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enigmachik

Gastric Sleeve Patients
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Posts posted by enigmachik


  1. It is very common to have a stall at the stage you're at. Most people experience their stall between weeks two and three after the surgery, but for some it doesn't hit until four or five weeks out. You are actually only about 3.5 weeks out so I'd say you are in the normal three week stall so don't panic! I would say at this early stage you might want to consider one Protein Shake a day. I agree that it's best to get most of your Protein from real food, but you are still really early out so one shake a day should help you keep your protein to recommended levels. Don't worry, the weight will come off when it's ready to.


  2. Normally, I don't advocate extremes, but honestly I would stay away from the junk. I say that because at 7 months out I have woken up the carb demon and now I'm struggling with night eating of sweets the same way I was pre-op. There was a point after my surgery where I was naive enough to think I had licked the cravings for good. lies. I know I need to kick this habit before it drags me back down the rabbit hole. Don't wake up your demons. The longer you avoid your trigger foods, the better chance you will have at success.


  3. You'll be fine. I went completely alone too. I didn't have anyone with me when I went for the surgery and I also didn't have anyone with me for the recovery either and all went well. You might want to have a back-up plan just in case there are complications, but more than likely you won't need the back-up plan. I know it's super scary, but you'll be so happy you did it once everything is done and you're all healed up again. Deep breaths, one step at a time. You can do this!! :)


  4. The reason that the RNY has better statistics on diabetes is because with RNY most people HAVE to limit carbs and sugar or they get dumping syndrome. With the sleeve, you should restrict your sugar, but not everyone does because many people have no problem at all with it tolerating it after the sleeve.

    That being said, the sleeve cured my diabetes. Mine was controlled using Metformin before surgery, but now I'm completely off all meds and my blood sugar is well within the normal range!!


  5. Don't give up! You can do this. I would highly recommend getting yourself into therapy with someone who specializes in eating disorders including emotional eating. You said you don't like yourself much and that negative comments would make you want to fall head first into the bad habits which tells me your issue is emotional (like so many of us) so a good therapist can really help you in this area. The surgery can help with the physical part, but we all need to do some work on the mental part as well.

    I know it's not easy! I've been eating far too many sweets myself. But, you absolutely can do this! You might consider doing the five day pouch test to help yourself get back on track. Whatever you do, don't give up!!! Come here, read others struggles, reach out for help (like you're doing) and believe in yourself. It's hard, but it's worth it. hugs.


  6. I live alone and did my entire recovery alone. I had absolutely no problems. If you are very independent like me, you may be happier and find your recovery more peaceful without other people around. If I had to do it all over, I would do it exactly the same way.

    That being said, if you decide to take care of yourself make sure you have a back-up plan just in case your recovery is more difficult than you expected it to be. Good luck!


  7. The difference between a Passport and a Passport Card is if you travel to Europe or not.

    I know I'm splitting hairs here, but why are you limiting your explanation to traveling to Europe or not? Do you think that anyone going beyond the borders of Mexico or Canada must be going to Europe? That's a very presumptuous and narrow view. And yes, I am biased. My family is from Taiwan. My travels take me to Asia, not Europe.


  8. What I do in these situations is to use the salad and spread a very thin layer of salad over the majority of the plate. Then take just a tiny tiny amount of the other foods to put on my plate. The plate looks full because of the salad, but really there is very little food on it. Then I remind myself to eat slowly and talk between bites so that I can fit more into my little tummy. While I'm doing this I'm also subtly pushing some of the salad into a corner of the plate one forkful at a time between bites so that I'm clearing a bigger and bigger space on the plate making it look like I've eaten more than I have. I tend to clear off my plate in this way at roughly the same rate that other people are clearing their plates. When I can't fit any more food, whatever is left on the plate has been concentrated to one area of the plate so that it looks like I ate as much as anyone else. At this point it is perfectly acceptable to say you are full and to toss the rest of the remaining salad. No one has ever questioned me on this. Most of the time I don't even announce that I'm full, I just quietly get up and throw my plate away around the same time that everyone else is finishing eating. Most people are so busy socializing and focusing on their own food that they really don't notice how much you've eaten. Good luck!!


  9. I'm six months out and I used mederma faithfully for the first four months or so. Since then I've just been using olive oil because the mederma is so expensive and it didn't seem to be helping much at all. Actually I've noticed a lot more improvement since I switched to the olive oil. At six months out, my scars are still quite dark and noticeable. I'm also very pale skinned so I imagine that has something to do with it.

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