Before I begin, what the fuck happened to global warming? I don’t care if it’s January, it’s not supposed to be 25 degrees, ever, in Dallas, which, by the way, feels like -30 does to Chicagoans. Like most Americans, the cold weather is beating me down, and I can’t shake this nasty hacking cough and constant green snot. This isn’t helping my rehab.
17 days. That’s all it took to wipe out 4 months of solid exercise and healthy eating. The soulless combination of surgery and inactivity has inflicted serious damage to my body. Before the surgery, I wasn’t about to win any bodybuilding competitions, but I was in fairly decent shape. Now, the little bulging veins that once proudly rippled across my arms are gone, as are the 1- and 2-pack abs I developed. (The closest I got to a 6-pack was the Amstel in the fridge). My right quadriceps is flimsier than jello, to the point where the outside of my thigh is actually sunken in like a crackhead’s cheeks. In fact, my entire right leg looks homelier than an orphaned chicken. It’s shriveled up so much that the brace already is starting to slide off. The PT told me yesterday that my leg strength was “pathetic,” though that’s normal for folks at my stage. I haven’t stepped onto a scale, but I’ve probably lost 5-10 pounds, mainly because I lost all muscle definition in my upper and lower body. Plus, I eat less than a French super-model addicted to heroin. My body transformation is like the reverse Super Size Me.
To combat my Benjamin Button-like renovation, I resumed lifting weights today, in addition to my regular rehab exercises. I’m finally comfortable enough sitting up without putting any pressure on my outstretched gimpy leg. Using light dumbbells (10lbs), I did a variety of curls, military presses and delt raises. It’s not much, but hopefully it’ll stave off any further deterioration. This past week, I started taking regular showers again, and each glimpse at my new body humbles me. I’m just trying to hang on until the doctor clears me to resume normal exercise, which, unfortunately, probably won’t happen for at least another month. Once I reach 90 degrees flexion in my knee (I’m at 75 degrees now; hopefully I’ll hit 90 by the end of January), I’ll be able to start riding a stationary bike with no resistance. Nobody will mistake the biking I do for the Tour de France, but at least it's a form of cardio. At first, I’ll peddle for just a few minutes at a time, before slowly increasing the duration and eventually adding some resistance.
Around the 6-week mark, I also expect to ditch the brace and start water therapy. I’ll likely just walk the length of the pool, perhaps adding gentle straight-leg kicks to my routine. According to the rehab protocol, “the buoyancy of the water decreases the amount of weight-bearing forces” on the injured areas of the knee. Even before I hurt my knee, nobody ever confused my swimming prowess with Michael Phelps’s, so I’ll be curious to see how pathetic I’ll function in the water with my bum wheel. I might even wear floaties just to be safe.
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HI Jim! I went to HS with Christina. So I read about the demise of your musculature and wanted to let you in on a secret I learned a while back. www dot unjury dot com
That is a website for a medical quality protein powder.
Anyway. You may or may not know, surgery saps protein. You need to up your protein intake...yesterday! It is a tad expensive, about $18 for a 16 oz canister, which gives you about 17 scoops. It is 20 grams of protein per scoop, at 100 cals, and I think 2 grams of sugar.
I had surgery a couple of years ago and was introduced to Unjury.
It's sold by a guy nearby to me in VA. He ships it off quickly, and you will get a ton of info regarding your needs, if you check the apporpriate boxes on the website. Please don't think I am in any way affiliated with Unjury, trying to sell something. I'm just an old friend of your wife, who cares...and I a nurse-to-be.
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