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whippledaddy

LAP-BAND Patients
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Everything posted by whippledaddy

  1. whippledaddy

    Whippledaddy Has Passed Away

    If you would like to contact me about Ryan, here is my phone number 517-774-4319. Thank you all for your condolences and support. Patty Ryan (Whippledaddy's wife)
  2. whippledaddy

    What was YOUR last straw?

    I'd been fat since I was nine years old, and I had gotten pretty much used to it. Not happy about it, but resigned, and yes, a little comfortable. There is a payoff to the fatness. For each of us it is different. For me it was that the fat insulated me from social interaction. I didnt' have to go to school functions like mixers, or the prom. Since no girls wanted to go out with me I didn't have to worry about that either. I even asked some out to appease my friends and my Mother, who couldn't ever bring herself to believe I wasn't the most handsome boy since Ricky Nelson. My fat saved me then, 'cause no one ever accepted. Even though I was always fat, I was always physically active, and sports minded. I was on the school wrestling team, and raced motorcycles pro/am. I"ve always had a physical job. Chef. Work work work. Twelve and fourteen hour days on your feet, moving sweating, lifting. Then a great job fell in my lap. I became a supervisor in food service in a prison. State employed. No physical exertion. A tough day is when no one woke me up to take my break. LOL. I gained forty four pounds almost instantly. All that activity was keeping me from getting fatter. When the activity stopped, the storage of calories started. Nothing fit. The hot weather came and it was pure torture. Then a prisoner grieved me (they get to write grievances, and they are heard, and action can be taken against the prison employee. Yes, I know it sucks. But it is there, and we must deal with it), This grievance said that the reason they were being fed small portions was because I was eating up all the stock. Strangely enough that was my wake up call. Now they get fed the portions they do because a nutritional department sets the portions. My gormandizing had no effect on that. That night I looked in a full length mirror for the first time in years. I saw a wasted body, stretched to the bursting point by an addiction to chewing and swallowing food. I saw humorless eyes staring back at me, and I saw a face dulled and wrinkled by care and self loathing. I saw the chances not taken, the joys not shared. The girls not kissed. I saw the deep nights without friendship, the endless days spent sweating in the shade. I saw emotions being replaced by a compulsion to eat, I saw food replacing my family and friends. I saw a wasted life. And I didn't like it. And there was no one to blame, but the fat jerk staring back at me. I hated him, and I wanted him to go away. He had imprisoned me. The real me. The me that lives inside the adipose penitentiary of my addicted soul. Some where inside, behind those piggish, greedy eyes; beneath that squalid, white, mottled flesh; just below those pendulous chins; somewhere in there was the real me. And he was dying. It was him or me. At that moment I chose......me. Life. I chose to change, to fight until the end. I chose to fight that demon who drove me to eat everything. Nothing left on the plate. No leftovers in my life. The next day I made that call. And the first thing I thought as I dialed that phone was...."I'm not doing this to LOSE anything. I'm doing it to GAIN. To gain a life. To gain a life worth living. Live, love and be well. Ryan.
  3. whippledaddy

    Hey Guys

    So darkness has fallen and my wife has fallen asleep while watching tivoed reruns of old sitcoms. Yet sleep eludes me. I sit up and stare at this bright eyed friend, and read the posts of those with whom I share so much. And I come across your post, like a beacon in the night. Like a point of light that offers hope and comfort, I drift toward it. I've got to go back to my surgeon after a long absence, and I have plateaued for quite a while. I, too, wish I could crash diet, lose twenty pounds and then see him. It's not that easy. I have a band that still holds me back, but I have this addiction. Addiction is like having a tiny person on your shoulder whispering in your ear. Demanding. Pushing. Smarmy little bastard. I'd reach up and squash him, but he's as real as the air, and as solid as a dream. Good luck. It will be okay. Your thirty pounds will come, or you will realize that you are beautiful just the way you are. One or the other. I need to lose another 58. Need? Want? Well, it's my goal. And it's a good goal. You'll do fine. Just fine. See the surgeon, if he doesn't understand well....he's in good company, because so few really do understand, eh?
  4. whippledaddy

    Who Has Lost Over 100 Pounds?!?!

    I don't feel the need to post here much. Lately I admit I haven't visited much. But this thread.........................struck a nerve. I got banded in 2004, November 16. I promptly lost weight, and got three fills and continued to lose weight. Total I've lost 108 pounds. Now, my first goal was to lose over a hundred pounds. I did it. My second goal is to be at 200lbs exactly. I've got 58 pounds to go. It's been on my mind a lot lately. I need to get another fill, I still can't eat as much as I once did, and I certainly don't eat as often, but I can eat more than when I was losing. This is a complicated thing for me. I know I should feel successful for losing that hundred, but I also feel like a failure for not losing the remaining 58. And I feel like a traitor to myself for not celebrating my success in the loss as much as I attack myself for not completing my path. I've had to cancel the last five doctor appointments/fill sessions due to my wife's ongoing illness, and mandates at work. But that isn't an excuse. If I had really defeated the Demon in my soul who constantly whispers in my ear "eat...eat....eat...eat...eat.." then I would still be losing, slowly. Yes, I've lost a hundred, and yes I feel, and look, better. Most importantly my health has increased significantly. Then, tonight, before reading this post I was outside, looking a the river, and I found a ray of hope in my despairing thoughts. A tiny flash of understanding. Life, and all of its endeavors, are like a river. Sometimes it's but a trickle wandering downhill in a hesitant spring. Sometimes it's a wide and roaring rapids, crashing towards the sea. Sometimes it's just a river, slow and lazy, gradual as the sunset. My weight loss has been like a river. A rapids at first, roaring and frothing in it's enthusiasm, then a river, slowly drifting seaward, then a lake. A lake is merely an interruption if you're a river. Sooner or later you will begin to flow on the other side. Your pace will pick up, and you'll be heading home, home to the sea. I have time. Thanks for reading. I know I ramble, those who've read my posts here before know this all too well.
  5. whippledaddy

    Goodbye, Mr. Whipple

    My beloved friend, Mr. Whipple, slipped quietly into the arms of the angels at nine o'clock this morning. He died as he lived, with strength and grace. And through him I've learned that death, too, can be a miracle, though dark and sad. It is a mystery how such a small fellow as he could leave such a large hole in my heart. As always, he taught me about life. He has always been a great friend and teacher. Now he has taught me about dying. I hope I can measure up to his class when my turn rolls 'round. He gave so many lessons in life, he had no words but he spoke with the eloquence of poets. He taught me the rules of being a "Good Dog". And, if more people could just be "Good Dogs" the world would be a warmer and more liveable place. The Rules as told to me by Mr. Whipple: 1. Be overjoyed to see a loved one. Even if they have been out of your sight for just a few moments. 2. Greet each day with a stretch. 3. Learn about the real treasures and soak them up. The real treasures are: Head scratches, belly rubs, and warm rays of the sun. 4. Defend your family against all threats, no matter how large. 5. When in doubt, bark. Goodbye my friend. I'll carry you in my heart forever, your memory and your gentle spirit are a part of me as is the air I breathe. Frolic in the tall grass of heaven. Chase the butterflies on an endless summer's day. I'll be along, by and by, and we shall run in the meadow together, and once more I'll pet you, and hold you in my lap. You've made the great step into the Darkness, and I must be brave enough to let go. Know this: I am. And shall forever be. WhippleDaddy. Proudly so. _________________
  6. whippledaddy

    Goodbye, Mr. Whipple

    We'll try this pic, see if I downsized it enough. Looking through his pics was both a thing of sadness and a thing of joy. I had the priviledge of smiling through my tears. Time goes by. Life goes on. The sun rises and sets. Still my thoughts turn to my wordless friend and the volumes he spoke to me. I miss him, but the pain is the dull ache of loss, not the sharp pang it once was. Still I think sometimes I see him out of the corner of my eye. And when we mention his name to our other dog, Abby the Half Pug/Half Terrier, she looks up at a corner of our living room ceiling. I find this disquieting, and somehow comforting. I know it is but my grief working its way through me. And so the days continue. Life has many tasks that must be met. And through the sun of each new day we keep close our departed friend with the shadow of a memory. So here is his picture. He was just a dog to anyone but us. And that's exactly how it should be. His life changed ours forever, and that, too, is exactly as it should be.
  7. whippledaddy

    Goodbye, Mr. Whipple

    I've gotta resize a pic to post it. Thanks. It'll take a day or two, kinda busy getting ready for yet another surger for Patty, 300 miles away.
  8. whippledaddy

    Where are the happy bandsters?

    I'm not just happy....I'm thankful. What a wonderful tool this is. But, just like any tool it must be USED and it takes CONCENTRATION. Eat too much, too fast, and BAM!. Just like a hammer. Lose your concentration and BAM! a very sore thumb. So should I throw away my hammer? Silly. I'm down more than a hundred pounds. IF it all stopped right now I'd still be happy. It's wonderful. Now, here's something I wrote about a friend of mine. Read it and you'll know the real reason I'm happy about my band, and you'll know how I feel about UNREASONABLE worrying about complications. Look into it, yes, heed warnings, yes. Let hearing about the complications of others make your decision for you? NO. Kent: I saw an old friend today................but he didn't see me. He didn't greet me, or shake my hand, or grace my ears with his booming laugh. He couldn't. He couldn't get out of the casket he lay in. He was a big man, and it was a big casket. You see he loved to hunt, and camp, and fish, and....eat. His wife was out the other day, and when she got home, Kent was no longer in. I had known him for many years. Since Patty and I met some seventeen years ago. He always had a good word, and a smile, and a merry twinkle in his eye. His beard went white while his hair was still dark, and his laugh was so joyful, so infectious that it made Santa seem depressed by comparison. And, oh yes. He had the kindest eyes I've ever seen. When I went to my first meeting for the Lap Band Kent was there. He was just sixty years old and he was being refused the surgery because Dr. Cudjoe doesn't do them on folks over sixty. But Kent was the kind of guy who didn't fit the actuarial charts. After he met with the good Doctor it was settled.....if the insurance would cover it. He was scheduled for the surgery on three occasions, and each time the insurance fell through. He had enough money to cover the $40,000.00 that Cudjoe wanted but Kent's wife wouldn't let him rob their nest egg. So now he resides in an oversize wooden box, festooned with satin, and trimmed in death. To the insurance company, and even his wife it seems, he wasn't worth it. Yet he was shown three nights in a row. And each time it was an hour and a half wait in line to pay respects. Three days of people lined up out the door and down the block. Not worth it? How many lives like mine and Patty's were darkened by his passing? He had children who had just given him grandchildren. He had friends. Yet someone, somewhere, decided what the fat man was worth. And, yes, that angers me. But something angers me even more. Each day I read about fears on other WLS sites. Fear of complication. Sad and fearful laments "What if something goes wrong? What if I erode, what if I reject, what if I get infected?" The complications of Weight Loss Surgery. Ask Kent about the complications of NOT getting weight loss surgery. Risky? Yep, it's risky. So is apnea, diabetes, stroke, hypertension, heart attack. They seem risky too. So, you're thinking about WLS? And you're worried that something bad MIGHT happen? Well it might. BUT.........if you don't do it.......Something bad WILL happen. And I wonder something else. Could all the worry over complications be your addiction trying to survive? Could it be a subconscious stalling tactic? A tricky form of denial? I beg anyone who is wavering to think of Kent. He had no doubts. He was ready to forge ahead. He knew the risks, and he knew that SOME chance is still better than NO chance. If you have this tool at your disposal why continue to plod slowly but surely up Death's walk and to His doorstep? Turn aside, and take a chance to live. To put life in your years. Fear is the enemy. Love, Ryan.
  9. whippledaddy

    You are what you eat" New Show on ABC

    If you are what you eat, how can you be who you wanna be unless you eat what you wanna eat?
  10. I have been discriminated against in each of these ways, and in other ways. Methods of discrimination that seem kind, but are really painful jabs at a sensitive ego. How many times have I been told that "You're not fat, look at that guy, now HE'S fat" If I'm not fat, why point out the person who is the epitome of fat? How many times have I heard "You're not fat. And besides you carry it well." Carry what well? Plus sizes $7.00 more "Wear stripes, they're slimming." No, diet and exercise is slimming. Now I look like a fat convict. And, in some subconscious way wasn't "Clean your plate" the ultimate discrimination? Why not say "Hmmmmm, you don't seem addicted to anything, why not try food?" And what about the jokes your "friends" tell you? What about those well meaning morons who say "Have you ever thought of going on a diet?" Why no, I haven't. Have you ever thought? Then there's the biggest "fat bigot" of them all. Me. Bigoted against me. Descriminating against myself. Telling myself those horrible lies. "She won't want to go out with you, you're too fat". Don't go to the theatre, the seats are too small." "Don't go to that restaurant, it's tables, not booths, so they'll all be staring at the fat guy, eating." There are a million stings in the hive of prejudice. We wield the sharpest ourselves. I have hated the man in the mirror over the years. He's a weakling who can't stop eating. Every eye sees us. Every heart judges. But our eyes are harder, our judgement harsher, our strikes go deeper than any other. Let them ridicule me who will. They are second class to me. I can hate me better than any of them. Yes, the stranger casts a sideward glance. The people murmur to each other when I walk by. But, truth be told, I am the real Enemy. Even down a hundred pounds I still hear the voices of derision. Most of them are heard with my soul and not my ears.
  11. whippledaddy

    What Dr. Laura said :(

    I used to listen to her years ago. Too many horribly prejudiced fat comments made me turn the radio off. If she made the same comments about RACE as she does about FAT she'd be pushing french fries at a drive through window instead of marketing hate to the masses.
  12. whippledaddy

    Boobs

    I don't know what the big deal about boobs are either. But...................all I did was read the title......................and here I am. Sheesh.
  13. whippledaddy

    Read any good books lately?

    These are a little older (three or four years) and just a bit obscure but I found them fascinating: Peace Like a River (nope don't remember the author, and I give 'em away as soon as I read 'em) The Lovely Bones (don't remember this author either, sheesh.) Excellent surprising little stories about love. Familial love and the borders it breaks down.
  14. whippledaddy

    Do you have a New Years resolution?????

    As I believe I posted last year I tend to make resolutions that are easily kept. This does serve a purpose, by keeping my resolutions I have higher self esteem. Higher self esteem makes all my live issues easier to deal with. Here are some of my past resolutions: Never run through the car wash naked and ask for the hot wax. (Years have gone by and I haven't even been tempted to break this one) Never eat a Jeep. (Never broken this one either) And this year I resolve to: Never walk up to Mike Tyson and tell him he's a Wussy. (Bet I keep it)
  15. I've lost 105 lbs in a little over a year. But I have no way of measuring the life I have gained. It's not about losing. It's about gaining. I did have fantastic insurance, and I did get it here in the good old USA. I'd do it again. And again. I've never been this successful on any diet. I'd do it again. Did I already say that? I'd rather roll naked in a pile of fish hooks than give up my band. How's that?
  16. whippledaddy

    how have you changed?

    I wake up each day without a sleep apnea headache. And I have dropped the lethargy of apnea, too. I get things done. I have an apron of skin. It's very ugly. It sweats. And chafes. Ewwwwww. I could have my hanging belly skin tatooed in a plaid and people would think I was wearing a kilt! Yuck. I have to eat slowly now. This means I can converse. What a joy! Talking with people during a meal! Amazing! I no longer have to pray for my immortal soul before I attempt a flight of stairs. In fact I like 'em now, they're faster. Sometimes I forget that I'm over a hundred pounds down. Then I take too big of a bite and remember. Ouch. My bottle of diabetes pills sets where it always has. Dust on it now. No, don't dust it. I like it that way. Did you know that the car seat can move FORWARD? Astonishing. For the first time in my life I must deal with clothes that are too big. Wow! Bad side? I can't eat a small third world country any more. That can be bad, because, you see, food is my drug. Actually eating is my drug. The food doesn't matter. I have bad bouts of nerves. When night has fallen, and I have time to review the stresses of my life then I want to eat. Graze. Open the refridgerator and dive in, like a man on a mission. That's hard. I must, instead, deal with my feelings, my issues. Tough. But getting easier.
  17. whippledaddy

    Thanks for joining my pity party

    Was he right about the hard week?
  18. whippledaddy

    Its Winter Time!

    There once was a man of Quebec Who was buried in snow to his neck When they asked "Are you frizz?" He replied "Yes, I is. And this ain't even cold for Quebec!" It was 8 degrees here this morning. I could hear the Kee Birds singing all over the neighborhood. They were singing "Keeeeeeeee ripes! It's cold!"
  19. whippledaddy

    I feel so down!

    Sometimes our weight becomes like prison bars. It isolates us from others, as it does from our very selves. Yet others do not see us as we see us. Usually we are the more critical. I know that of all the people in my life the one who hated me most was my best friend.....ME. This self recrimination serves only to further distance ourselves from others. We feel ashamed, and unworthy. We feel underserving. And most of all we feel that they won't like us when they find out who we REALLY are. Fiveholts, I can tell from your post you are a beautiful person. You are judging you by the shell, the outside. You are like an onyx. Rough exterior, but when revealed one of the most beautiful stones in nature. The trick for you is to make the outside like the inside. Inside you are witty, and kind, and vivacious. That is the real you. Consider the band. Consider WLS. And find someone to talk to, someone who is safe, someone who has your best interest at heart. They will help you find that beautiful person you're hiding from the world. You, who posts the truth of your heart, can change it all. You have a beautiful spirit, and that is enough to be beautiful. Love, Ryan.
  20. whippledaddy

    Who are the MALES in here

    Just found this thread. The band and losing the hundred pounds was how I found out I was a guy. Got on the scale and looked down and........ there it was! The only male specific band thing I can think of is that while losing the weight may not make a certain anatomical part larger,,,,,,,,the tummy getting smaller makes it APPEAR bigger. Works for me!!!!! Seriously, what male specific band issues did you want to raise?
  21. whippledaddy

    please pray!

    I too, have prayed for your brother, and am sending Reiki and healing light. May all be well with him, may his hearing be returned. Love, Ryan.
  22. whippledaddy

    Goodbye, Mr. Whipple

    Thank you so much for your kind words everyone. I know that as the days go by it will get easier. The sadness will not lessen, but the memories will become less painful, and more pleasant. They will be warm and loving recollections of a beautiful spirit in a dog's body. There are many wonderful memories for us. He was a Good Dog. I hope I can be a Good Dog as well.
  23. whippledaddy

    I'm home and bandless

    Glad to hear you are well. And I mean "well" in so many ways, not just physically. It takes a very centered person to handle something like this as you are. I have heard of certain stitches causing problems. As a result of Patty's four gazillion surgeries we've discovered that she is "allergic to the last stitch" (doctor's words, not mine). What is different about this stitch? I don't know. DeLarla. It's so hard to lose a pet. They truly are members of the family. In some cases, like yours and mine I suppose, they ARE the family. My Mr. Whipple is in kidney failure. Comfort measures now, untill.......... Pets have an angelic quality about them. They, unlike any human in our lives, love us unconditionally. That is their true calling. To show us what it is like to be loved without condition or reservation. Thanks Michelle, for showing me how to have some grace and class in an unimagineable situation. Your fantastic attitude is a lesson in and of, itself. We must realize that the band is a helpful thing. Like all man's endeavors it is not without problems. They must be faced, and, with courage, overcome. I am not worried about band problems as much as I am convinced that being fat was killing me. K-I-L-L-I-N-G me. Discomfort, or band problems seem small in the face of Death. All the best. Whip.
  24. whippledaddy

    What are you thankful for thisThanksgiving??

    There is so much. We tend to see the negative, because it affects us in the immediate now, and the positive is as invisible as the air we breathe. The good things are always there. Gradual as the sunrise, we accept them as a given, and forget to be thankful for the treasures we have each day. A home. A spouse. A family. A job. Health. Life. Friends. If you have someone to love, who loves you back (including pets!) you have reason to be thankful. I am thankful for the night, for it makes the day brighter. I am thankful for pain, it gives greater value to comfort. I am thankful for hardship, it makes me appreciate easier times. I am thankful for the storm, it causes me to realize just how small I am. I am thankful for struggle, it makes winning all the sweeter. I am thankful for a piece of toast, because I know that to someone, somewhere, it looks like a feast. I am thankful for all my trials and tribulations, for compared to others, mine are insignificant. I am thankful for the demon within me who made me fat. For this was the path that led to supportive caring people with whom we share so much more than obesity.
  25. whippledaddy

    Where are the happy bandsters?

    I would rather run through a car wash naked and get the "hot wax" than give up my band. You see, this is a support place. Happy people don't seek support, even though they are sorely needed to give it. The happy ones are out enjoying their new selves. The ones with problems are here, praying for answers. I'm happy with my band. It is all going according to plan. If you think I'm not happy with it, just try to take it away.

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