Jump to content
×
Are you looking for the BariatricPal Store? Go now!

thebionicbroad

Gastric Sleeve Patients
  • Content Count

    614
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by thebionicbroad


  1. Cupping? I didn't know that there was a name for it. Many moons ago, when I was trying to get my weight down to join the military, I went one full year with zero carb. I can remember making, chewing, and spitting out an entire batch of chocolate chip Cookies. I haven't done this with the sleeve, though. There's nothing that I really crave or miss. Sweets don't even look good anymore, since there's zero nutritional value in them. After having a malfunctioning crap-band for five years, I'm having too much fun eating things that would never go through the band. Splenda, fruit, and Atkins bars keep me happy.


  2. I bounce like Tigger. Yesterday, 171.8. This morning 173. With no changes, cheats, etc. Every time I go below 172, I bounce. But every time I get back below 172, it's a bit lower. I just see it as the body fighting for all it's worth to keep my weight stable. And, no matter what charts say, I must be getting close to a normal weight for me. I'm giving myself until next December to get to goal, which is the 155 - 160 range. I hope I can get that low.


  3. Interesting question. The metabolic needs of the body are so much higher than what we can eat post-op that the body has no choice but to burn body fat. My surgeon told me that the body is indiscriminate about what it burns after surgery. I lost a lot of muscle along with that fat, but things settled down, as my surgeon told me, and if I keep up my Protein and weight-lifting, what I'm losing is fat. I'm 5 months post-op and I haven't stalled. I have "bounced," as my body is trying to maintain weight, but if I keep on doing what I'm supposed to, I keep losing, even if it's only a 1/10 of a pound a day.


  4. Lizzy, part of what you're feeling right now is hormonal. Estrogen gets soaked up by the fat cells in obese women (hence the stereotype with facial hair and a deeper voice). When we have the sleeve, and are burning fat, waves of that estrogen are released into the blood stream. It will subside. I felt like a failure after two C-sections, wondering why I couldn't do it the "natural" way. Well, both of my boys would have died, that's why. Obesity is way too complex to be reduced to "calories in, calories out." You are doing it on your own...you opted for a medical procedure to fix a medical problem, just like a C-section.


  5. I sit all day, too, and I've noticed the same thing. Part of it might be weight redistribution, part of it might be just me sitting too much on my arse. Anyway, I'd go to a reputable chiropractor for some stretching exercises. My favorite is to sit on the floor cross-legged, and lean forward.


  6. I slept after my 3 pm surgery. In fact, it's all a blur. It took about 4 hours for the procedure, because it included removal of a Crap-band. I woke up in Recovery just long enough to say, "I'm nauseous," then I went back to sleep. The next day, they got me up to walk. I'm a KS girl, too! I still say that I'm from Overland Park. Good luck! You'll love your sleeve.


  7. Susie,

    I had my Band for 5 years, and was so sick all the time that I was living on cheese. I gained all my weight back plus some. I was also depressed, wouldn't go out, and refused to attend social events, especially with people who hadn't seen me for awhile. I started out every morning calling myself brutal names when I looked in the mirror.

    Because of the complications, I had the Band out in December and a revision to sleeve. I am 55, and now weigh the lowest I have weighed since I was 20. I did go through a type of grieving process for food, I will admit. But I'm taking joy in the fact that I can eat tasty, healthy foods that I never could with the Band: White-meat chicken, cooked veg, cooked egg, etc. And my tastes have changed. So much of what I used to eat just looks NASTY now. With such a small stomach, I want what I put into it to give me the most nutritional bang for my buck. Crap food ain't it.

    I have had no leaks or other complications. I haven't vomited once. I have followed the doctor's orders to the letter. I don't have to shop in the plus size area. I fit into stadium seats. I can march into a regular store and buy clothes off the rack. My thighs don't rub together. I'd rather have all these things than a table full of crap food. You have to decide what's best for you, and I urge you to do your research. I would do this all over again without one shred of hesitation. God bless you.


  8. Apricot, I want you to imagine your liver, which overlaps the top of your stomach. During the surgery, the surgeon has to use a liver retractor to hold the liver out of the way so that he or she can cut out the stomach. Now imagine the liver of an obese person, who has gained 10 - 20 pounds more before surgery, which makes the liver even fattier. The surgeon has to use a paddle to hold the liver aside, at the same time that he or she is trying to cut out 85% of your stomach. Do you REALLY want that? He or she is trying to staple the incision line so that you don't have leaks. Wouldn't it be better to make handling the liver easier so that he or she could put the majority of focus on doing the surgery correctly? Every pound you gain pre-op makes his or her job more difficult. Having a food-for-all pre-op isn't exactly the best idea, IMHO.

PatchAid Vitamin Patches

×