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10 weeks out and I should know better! Geez.



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Please tell me what slime is so I will know....I just asked a question...not judgemental. I have thick thick spit...is that it? Again I am only 3 weeks along.

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Yes it's thick thick spit after you eat too fast/too much..

Sent from my iPhone using VST

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It's a long learning process complicated by the fact that certain foods will bother you at certain times and go down easily at different times.

I had to re-learn my capacity (with lots of tossing up food) when I got pregnant. I felt like I had more room and sure, I do, but that means ten bites of steak instead of six...not fifteen bites. :)

Certain foods make this harder - if bread, Pasta, rice or flour tortillas are involved they swell once they hit the stomach. For me, I can go from perfectly fine to discomfort in just one small bite. So always watch those foods until you learn your limits.

Don't be so hard on yourself. I was a fast eater that took big bites for nearly 30 years prior to surgery. I didn't just unlearn that habit in only a few weeks!

You'll get there. I'd say lesson learned but sometimes it takes a while. :)

~Cheri

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Please tell me what slime is so I will know....I just asked a question...not judgemental. I have thick thick spit...is that it? Again I am only 3 weeks along.

For me, it's not just thick spit... it is actual regurgitation - but what I am puking is of a slime like consistency...not like actual chunks of what I ate (sorry to be so graphic)

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It's a long learning process complicated by the fact that certain foods will bother you at certain times and go down easily at different times.

I had to re-learn my capacity (with lots of tossing up food) when I got pregnant. I felt like I had more room and sure, I do, but that means ten bites of steak instead of six...not fifteen bites. :)

Certain foods make this harder - if bread, Pasta, rice or flour tortillas are involved they swell once they hit the stomach. For me, I can go from perfectly fine to discomfort in just one small bite. So always watch those foods until you learn your limits.

Don't be so hard on yourself. I was a fast eater that took big bites for nearly 30 years prior to surgery. I didn't just unlearn that habit in only a few weeks!

You'll get there. I'd say lesson learned but sometimes it takes a while. :)

~Cheri

Yes, "perfectly fine to discomfort in just ONE SMALL BITE". Ugh. Yes, it will take some time, but I am getting better.

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To answer about when sliming goes away: I would state that between month 5 and month 6, the consequence of sliming or getting the stuck feeling in chest reduced drastically even if eating too fast. Agree with others here that you want to develop a habit of chewing and eating slow, but a least you know that sliming will become much less in a couple more months for you. I do not know why this is the case, but suspect that it took 5 months for the stomach to heal and the swelling to go down. I can drink a lot of Water now in a short period of time. Eating 3-4 ounces of chicken no longer causes me pain or sliming when eating over 5-10 minutes. However, I do slime if eating around 5 ounces around the same amount of time.

It is best to continue to follow the best practices for eating until you get to the point where you can judge what your stomach allows. Being able to interpret the body signals is something that really helps to prevent overheating and/ or sliming as time goes on so you don't have to rely so much on the rules that we get as new sleevers (eat x ounces amount of food and take y amount of time to eat it).

You will learn to eat to satisfaction rather than to fullness. Some days, you will need to eat everything you put on your plate ( even if it is only 3-4 ounces) and other days you will not. it is all about interpreting the body signals to know when to put down the fork and stop eating for a meal.

Good luck and I hope this information (from my personal experiences) helps you.

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