Lunch
Once a week, every Tuesday, I have hotel food. I’m a member of a service club that meets weekly at the Crown Plaza in White Plains.
Usually I’m repsonsible about my choices. I have a big salad, lots of vegetables, the meat of choice and one small potato. I usually just have vinegar on the salad. I never have dessert, even though they have an enticing selection. Cheesecake, chocolate fudge, and a key lime pie are the normal choices. And fruit.
I steered away from the vegetables. I know how they are cooked: a pound of butter. Usually I forgive this, but not now. I took two pieces of pork that had no sauce on them, and scraped off what I could. I didn’t want to take the chance that the sauce would have flour: the normal constituent part of a deep roux. The flavor in whatever was rubbed onto the fat was enough.
Following Paleo would be tough for anyone who is in regular social situations. I’m involved a lot in community events. The week before the challenge I had a Martin Luther King breakfast where they served sausage, eggs, grits and orange juice. Two evenings later at a YMCA event, the sponsoring restaurants would serve such delicious dishes as steaks on white bread; shrimp po’ boys in hot dog buns; pumpkin ravioli; pastrami sandwiches; chicken tikka on rice. Paleo nightmares. Fantasies for most.
Today the service club had a big birthday party, the 90th birthday of one long time member of the club. There was singing, stories, and a very big cake. In this case, a vanilla butter cream white cake with a chocolate filling.
I was the only person at the table who said, “no thank you.” I can proudly say I said it with confidence. As I said it, I thought, I do not need those toxins in my body.
I watched them consume. I had the fantasy of saying to them, “You realize you’re killing yourself. You’re destroying your bodies. You’re encouraging slavery in Florida. It doesn’t need to be this way.” I didn’t. Still, I wavered between horror and envy, wanting to feel the sensation of a velvety cream frosting upon my lips and tongue.
Inevitably, some compromises will be made. I will probably, after the 30 day challenge, have a couple vegetables, even if steeped in butter from bad cows. But I’ll continue to refrain from the potatoes, even though they looked pretty good, roasted, salty, inviting.
Dinner I could control: leftovers. Cod curry over broccoli, and a spinach salad. The curry tasted better after a couple days, the flavors mingling, and more robust. My lady friend thought it was a little salty the previous evening, but Cod requires salt.
The work out was 5 x 5 – 185 lb backsquats. I had a longer day, so as I didn’t go to Stamford, my form wasn’t perfect. I’m still not very flexible on my squat, but I was able to push myself up when I let the weight push me down. I did do 4 strong minutes of rowing, and 10 minutes of run-walking in my new Vibram shoes.
And I weighed myself. It was encouraging.
But I’ll wait to share the details.
So you and Dr. Baldwin have inspired me…I’ll be starting the 30-day challenge on Feb 16 (Emily and I have nice dinner reservations that weekend), and get this, Dr. Baldwin will be giving up caffeine for those 30-days as a show of support…I think he’ll feel so much better, he’ll never go back, but we’ll see.
Keep up the good work, Padre!
Thanks Joe! So far it hasn’t been that bad. Last night my lady friend had a few glasses of wine in my presence, and I was totally cool.