Have you had your eyes checked lately?

How is your eyesight?

Do you need glasses to drive at night?

I used to but don’t anymore.

Every two years I drive down to Toronto to have my eyes examined by my optometrist.

I was one of his first patients when he opened his practice in downtown Toronto in 1987 at the age of 25 years of age.

Quite possibly the best decisions I had ever made.

I look forward to my visits to get my eyes examined for several reasons.

The cool machines I look through to check my eyes are fascinating to me. 

I especially like the one that blows air in your eyes to check for glaucoma with the little farmhouse in the back room.

Plus I get to chat with my optometrist Jerry who I’ve known for 30 years.

We talk about family and sports for an hour first before he examines my eyesight.

He always asks how my eyesight is doing. 

It’s really a rhetorical question because he already knows how my eyesight is before he checks me.

I always ask him how his eyesight is doing.

Not only are we the same age but we also have the exact same vision.

There was a big difference the last time I went to see him from the previous time.

 I had trimmed down and made some drastic changes to my life.

He told me that he had good news and bad news about my eyesight.

The good news was that my eyesight had improved.

I laughed and asked “ how is that even possible?”

He explained that pressure exerted on the optical nerves to my eyes had become less because of my weightloss.

And I wouldn’t’ need glasses to drive at night anymore.

I found that difficult to believe after driving with glasses for almost 30 years.

But he was right. I didn’t.

How is the optometrist always right?

Then he gave me the bad news.

I would need glasses to read in the not so distant future.

It was fascinating to learn that losing weight could actually improve my eyesight.

That was something I was not expecting to hear on my visit.

Your eyesight is important.

Having your eyes checked regularly is an important part of health and fitness plan.

I look forward to my next appointment.

Life is meant to be lived


Before I moved to Collingwood, made a lifestyle change and lost 125 Lbs,  I was a single parent who worked for a large publishing company in Toronto. 

It was a very stressful job with endless deadlines.

My life was also very stressful.

I had a young son at home who refused to go to school.

I did not exercise and had unhealthy dietary habits, very unhealthy as I learned years later.

My commute to the office every morning involved stopping at Timmys to pick up a extra large double double and a 24 pack of Tim bits for the trip.

Or sometimes it was a nice big muffin from Country Style.

That was after I had already ate breakfast at home which usually was left over pizza and some OJ.

Afterall, I needed energy for the eight hours of sitting in a chair staring at a computer screen that lay ahead.

So, I would spend up to two hours each day in my car driving to and from my job and then eight hours sitting in my chair working. 

Usually I would have a few more cups of coffee at the office drink a few cans of pop eat chocolate bars and pizza. 

Typically our office would hold pizza lunch meetings.

I couldn’t even go outside to walk because I had to work and sit during my lunch hour. 

That is a lot of sitting.

And to make matters even worse when I would arrive home I would open a beer and eat pizza or have a big t-bone steak.

One morning while I out for a walk before going to the office.

I started to feel a pain in my chest.

But I drove up to the office anyway, and had my coffee and Tim bits along the way too.

When I arrived to the office and sat myself in my chair to start work, the tightness in my chest got worse and was even having difficulty breathing.

I decided to inform my Manager that I was not feeling well and had to leave.

They were not happy to hear that and reluctantly let me leave the office.

My father met me at my home in Toronto and drove me over to the emergency department at Toronto general. 

I proceeded to admit myself to find out what the problem might be.

The nurses stripped me down and attached diodes all over my chest.

not long after that the doctor came to visit me.

He told me that my blood pressure was 300/220. 

That was more than twice as high as blood pressure should be.

I said “so what”.

He told me that technically, I should be dead, but I wasn’t.

I was lying naked in a hospital gown in a waiting room on display to everyone who entered the hospital.

I was even waving at the people as they entered.

immediately the doctor gave me a high blood pressure pill to lower my blood pressure. 

I told him that I didn’t want the blood pressure medication but he told me I had no choice.

They took chest x-rays and urine samples to examine.

I was finally released from the hospital 12 hours after being admitted.

It was not an experience I ever wanted to experience again.

That was the day I started to take blood pressure medication to lower my blood pressure.

It was also the beginning of a seven month long journey to find out if I had something wrong with my heart.

During the next seven months I had  my heart ultrasounded, had a heart stress test, an angiogram and a test that took images of my heart while inside a CatScan like machine. 

They slid my body inside the machine and rotated my body around to take pictures of my heart. 

Thankfully they did not need to insert any wires into my penis. 

The day finally arrived that I had my follow up appointment with the Chief of Cardiology to get results of all my tests.

He was a tall Polish man about the same age as myself but much thinner and fitter than myself.

I suspected that he did not drink double doubles and eat a box of Timbits on the way to the office every morning like I did.

He shook my hand and told me to sit down in a chair.

So , I asked him, “how’s my heart doc?”

He smiled and replied “Well Craig, you have the healthiest heart that I have ever seen!”

I was not ready for that answer. 

I asked him to repeat what he said just to make sure I heard him

correctly.

All the rock concerts I had been to  in my life had also caused my hearing to be less than what it should.

That was the best news I had ever received from a doctor.

His recommendation was to lose weight, a lot of weight.

I asked him how I will be able to lose the weight. He told me that it was up to me to figure it out.

He shook my hand once again and said it was nice meeting me and that he never wanted to see me again. Have a great life.

I certainly did not want to see him ever again either.

Exercise increases T-levels

High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) is important to increasing your testosterone levels.

Having high testosterone levels are important to get and maintain a hard erection.

In 2005 after a visit to the hospital for some chest pains, I found out that I high blood pressure.

Soon after taking medication to lower my blood pressure, I started to experience low libido and E.D.

So I went back to see the doctor and was prescribed another medication to fix a problem that a medication was causing.

Or at least, that is what I thought.

It did not seem like the best solution to me.

I stayed on track with my fitness goals, continued to work out religiously, hike, spin, do HIIT, practice yoga and eat clean and healthy.

After losing more than 100 Lbs, started to experience dizziness, nausea and went back to my doctor.

My doctor told me to stop taking the blood pressure medication.

I could not have been happier.

After a few months, my body started to come to life again.


Dead Man Walking

When I was 48 years old I was overweight and needed to have my wisdom teeth removed.

I don’t know if you’ve had your wisdom teeth removed but it’s one of those life experiences that I never wanted to experience and had avoided.

Luckily for me at that time I knew a parent from my son’s hockey team who just happened to be a Dental Surgeon. He offered to remove my wisdom teeth and I gladly accepted his offer.

On the day of my surgery, the nurse took x-rays and then escorted me into the surgery room and administered anesthetic.

The Dental Surgeon went to work but after a few minutes, I woke up and looked up at the doctor while he was pulling a tooth out of my mouth with a big pair of pliers.

The kind doctor looked down at me and said “Craig, you are a dead man walking and there’s a good chance you will die before before the age of 50 if you do not lose weight.”

He made me promise that I would have to make a serious effort to lose weight or he would not finish operating.

I reluctantly promised that I would change my life and lose weight and he finished removing my wisdom teeth.

That was a day that changed my life forever.

 

 

 

 

 

Lifestyle change is worth it

In 2012, I made a lifestyle change and moved from Toronto to Collingwood,Ontario on the shores of Georgian Bay.

I have lost 125 pounds, no longer take high blood pressure medication, am healthier and more physically fit then I have been in my entire life.

Many people have helped me along the path to health and wellness and there is a lot of learning involved but the main decision to change comes from deep inside.

Lifestyle change will probably change your body overnight and will mean altering many things in your life that you have become used to.

If you or someone you know is considering making a lifestyle change to lose weight and get healthier and fitter, it is the right decision to make.

Go for it and never look back, keep an open mind, be grateful, embrace change and never let anyone change your mind.

What you have decided is the right decision and great things will follow, along with feeling very hungry and tired and not being able to walk for a few days because of sore muscles.