Atticus837
New member
Posts: 1
Hi!
Long post incoming, but TL;DR: recommend me a workout program to do next, after starting with Baseline!
I'm Atticus. I'm 29, and have been overweight since I was about 10 years old. Over the years I've had many attempts at losing weight, my most recent being a 20kg weight loss (44lb.) a few years ago, that I put back on after losing my job and going through a rough patch during the pandemic. About a month ago, I hit my peak weight of 137kg, or just over 300 lbs. I now have two kids, a two year old boy and a little baby girl... and I have a new reason to get fit and healthy - not for me or my own body, but for them. I want to be able to run around with them for longer than 30 seconds at a time, kick a ball with them, get down on the floor with them without struggling to get back up, and be strong enough to still pick them up as they start to get older...
So I set myself a new goal - I don't care about being skinnier, I want to be fitter and healthier. Specifically, my first goal (of many!) is to do something I've always wanted to do but never done: I want to do monkey bars. See, by the time I was tall enough to reach them as a kid, I was too heavy and not strong enough to hold my own weight up. This means there are two ways to reach my goal: 1. Lose enough weight that I'm light enough to do monkey bars or 2. Get strong enough to do them despite my weight. In reality, I'll end up doing a bit of both and meeting in the middle. Then I'll find another goal to attempt and keep going until I'm the healthy Dad I want to be for my kids.
In just the last 30 days I've lost 4kg (9lb.) already, and I feel better... all by making a few small dietary changes (nothing drastic) and doing some daily exercise. I've been doing the Baseline Program, which was a great, low-impact way to start. I did most days on level 3, with the exception of a day or two where I was sick and allowed myself to take it a little easier, and I found this to be a decent challenge overall. I'm about to finish that, and I'm not quite sure where to go next... I looked at Square One and Foundation Light, and they seemed too easy... But Foundation introduces Squats and reverse lunges, and I'm not sure whether to push myself to try those or whether that's too much too soon.
I love the idea of RPG fitness (I'm a huge TTRPG nerd) but can't work out what to pick there. Zero Hero looks like it night be too easy now that I've done Baseline but I'm not sure. I tried to do age of pandora some years ago, and burned out after a few days. It was too much too quickly, although maybe now that I've warmed up with Baseline it's worth another shot?? I thought perhaps hero's journey with the heavy sword weapon might tie in nicely to my monkey bar goal, but the problem is I'd have to be able to do a pull up or chin up, which I certainly cannot. If I could, I wouldn't need to be working towards monkey bars!
I don't have any equipment, so I'm relying on bodyweight training alone. I'm willing to consider purchasing some items down the line.
Long story short, I'm finding it hard to tell what's actually suitable for my level, what will be easy and what will be hard, and I'm (rather foolishly) scared to start a program and then find that it's either too much for me or not enough. Any wisdom or guidance you can offer is greatly appreciated!
Long post incoming, but TL;DR: recommend me a workout program to do next, after starting with Baseline!
I'm Atticus. I'm 29, and have been overweight since I was about 10 years old. Over the years I've had many attempts at losing weight, my most recent being a 20kg weight loss (44lb.) a few years ago, that I put back on after losing my job and going through a rough patch during the pandemic. About a month ago, I hit my peak weight of 137kg, or just over 300 lbs. I now have two kids, a two year old boy and a little baby girl... and I have a new reason to get fit and healthy - not for me or my own body, but for them. I want to be able to run around with them for longer than 30 seconds at a time, kick a ball with them, get down on the floor with them without struggling to get back up, and be strong enough to still pick them up as they start to get older...
So I set myself a new goal - I don't care about being skinnier, I want to be fitter and healthier. Specifically, my first goal (of many!) is to do something I've always wanted to do but never done: I want to do monkey bars. See, by the time I was tall enough to reach them as a kid, I was too heavy and not strong enough to hold my own weight up. This means there are two ways to reach my goal: 1. Lose enough weight that I'm light enough to do monkey bars or 2. Get strong enough to do them despite my weight. In reality, I'll end up doing a bit of both and meeting in the middle. Then I'll find another goal to attempt and keep going until I'm the healthy Dad I want to be for my kids.
In just the last 30 days I've lost 4kg (9lb.) already, and I feel better... all by making a few small dietary changes (nothing drastic) and doing some daily exercise. I've been doing the Baseline Program, which was a great, low-impact way to start. I did most days on level 3, with the exception of a day or two where I was sick and allowed myself to take it a little easier, and I found this to be a decent challenge overall. I'm about to finish that, and I'm not quite sure where to go next... I looked at Square One and Foundation Light, and they seemed too easy... But Foundation introduces Squats and reverse lunges, and I'm not sure whether to push myself to try those or whether that's too much too soon.
I love the idea of RPG fitness (I'm a huge TTRPG nerd) but can't work out what to pick there. Zero Hero looks like it night be too easy now that I've done Baseline but I'm not sure. I tried to do age of pandora some years ago, and burned out after a few days. It was too much too quickly, although maybe now that I've warmed up with Baseline it's worth another shot?? I thought perhaps hero's journey with the heavy sword weapon might tie in nicely to my monkey bar goal, but the problem is I'd have to be able to do a pull up or chin up, which I certainly cannot. If I could, I wouldn't need to be working towards monkey bars!
I don't have any equipment, so I'm relying on bodyweight training alone. I'm willing to consider purchasing some items down the line.
Long story short, I'm finding it hard to tell what's actually suitable for my level, what will be easy and what will be hard, and I'm (rather foolishly) scared to start a program and then find that it's either too much for me or not enough. Any wisdom or guidance you can offer is greatly appreciated!