there is almost always a photo, and often a link to more information.

Workout Instructions and Videos for Push Ups

Workout Instructions and Videos for Push Ups

Granular Workout Tracking

Workouts are measured in units that make sense for that specific activity. For instance weight training is measured in reps and weight, and you can add as many sets as you want. Running uses time, distance, average grade, and calories burned. You can also indicate how strenuous the exercise was. The biggest difference between Daily Burn’s workout tracking and Traineo’s is that you can look back and see the components of each individual exercise and see how you’ve progressed over time.

Challenges

Similar to Sparkpeople Spark Points, there is an achievement system in Daily Burn as well. You can voluntarily join challenges that will add badges to your profile once completed. Some are “Everybody Wins” challenges where anyone who completes the challenge gets the reward. Others go to the top performer at the end of the challenge period. For either type of challenge there are leaderboards where you can see who’s on top, and where you fit in. Unlike Sparkpeople, these challenges don’t earn you real-world prizes, just online prestige.

Not so Cool Stuff

In Your Face Upselling

Like Sparkpeople, Daily Burn offers a meal planning feature. I’d love to tell you what it’s like, but I can’t because it’s only available to paying users. When searching through workouts, you’ll find that some of the top rated and most interesting are only available to pro users. Also, some of your nutritional facts are very conspicuously hidden behind a “Pro Only” wall. To be fair, many of the pro features are the types of things that will only be of interest to people who are very serious about their workouts. The base functionality doesn’t feel gimped in the slightest. Still, there are constant reminders that you are missing out on something enticing you to upgrade.

No fewer than seven reasons to go pro

No fewer than seven reasons to go pro

Articles Pull you Out of the Site

Many sections of the site include relevant news articles along the bottom of the page. Clicking on these takes you away from the main site and into the Daily Burn Blog. Once there you have to hit back on your browser to get back to the other articles you may want to read. Obviously you can work around this by opening each article in a new tab, but since the rest of the site’s navigation is so smooth this stands out as a bit clunky.

Niche Communities are Kind of Hidden

The Daily Burn community is split into Forums and Motivation Groups. Motiviation groups are under the motivation category, and each group has its own mini-forum. But, from what I’ve seen, these group forums are kind of dead. The main forum on the other hand, has its own tab, and is quite active. I don’t necessarily think that the Daily Burn would benefit from a greater emphasis on social networking. That’s not what it’s for. But it would be nice if it were easier to find and communicate with people with common interests.

Overall Impression of Daily Burn

Daily Burn combines the elegance of Traineo with the depth of Sparkpeople. It’s a pleasure to use; very intuitive. The site offers a great mix of flexibility and simplicity. It is arguably more hardcore than traineo. You won’t find it offering tools to track vacuuming or musical instrument playing. And you need to put a bit more in to get the most out of it. And alas, the Wii is only represented by one small Wii Fit motivation group. Still, even though Wii isn’t explicitly supported, there is no reason you couldn’t track the progress of your Wii workouts on this site.

The Goldilocks Conclusion

For me, Sparkpeople was too big and clumsy, and Traineo was too light and quirky. Daily Burn turned out to be just right.

What’s your favorite fitness site? Do you think the Pro memberships are worth it? Anything you disagree with or would like to add? Please leave a comment.

Day Three: Lightweights and Ice Capades

Today’s weight difference was less dramatic than yesterday’s. Still around 176 pounds.

Wii Fit Plus Weight October 9th, 2009

I actually find these gradual shifts of fractions of a pound comforting. It seems to me that’s the way it should work. The days where I’m 2-3 pounds up or down are more disconcerting because it feels like the fluctuations are up to random chance or the whim of something I unwittingly did or ate.

The Wii Fit Plus age is still 28. Square in the prime of my pudgy Mii’s life.

October 9th, 2009 - Wii Fit Plus Age

I played 30 minutes of Wii Fit Plus, with most of that time spent in Advanced Obstacle Course. The advanced level introduces conveyer belts and ice. Since the there’s no way to come to a complete stop on the ice, you have to be more conscious of your timing so that you’ll slide to the edge of a platform at just the right time to make a jump to the next.

The conveyer belts speed you up, slow you down, or drag you to the edges of the platform. So you need to take this additional movement into account when dodging the obstacles.

I played four times, getting to the very end of the level on my last attempt but not quite completing it. The pacing and rhythm of the game really feels just like the original NES Mario Bros. games. I found myself missing jumps and cursing at the TV in just the same way (“Oh for f**k’s sake”), and getting the same sense of satisfaction at the end of a difficult sequence.

Today’s Wii Fit Plus session Included:

  • Advanced Obstacle Course (4x)
  • Super Hula Hoop (6 minutes)
  • Bird’s Eye Bullseye (2x)
  • Island Cycling
  • Palm Tree
  • Tree
  • Triangle

In addition to Wii Fit, I also introduced some light weight training. And when I say light, I mean it. Five pounds light!

5 Pound Weights

Why so light? Well, in the past when I’ve started exercise regimens I ramped up to fast too early and ended up hurting myself. Which, of course, discouraged me from exercising. So I’m going to start with these 5 lb. weights and work my way up very gradually using a workout from Daily Burn. So today wasn’t very strenuous, it was primarily to see what I could handle.

Here was today’s workout:

  • Pushups 6/7/9/7
  • Dumbell Flys Flat – 10/10/10
  • Bench Press – 10/10/10/10
  • Stiff-legged dead lift – 10/10/10/10
  • Bent Over Row – 10/10/10/10
  • One Arm Dumbell Row – 20/20/20/20
  • Shrugs – 10/10/10/10

Incidentally, when I first started this project I was kind of parochial about only the Wii to exercise. I’ve since come around to thinking that such a point of view is limiting and self defeating. The Wii is there to make exercise fun and to get me motivated to do what’s best for my body. And there will be cases, like weight training, where the Wii just doesn’t offer anything for me.

Day Two: Further Adventures with Wii Fit Plus

Today’s workout consisted of just over an hour of Wii Fit Plus. Admittedly, I spent more time checking out the new games than I did focusing on strenuous exercise. I worked up a little bit of a sweat, but in total the whole hour felt more like a warm up.

To my surprise, I was down almost 3 pounds today. I hadn’t eaten anything before playing, so I’m guessing that’s the major difference.

Surprisingly immediate results!

Surprisingly immediate results!

Similarly, my Wii Fit Age is down as well. I feel like Plus has changed the way that age is arrived at, because I completely bombed the “mental agility” test, but still ended up a spitely 27.

Please excuse the double faces

Please excuse the double faces

Here are the Wii Fit Plus games that I played:

  • Perfect 10 (3x)
  • Driving Range
  • Obstacle Course (2x)
  • Tilt City (2x)
  • Rhythm Parade
  • Big Top Juggling
  • Table Tilt Plus (3x)
  • Balance Bubble Plus
  • Basic Run Plus

And here are the exercises and Yoga routines. These were chosen from the preset routines, and also by asking the balance board to put together a 15 minute routine in the “My Routines” mode.

  • Basic Step
  • Yoga Chair
  • Rowing Squat
  • Single Leg Extension
  • Advanced Step
  • Standing Knee
  • Plank
  • Sideways Leg Lift
  • Downward Facing Dog
  • Single Leg Twist
  • Lunge
  • Standing Knee
  • Balance Bridge
  • Torso Twists

It would be nice if these routines were more focused on specific areas of the body, and if they rotated from day to day. For instance, if I did a lot of arm exercises one day, I would like the game to recognize that and offer leg or core exercises the next. I don’t think Wii Fit Plus is that intuitive.

Despite being a bit random, the flow from one exercise to the next was much improved over the original Wii Fit.

For food today I’ve had some chicken breast, snap peas, salad, a slice of bread, vanilla yogurt w/ nuts and bran, water, water, and more water, and… a Three Musketeers bar.

When I first started this project earlier this summer I would have been freaking out about the candy bar. Now I’m approaching it with a different perspective. If I try to cut out all the “treats” at once, I’ll just start thinking about them more and resenting the fact that I can’t have them. Then when if I do slip up and have one I’ll say, “To hell with the whole thing” and start overeating.

Instead of doing that, I’m going to focus on eating better overall. And if occasionally I have a nagging craving, I’ll indulge it enough to make it go away, and then let it go. I think that’s going to work out a lot better than the all-or-nothing approach I tried earlier.

Day One – Progress Photo (Before)

I know we’ve already done the before picture. But since we’re rebooting it seemed like a good idea to start off with a new one.

Octoboer 7th 2009 progress (Before)

I think the “t-shirt tucked into cut-off dress slacks swaddling 30 pounds of spare meat” look is going to catch on. This image is my first salvo in a campaign against the fashionistas who claim people should attempt to look, as they say, good.

Is my posture really that bad? Maybe Wii Fit is on to something.

This is the longest pregnancy ever.

179 lbs. today.
36.5″ waist

Getting Started with Wii Fit Plus

Wii Fit Plus Title Screen

I’ve had a chance to spend some time with Wii Fit Plus. Before diving in, let me just give a little background on the core game, Wii Fit.

Last year Nintendo launched Wii Fit bundled with the balance board peripheral, kicking off a wave of exer-games that had gamers and grannies alike stepping, leaning, squatting, and hopping their way to fitness bliss. While you can find plenty of Wii Fit knock-offs at the store these days, the original is still considered by many to be the best.

However Wii Fit got its share of legitimate criticism. Its quirky approach emphasizes “awareness of your body” over the sort of exercises that most would consider essential to a basic workout. Wii Fit focuses on posture, balance, and breathing rather than breaking a sweat and going for the burn. It makes no attempt to provide a structured exercise plan, or nutritional suggestions. And it tracks your progress using a bizarre unit of measure known as your Wii Fit Age, which heaps its highest praise on those who can stand completely motionless.

As the name suggests, Wii Fit Plus is not a sequel. It’s an expansion. Expansion packs have been around on PC games forever. Likewise, Xbox 360 and PS3 games are often extended with downloadable content. But on the Wii, this sort of thing is unusual.

Wii Fit Plus includes all the balance games and exercises from the original and adds some new balance tests, 15 new minigames, 3 new strength exercises, and 3 new yoga poses.

More importantly, it adds “My Wii Fit Plus”, a mode where you can play through preset sequences of themed exercises, or roll your own routine. The preset sequences retain the game’s quirky charm. There are exercises for people who recently overate, have trouble sleeping, and even for those who struggle to stand completely motionless.

My Wii Fit Plus brings you to the enchanted world of the balance boards stinky locker room

My Wii Fit Plus brings you to the enchanted world of the balance boards stinky locker room

The expansion puts a greater emphasis on calories, using the difficulty of the activity and your weight to estimate calories burned. You can also see the real food equivalent of the number of calories that you’ve burned, or would like to burn. For instance, you can tell the game that you’d like to burn the equivalent of a piece of fried chicken, or you can look at the exercises that you’ve done so far and realize it only amounts to a single slice of cucumber.

Wii Fit Plus Calorie Counter

The progress graph now includes a place to track your waistline, and the number of steps you’ve taken that day (pedometer not included). The game won’t ask you for this information, you have to be proactive about entering it yourself.

Wii Fit Plus Graph

There is now a mode for weighing babies and animals. And why not? It wouldn’t be Wii Fit without a few non sequiturs.

If you misbehave the balance board will know. And it won't be happy.

If you misbehave the balance board will know. And it won't be happy.

And there are also new multiplayer modes, which I haven’t tried yet.

Best of all the transition from Wii Fit to Wii Fit Plus is seamless. When you first start up Wii Fit Plus it will read your save file from Wii Fit and import it automatically. You don’t lose any progress in the transition, and you don’t have to worry about any games being locked when you jump into Plus.

Speaking of games, I have yet to play all 15 of the new games, but those that I have tried have been a lot more entertaining than the original Wii Fit balance games. It feels like the developers had a stronger grasp of the weight sensing technology, and they’ve put that experience to good use in some genuinely entertaining minigames.

Nintendo priced Wii Fit Plus at $20.00, and that feels about right. It is a robust upgrade that refines the functionality of the core game and addresses many of its greatest weaknesses, and also offers some great new content.

Have you tried Wii Fit Plus yet? Do you feel it was worth the price to upgrade? Have you put together any custom routines?

Das Reboot: Relaunching Miniimize Me

July 13th, 2009 I embarked on a fantastic journey to lose weight, improve my overall health, and have fun doing it. The project would use the Nintendo Wii as the primary exercise tool, and take 90 days to complete. At the beginning of the project, I weighed 177 pounds. The goal was to reach 149.5 pounds by October 10th.

Today it’s October 7th. According to the plan, I should be within striking distance of my target weight; preparing to celebrate my triumph with a nice healthy carrot (which, according to the plan, I would have developed a taste for).

So, how far do you think I’m off by? Two pounds? Five? It couldn’t be as much as ten – could it?

Let’s try 29.5 pounds.

Why is that Mii smiling?

Why is that Mii smiling?

I’m actually two pounds heavier than when I began back in July! How could this have happened? I guess the simple reasons are:

  • I stopped being mindful of what I ate
  • I stopped exercising
  • And I stopped updating this blog

Ah. It turns out to be pretty straightforward.

I’ve been stressing out about what to do with this blog for weeks. I felt the options were:

  1. Scrap the blog and consider the project a failure
  2. Scrap all the old content and restart the blog from scratch
  3. Or, pick up from where I left off, acknowledging that I screwed up

I gave serious thought to all three.

Scrapping the blog would eliminate the gnawing feeling of guilt, absolving me from dwelling on how I didn’t follow through.

The balance board never forgets

The balance board never forgets

According to the stats for this blog, very few readers have visited since it first went up. Even fewer repeat visitors. I could have just thrown away all the old content and started fresh. A clean slate sounded very appealing. After all, who would know? I liked the idea of pretending the initial failure to launch never happened.

But the more I thought about it, the more I felt that plastering over my mistakes wasn’t the right way to go. For one thing, even if the readers didn’t know that I had failed the first time out, I would. And that would bother me. For another, failure is instructive. To pretend that it didn’t happen would be a disservice to the readers and to myself.

Lots of people start exercise plans and diets with the best intentions, but barely make it past the first couple of weeks. It’s hard to make a change in your life. You’re often working against deeply ingrained patterns in yourself and among your social group. It’s only natural that the friction at the outset is going to knock you around and make you screw up. But, I don’t think that’s a fault.

The fault would be allowing those early stumbles stop you from trying again, and again, and again until you reach your goal.

That’s why today I’m trying again. It’s Day One – October 7th, 2009. This is the soft relaunch of Miniimize Me, the 90 day Wii weight loss project. Now is the beginning of a fantastic story, I look forward to sharing it with you.