A Note About This Delayed Post
I know it’s been weeks since my last update, and I’ve been putting off writing this reflection. Honestly? I wasn’t in the right frame of mind to share this story. I needed time to process what happened and gain some perspective before I could write about it authentically.
I needed the space between my experience and the sharing.
When Life Happens to Your Perfect Plan
It’s Friday, 5:30 PM, and I’m staring at my meal prep containers that have been sitting untouched for two days. The week that started with such good intentions has completely derailed. Sound familiar?
I had it all planned out. Seven days of perfectly portioned meals, every calorie counted, every gram of protein calculated. But then life happened. Family commitments, unexpected plans and suddenly my beautiful meal prep felt more like a burden than a blessing.
The Slippery Slope
For two whole days, I didn’t touch my planned meals. I told myself it was fine – I’d just eat within my calorie goals and focus on protein. How hard could it be?
Day one went okay. I managed to stay somewhat on track, making decent choices even without my prep.
But day two? That’s when things got interesting. I spent time with family, and we went out for a nice meal. I ate what I wanted and finished with a nice ice-cream. It felt good in the moment – freeing, even.
The Harsh Reality Check
By day three, the scale delivered its verdict: up 3 pounds. Three. Entire. Pounds.
All that progress from the previous weeks? Gone. Just like that.
I won’t lie – I was furious. Frustrated doesn’t even begin to cover it. There was this overwhelming sense of failure, like I had let myself down in the worst possible way.
And then came the most dangerous feeling of all: rebellion. I felt angry at my diet plan. Like it was the enemy. Part of me wanted to challenge it by eating even more, just to prove some ridiculous point. Thankfully, I didn’t act on that impulse, but the feeling was real and intense.
The Heart-to-Heart That Changed Everything
It was during a conversation with my coach that everything clicked into place. I was ready to give up, convinced I was a failure at this whole thing.
But my coach helped me see the bigger picture. He reminded me that this journey – especially the calorie deficit phase – requires commitment and discipline. Not perfection, but consistency.
“Think of it this way,” he said. “Right now, you’re changing your body composition through exercise and nutrition. This phase requires focus because you’re literally rewiring your habits and changing your metabolism. Once you reach your goal and these habits become second nature, you’ll have the freedom to be more flexible.”
The Real Learning
This setback taught me something valuable: the goal isn’t to never have off days. The goal is to not let off days become off weeks or off months.
Those 3 pounds? Mostly water weight from restaurant food and higher sodium. Not the end of the world.
The anger and frustration? Normal responses to feeling like I’d lost control.
The desire to rebel against my own goals? A sign that maybe I needed to build in more flexibility from the start.
Moving Forward
I’m choosing to see this as a learning experience, not a failure. Here’s what I’m taking away:
What I learned:
– Meal prep is helpful, but I need backup plans for busy weeks
– Family time and food enjoyment matter too – I need to plan for them
– My emotions around food are still something I’m working on
– Small setbacks don’t erase previous progress
What I’m changing:
– Building in one flexible meal per week
– Having simple backup options for crazy days
– Focusing on getting back on track quickly rather than being perfect
– Remembering that this is a journey, not a sprint
The Reality Check
Even though I’ve gotten back on track these past few days, I’ll be honest – the weight is coming off more slowly than I’d like. Maybe it’s my age, maybe it’s how my body responds, maybe it’s a hundred other factors I can’t control.
But here’s what I’ve decided: I’m going to focus on what I can control. How I fuel my body. How my body feels. Staying consistent with my exercise, whatever I can manage that day.
The scale will do what it does. My job is to show up consistently for myself, trust the process, and celebrate the wins that aren’t measured in pounds – like having more energy, sleeping better, and feeling stronger.

keep going with your nutritional and exercise regimen! agree process more important than results… like in the Bhagawad Gita!
When we get attached to perfect results then we also get hurt..
Importantly you accepted your responsibility and then made your plans.
Writing is your way of reflecting and talking to your mind… don’t be hard on your mind or your body..
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