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Pookeyism

Gastric Sleeve Patients
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Posts posted by Pookeyism


  1. Wow - you cannot cure that level of infection control malpractice with hand wipes and sanitizer. It sounds like it should be avoided.

    Seems like they are catering to what most will find attractive while not noticing the underlying cost-cutting measures. It would make me wonder how well they are trained. Most people I find, once they are adequately aware of microbiology and infection control by sheer self-preservation will keep their hands clean, at least.

    Very glad you did well! welcome to the losers bench :)


  2. If it were strict cosmetics or that the skin was getting unmaneagable, I would agree not to try to heal in the heat of the summer (but I am in Houston). However, a hernia is kinda like a time bomb, so your doctor may have a very valid reason for getting that done now, and not being so worried about the 30 lbs left (which is a non issue if you know you are going back later, I would think)

    However I am not a doctor. Ask you doctor how potentially urgent is the hernia. Go from there.


  3. I agree it is very brave of you to post the questions here. Thank you for bringing up good points.

    First, the topic of growth – I know it does, because I have had some candid conversations with friends and in one instance a couple that went through surgery within 2 weeks of each other (WOW some really interesting stories there). While I can’t tell you how it will affect you overall, may I make a suggestion? I don’t recall seeing too many people do this, but consider taking some measurements, and compare them to you weight, inches lost at waist & thigh and BMI – pic if you are so bold (but don’t post here! Lol). The other guys would probably be interested to know.

    As for skin, everyone is different with this and genetics play a major role. In your family, who do you get the traits of skin color, skin color variation on the hands, genitals, feet etc. or have like allergies or skin conditions? If you have a few larger scars, who do you favor by way of how they look as they heal? Look to these people to see how their skin ages and droops ad they got older – that is a good indication of how this will work for you – but absolutely no guarantee. Variation genetically is how we roll, so no way of telling 100%. Also you are younger and that helps!

    Another factor for the skin, if you will need surgery, will be how your under skin fares. For instance, if you have a lot of issues or it is really cumbersome, you may want to consider the surgery to reduce the medical issues or pain. Two years ago I would have said NONONONONO more surgery. Now, I will most likely have at least my arms and panni by next year. My arms pinch in clothing and exercise, bruise real easy, and my panni has issues with moisture, despite constant effort to keep it clean and dry. It also prevents the level of activity I would like in some of my sports. I am also seriously concerned that if my finances were to change later in life, I would have to carry that skin possibly into situations that I could no longer care for myself, and lack of care for those areas scare me. A lot.

    Thanks for posting the question, and I wish you luck in, er, your growth through WLS .


  4. Me - but I work in a facility that is responsible for weighing product to the thousandth of a pound if necessary, so I do weigh myself - but infrequently. I also adjust the scale to the +/- 2 lbs mark, to be easy on myself.

    You are not crazy! but consider weighing at the same time each month, to at least gauge all is well. There is another aspect to weighing regularly. Really drastic weight fluctuation can also be signs of illness, and out bodies are adjusting to so many things that we may not notice other things that, without the surgery, would have been more noticeable warning signs.

    Keep a food log, note your exercise and compare to your weight. That way if it is ever a question of too sudden a gain or loss, you have history for the doctor to reference.


  5. You may need to get a tad aggressive, with mindfulness to keep the ball rolling.

    Make a list of everything you are going to need. Nut visits, do you need a demonstrated diet attempt, the PCP recommendation your doctor seems unwilling (I don’t buy unable). Anything you can do well in ahead, do it. Get as much lined up as possible.

    Contact your PCP. Include a .pdf containing a letter written for approval. Leave the edit option open in case he is truly that lazy. Tell him in the letter you are providing the example he needed, and now you need to have him clarify if he does not know how to fill this out, won’t fill it out and if he will not why, because you are going to provide feedback to the doctors that recommend him for ANYTHING. In the meantime, get another PCP in the works, make another appointment – if you get two letters yay.

    Keep a notebook of every time you talk to someone, an attempt – a voicemail, email, etc. This is not necessarily for the PCP situation, but if you have detailed notes on everything, it is harder for anything to become an issue.

    Good luck.


  6. Small increments in walking are just fine. You do what you can. Google office yoga/ yoga in chairs - and consider "mindful breathing". Google ujjayi breath or ocean breath - a beautiful, powerFULL thing to do at your desk.


  7. I eat mostly raw, but you tube and pintrest offers so many ideas for healthy Snacks. One of my faves is thin apple slices with a small bit of apple butter wrapped in spinach. You can do this shredded also and bake it.

    never underestimate the awesomeness of mono-snacks. Just a cut up melon or an orange or carrot, apple or grapes. The blueberry/walnut/chicken/apple salad is great, and a tangy wasabi mayo is a healthy fat to bring it together.


  8. I have a similar situation, but no child. My husband is slowly creeping up in the weight to the point that he is now officially morbidy obese, and has co-morbidities. Many more than I did at the equivalent rough BMI. He has always been uber healthy and a quick healer. Not so much anymore.

    He does not say it is easy cause I had surgery, he has just seen too much that I think he would even dare say that – even if he thought it! LOL! But he does say things like “Wow you can eat so much more than you used to”, which at one point I used to reply “as opposed to 2 oz. of Jello, back when I was bald?”.

    I think maybe he has come to have a feeling if overwhelming discouragement over seeing other people lose weight with or without the surgery. It is an ongoing effort to be kind with this. Mostly, I can’t control what he eats when he is not around me. So I don’t try. At home, I fix it before it happens. No breads at home, no sugary foods, no morning cereals or processed Snacks. With the exception of his “hidden” chocolate stash. Which is ok for now, I can’t win every advancement in every battle. When we eat out, I do not give in on the bad foods. No chains, like Chili’s or macaroni Grill, nothing. Fast food? Does My Fit Foods or Jason’s Deli count? If so then yes, if not then no. Our together rituals have begun to include long mornings going to get farm raised eggs and milk, pick strawberries or such, farmers markets, etc. Evenings taking healthy cooking classes, or painting, or how to juice or make raw meals. Yoga, swimming, SUP is a new “thing” and the hubby is surprised he is good at it.

    I’m not sure if I would do it or not, but I would be tempted to point out (to someone if this were me) that my surgery has WHAT to do with them choosing to eat poorly? Tell them to eat as much as they can hold, of a healthier fare. Or perhaps ask back "are you trying to get a big as I was so you have to go through all this? I am not always tactful, so I would be kind with getting this message across.

    Just a bit more advice - you control what your child eats, not the other way around. Your wife can sabotage her health but you can intervene with your child. Make time to go eat healthy foods with her and participate in fun, active events with your daughter even if your wife does not attend.


  9. So for those, say either 4 months out or about 50 lbs. down – I have a suggestion: think of the things you are going to do today or did this morning that you would not have been able to do, or do without discomfort, etc. – and share them!!!!

    Let’s give our brave new pre and post sleeve brethren some NSV’s to look forward to! <3


  10. Can I suggest you post this to the guy forum and put the title as "need info from xxl travelers and businessmen"? Or something like that? I think you may come across alot of gentlemen that will be able to give you first-hand advise.

    What I can tell you is at 285 +/- lbs and some of that muscle, my 6'2" hubby is nearing the reasonable limit for 1 seat in the newer aircraft. What i mean by reasonable is after a certain size, even if they do not make you, common courtesy is to not spill over into the next person's space. You don't know if they are already scared or tense or have issues (especially women) with men being really, really close, which you cannot avoid. We pay a bit more for our seats, but it keeps hubby at the window or in the isle, and me as buffer to the next person.

    Also - some aircraft have 2 seats to a row, so it would be only the two of you. Generally I say avoid travel agents for domestic flights, but in this case they may be of service.


  11. No. I have a friend that cuts off very long hair for wigs and even a thick ponytail does't add to a pound. You've broken your stall with effort!

    The hair thing will pass, as long as you keep your calories not ridiculously low and eat a variety of healthy foods. I recommend fresh squeezed juices or vitamix smoothies if you cannot yet hold solid food.


  12. If you eat what you used to, you will possibly maintain some weight loss, but you may very well not head off the co morbidities you either have or would have possibly ended up suffering from. Generally, from what I have observed "just less" of the same foods usually does not work. I think, among other things, it has to do with the fact that most poor choices are also slider foods, and you will eat more than you realize.

    I have some concern for you, it sounds to an extent that perhaps you did not listen to what was told to you ahead of time, and treated this like another radical weight loss option, when in fact you have made a change that is NOT a cure. THIS WILL NOT cure you. It is a tool - an amazing god-sent tool in my opinion, but just a tool. You have to work at it every day, work at it until the new habits are old habits, and work at it still.

    Make another appointment with a WLS specific nut, stick around here, too. Even when you can eat crap, don't. Good luck.

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