The Pleasant Sound of a Growling Stomach
Monday, January 30th, 2006
I’ve struggled with this entry.
Why, you ask? Was it because the title is remarkably insensitive to those who don’t have enough to eat? Well, yes, a little – I can’t help that I’m a bleeding-heart liberal, in whom higher education has instilled a constant awareness of “the other,” and with it an unrelenting sense of empathy. But, to be truthful, this was not my primary concern, regardless of how terrible that sounds. No, I was more worried about just how psychotic the title of this entry was going to make me sound.
I’ve already touched on the obsessive tendencies that I believe need to be cultivated, in some degree, in order to achieve significant, life-changing weight loss. But, these tendencies have done more than just propel me to the gym five times a week, rain or shine. They’ve forced me to fall in love with the effects of my own hunger. I’m not kidding.
I’m mortified that I’m about to describe these tendencies in detail, but I guess that’s what this weblog is for: I derive a sick and twisted pleasure from 1) feeling ravenously, uncomfortably hungry, and 2) listening to my stomach growl angrily, as I push it to this point of discomfort. It was worst in the winter of 2005. This was when I encountered my most rapid weight loss, immediately following my “Strip Poker” revelation; I was exercising fiendishly, and making sure to count my calories judiciously, and I was hungry as hell while I did it. This is probably why I grew to enjoy these feelings. If I hadn’t, I would have killed myself, or (more likely) my boss. Here’s an exercise: eat a piece of 40-calorie, low carbohydrate toast. (Note: this toast tastes like cardboard, if cardboard were blander). Oh! I almost forgot: you can jazz up the low calorie toast with a spoonful of low calorie strawberry jam. Then, go to the gym, and run for forty-five minutes. If you’re 240 pounds (my weight at the time), you’ll probably burn around 750 to 800 calories. Finally, go to work, and refrain from eating anything until noon. Do this for a couple of days, and you will come close to losing your mind. Eventually, something like the following conversation will occur:
My Boss: (Appears at the doorway to my office) Hey Andy?
Me: (At my desk, seething, while looking at the clock, which has been frozen at 10:05 AM for what feels like several hours) What?
My Boss: Yeah, this calendar you added to the website… (trails off)
Me: Yeah!?
My Boss: Well, it doesn’t work. The colors are off. It’s missing the Sunday column. And it says January has thirty-two days.
Me: FUCK YOU! WHERE IS MY GODDAMN BAGEL!?
Okay, I may have exaggerated that conversation for the sake of humor, but if you work with children, the elderly or the otherwise infirm you will definitely want to monitor yourself while you modify your diet in this fashion.
And, you know what the really awful thing is? I don’t want to discourage you, but it really won’t ever get any easier, unfortunately. Yeah, you’ll get used to it, of course, and as you come to enjoy the pain, and the strange squeaks and zips and urps and squawks that emanate with increasing volume from your lower mid-section, you will enter what I can only assume is a zen-like state. But you’ll still have to be ever mindful of maintaining that state. And you’ll have to almost enjoy it, or you’ll rip the head off a small dog.
Be warned, though. Even though I have mostly achieved my goals, I have a hard time letting go of this behavior. There are times when I find myself laying on the couch, watching a movie or just resting peacefully, and my hand will gravitate to my stomach, without thought or premeditation, so that I can feel the rumbles of my insides desperately consuming themselves, while my stomach sounds like the hull of a nuclear submarine. And I’ll think to myself, “You know, you really shouldn’t engage in this behavior. It’s mentally and physically unhealthy. Furthermore, if you ever tell anyone about it, you’re going to sound like a complete lunatic.” My brain makes good points, but how does my body respond?
“FUCK YOU! I NEED PASTRIES!”
Old habits die hard.
