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

Hastings

LAP-BAND Patients
  • Content Count

    964
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Hastings


  1. You do have to keep in mind that people are getting banded by the hundreds. Many doctors/practices are very practiced at getting people approved by their insurance and banding them.

    I think a lot of people are banded because it's the new fad diet. I worrry when I see people who think that the band will be their solution for ever. It might not be. They might lose their band for different reasons.

    I hope everyone takes the time and makes the effort to change their eating habits so that if they lose weight and then their band, they will be able, on their own, to maintain weight loss. If habits aren't changed then the band could be only a temporary solution.

    Personally I like the band because I still have control and input. My PCP suggested the band to me, and I thought about it for a year and then did it.


  2. If you do some research on the net and read about a "stitch" in the side, it is almost always the right side.

    I had this pain for a while, but on the left side. The instructions for an actual "stitch" :

    "Now researchers believe that the side stitch is caused by stretching the ligaments that extend from the diaphragm to the internal organs, particularly the liver. The jarring motion of running while breathing in and out stretches these ligaments. Runners tend to exhale every two or four steps. Most people exhale as the left foot hits the ground, but some people exhale when the right foot hits the ground. It is the later group who seem more prone to get side stitches."

    "Exhaling when the right foot hits the ground causes greater forces on the liver (which is on the right side just below the rib cage). So just as the liver is dropping down the diaphragm raises for the exhalation. It is believed this repeated stretching leads to spasms in the diaphragm."

    It was recommended on a runner's site to cup your hand under the area that is having the stitch and gently lift it. This has worked wonders for me when I get that same pain on my left side. I'm not a doc, but for me it's not gas and it's not from laying a certain way in surgery. I believe it is as explained above because the "cure" did the trick.


  3. I have noticed a lot that people are eating things, and then the phrases follow: it goes down easy, it was easy to swallow, I didn't throw up, and once even "it didn't put up a fight" . . . . and on and on.

    Have you notice that there seems to be a thought process that says if you can swallow it, it's ok. Take a couple of steps back and think about this.

    If we can get it inside our bodies and thus POSSESS it, it's ok? This is not healthy nor even normal thinking.

    What all would we eat, possess, conquer by swallowing it, if we could (I'm not talking about emotions). A picture of Jabba the Hut is coming to mind.

    No one is going to die from hunger from following post operative directions and a liquid diet for a while.


  4. There is a school of thought that says if you just replace your full sugar items with artificially sweetened items, you aren't making a real life style change.

    I too worry about the chemicals.

    If I want 158 grams of blackberries (close to a cup) and they are too tart, I put one teaspoon of sugar on them. Most of the sugar ends up on the bottom of the bowl and isn't eaten.

    It's remarkable how little sweetened stuff I eat anymore, whether sweetened with sugar or chemicals.


  5. There is a thread about this in the exercise forum. I have a trikke. I love it. I'm not such an accomplished rider, but it's good exercise trying. My suggestion is to get some lessons from the place where you buy it, if possible. Get a helmet. It's not nearly as tricky as a skateboard.

    Check out Youtube there are lots of trikke videos on there.

    Have fun.

PatchAid Vitamin Patches

×