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Chris R

Gastric Sleeve Patients
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Everything posted by Chris R

  1. Who did your surgery? Where? I read about someone else on here who also felt no restriction and was always hungry - and when another surgeon checked them out, nearly their entire original stomach had been left intact. They had it revised and are having great success with it now.
  2. Chris R

    Over 3 months out!

    Wow! That's amazing! You look so young - may I ask your age? My 19-year old son is working toward this surgery but having a hard time losing the necessary pre-op weight. He started at 475 last May, and has lost 23 lbs. He needs to lose 15 more before he can have the surgery. I'm 2 months out. Lost 60 pre-op and 33 post so far.
  3. Everyone I work with has been very supportive. If you're generally an open person, go for it!
  4. Chris R

    My birthday and I'm on Puree!

    I had my surgery ON my 50th birthday - couldn't even have water! But the way I look at it, it's probably going to be the best birthday gift ever! Hmmm... purees for a birthday? What about plain Greek yogurt flavored with chocolate Protein powder? And a candle, of course!
  5. Sleeved 2/12, down 32 lbs.
  6. Chris R

    Gallbladder attacks

    I had my gallbladder out 19 years ago - 9 months after my first child was born. Your pain does sound like a gall bladder attack. Some people mistake them for a heart attack. My pain was more like someone was stabbing me in the back with my gall bladder.
  7. Chris R

    Eating out.

    I've been out to eat a few times with my husband and kids since surgery. I order something that I know I can eat, then just eat the amount that is comfortable (not much!) I take the leftovers home if they'll reheat well, and just enjoy the company and conversation in between my small bites, spread out over the meal.
  8. Chris R

    my foods, what's wrong...so frustrated..

    Splenda IS aspertame...
  9. The PA at the bariatric center of excellence I go to put it this way - it takes more energy just to carry around the extra weight. I started at a BMI of about 68, and it took a LOT more effort for me to climb a flight of stairs then than it does now, and I'm still at a BMI of 54. Even just the walking a person with a high BMI does just to get around burns more calories than it would if they weighed a lot less. So I do believe there is a relativity about it. I agree it's better to look at it as a percentage.
  10. Chris R

    editing profile is a pain

    The title above the picture changes automatically - the more posts you make, the 'higher' your rating. Oh, I just read your post more carefully - that is interesting... I think I'd rather pick my own than be "VST Addict"...
  11. Chris R

    Jp Drain...Worst.Thing.Ever?

    They only kept mine in while in the hospital. It felt really WEIRD when they pulled it out! All they did was put a piece of gauze and some adhesive tape over it, told me to change it daily and if the drainage turned a strange color or started to smell funky, call them. It did take a while to heal - it seemed to stay red around the edges, and I thought it might be getting infected. Finally I started putting a little bit of bacitracin ointment on it and leaving the gauze off, and it healed up fairly quickly then.
  12. I agree on the Water - MINIMUM 64 oz a day. SIP SIP SIP if it's hard to get it down. I was sleeved 4 days after you, and fortunately for me, drinking water isn't a problem at all - I can actually drink like a 'normal' person - the liquid just seems to flow through my sleeve. On calories, I average around 900 per day, some days as much as 1100, but usually in the 800-1000 range. I'm only drinking one Protein shake a day now, 1 c of 1% milk mixed with 1 scoop of Syntrax Nectars Protein powder. I don't love them, but they're palatable. I usually get at least 80 - 100 g of protein total, so I'm about ready to give that up, because I'd really rather eat my protein than drink it. I had a stall for about a week at 4 weeks out. I gained a pound a day for 4 days, then it took me the rest of the week to lose it back, even though nothing in my eating/drinking had changed. I've lost 31 lbs in the 6 weeks since surgery, so I'm happy with a little over 5 lbs a week.
  13. Key in what you said - she had her surgery "several years ago", when the sleeve surgery was very new and unproven. I think the sleeve has been becoming more popular with surgeons as it is proving to be statistically nearly as effective as rny, but with far fewer complications and potential problems down the line.
  14. Chris R

    Too much or not enough?

    At an informational meeting, they told us that for every cup of coffee you drink, you need to drink 2 cups of Water to make up for its diuretic effects! However, with the 3 shakes, your liquid intake sounds fine to me, too - seems like you're doing just fine!
  15. Chris R

    New to this

    My son is 19. He started the bariatric surgery program with me in May, 2012. I weighed 450 at the time. He weighed more. I've had better success with the program - I lost the required weight and all the program reqirements by last November, and was sleeved on my 50th birthday, February 12. I'd lost 60 lbs pre-surgery, and have lost 31 more in the 6 weeks since then. My son has completed all of the requirements except the weight loss. As of his last appointment, he still had about 13 lbs to go. I've tried to encourage him every way I can think of, but I can't seem to get him to try some of the strategies that I know can help. I've suggested he come to this site, but no go. I hope he can reach his pre-surgery goal and get sleeved right after school gets out for the summer, so he can really get on the path to changing his life.
  16. Chris R

    Too much or not enough?

    I'm 6 weeks out, and what you eat is comparable to what I eat, though I can only eat 1 scrambled egg at a meal. The only thing that sounds a little on the low side is your water. Are you counting your protein drinks in with that? If so, I would try to get that number up to a minimum of 64 oz of liquid a day.
  17. The way you describe your pain sounds just like the pain I had in my largest incision - like someone hooked it with a fishing line and was tugging from inside me. My surgeon said it would stop suddenly with a 'pop' when the dissolving sutures gave way, after 2-3 weeks. Fortunately, I slept through the 'pop'. Mine stopped 2 days shy of 3 weeks post-op.
  18. It's rather saddening when I'm reading threads on here and find people start bickering. I've posted elsewhere about this, but I think it deserves repeating. Message boards, by their very nature, do not allow the reader to have the physical cues of eye contact, facial expression, or tone of voice that one has in face-to-face conversations. This can make a poster's intended tone and message easy to misinterpret. It's very important to keep this in mind when reading posts, and to give people the benefit of the doubt when you start to feel upset about something they said or the 'way' in which you felt they said it. I honestly don't think anyone comes on here to be mean, nasty, or to try to insult people. Perhaps one person doesn't get another's sense of humor, or just misses the real point behind what someone is trying to say. But rather than letting things dissolve into nasty back-and-forth sniping that ends up getting more people upset, administrators involved, and running threads that the original posters made to honestly seek information and advice off-track, there is a simple solution. If you find that you simply don't like the way someone expresses themself on here, you can use the ignore settings. That way you don't have to ever read anything they post again. Simply click on the arrow next to your name at the top right of the screen, click on "Manage Ignore Prefs", and enter the name of that user. You can ignore their posts, signatures, and private messages. Simple solution, yes? If you get into this kind of back and forth bickering and this solution isn't to your liking, then perhaps you should reexamine your reasons for being here... Just my 2 cents worth...
  19. Oh, I just LOVE sarcasm. It's my FAVORITE thing in the WHOLE world.
  20. Someone I know was told by a doctor that people who lose a great deal of weight often get cold easily because all the blood vessels that used to feed their larger self are close to the surface, no longer buried in layers of fat, so our blood cools more quickly.
  21. I love the link PDX put in his earlier post in this thread - it reiterates and supports with evidence something I posted a while back k in "The powder Room" forum entitled "Bickering on threads". If you didn't follow his link and read the article, go back and do it now! Before you go jumping down someone's throat because you think you're being attacked, keep in mind that the chances are only about 50-50 that the poster intended it that way - and also remember that your own personal moods and sensitivities influence your interpretation of what they posted.
  22. Chris R

    What does your daily diet consist of?

    I'm 6 weeks post-op today.
  23. Chris R

    What does your daily diet consist of?

    Typical Day: Breakfast: 1 egg scrambled with 1/4 c fat free cottage cheese Lunch: 1 c fat free cottage cheese with pepper After lunch drink: Protein shake made with 1 c 1% milk Dinner: 3 - 4 oz of whatever protein we are having for dinner Snack: (Either mid-afternoon or before bed) 6 oz fat free fruit yogurt.

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