- Mar 19, 2006
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So about a month before school started, I began running everyday. I started out at like a quarter mile and eventually stepped it up to 2 miles. By the time school started (Sep. 8), I was running 4 miles a day.
However, with the start of school, there is a slight problem. I am literally getting assigned around 6-7 hours of homework each night (much of the thanks goes to AP U.S.). I come home at 2:15pm, chill 'til about 4:00pm, and then get started on HW.
Now, as you can imagine, this leaves little time for running anymore. I find that I am now only able to run Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays (very rarely on weekdays). The rest of the week, I'm pretty much completely sedentary at home, aside from the mile roundtrip walking to and from the high school.
I also now must stay awake longer, therefore eating more calories. Over summer, I would wake up at 12pm and go to sleep at 2am (there are much worse schedules out there, believe me). I followed a really simple three meal schedule that was easy to adhere to: breakfast (400 calories), lunch (500 calories), and dinner (500 calories). Now, I must wake up at 6am and go to sleep at 11pm. As a result, I eat more. I eat breakfast cereal in the morning (400 calories), school lunch at 11am (800 calories), a filling snack when I come back from school (300 calories), and dinner (500 calories). So, we're looking at 1400 calories consumed (summer) versus 2000 calories consumed (now).
So, I have a few questions.
1) Running 4 miles only 3 days a week: is this going to help me at all? I went from 155 to 147 in a month running every single day. Now, it's being restricted to a measly 3 days a week, and I'm having doubts of whether or not it's worth it (especially with my increased calorie intake).
2) Obviously, school lunch isn't the best way to eat if I'm trying to lose weight. If I were to take home lunch in the effort to reduce my calorie intake during lunch, what could I take that would be both filling and not terribly shitty to eat? I can't take what I eat at home (rice + meat + veggies + lentils) because they'd get cold.
Long post, but if you can help me out, I'd be really grateful.
However, with the start of school, there is a slight problem. I am literally getting assigned around 6-7 hours of homework each night (much of the thanks goes to AP U.S.). I come home at 2:15pm, chill 'til about 4:00pm, and then get started on HW.
Now, as you can imagine, this leaves little time for running anymore. I find that I am now only able to run Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays (very rarely on weekdays). The rest of the week, I'm pretty much completely sedentary at home, aside from the mile roundtrip walking to and from the high school.
I also now must stay awake longer, therefore eating more calories. Over summer, I would wake up at 12pm and go to sleep at 2am (there are much worse schedules out there, believe me). I followed a really simple three meal schedule that was easy to adhere to: breakfast (400 calories), lunch (500 calories), and dinner (500 calories). Now, I must wake up at 6am and go to sleep at 11pm. As a result, I eat more. I eat breakfast cereal in the morning (400 calories), school lunch at 11am (800 calories), a filling snack when I come back from school (300 calories), and dinner (500 calories). So, we're looking at 1400 calories consumed (summer) versus 2000 calories consumed (now).
So, I have a few questions.
1) Running 4 miles only 3 days a week: is this going to help me at all? I went from 155 to 147 in a month running every single day. Now, it's being restricted to a measly 3 days a week, and I'm having doubts of whether or not it's worth it (especially with my increased calorie intake).
2) Obviously, school lunch isn't the best way to eat if I'm trying to lose weight. If I were to take home lunch in the effort to reduce my calorie intake during lunch, what could I take that would be both filling and not terribly shitty to eat? I can't take what I eat at home (rice + meat + veggies + lentils) because they'd get cold.
Long post, but if you can help me out, I'd be really grateful.
