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What do you wish someone had told you? My surgery is a month away. I know there will be lots of unexpected pop ups. But if there was one thing you could share that caught you by surprise what would it be?

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After surgery you can have blurry vision...from drugs...I did not realize that.

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Thanks for posting this!! Im curious myself!!

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A few things. The fact that coffee no longer agrees with me was an adjustment. I do miss coffee. (I have ongoing acid post-surgery, not everyone does). That, and the fact that I cannot sleep on my stomach anymore because the pressure it puts on my insides causes acid to burble up and wake me up. I now sleep on my side and totally MISS sleeping on my tummy!

If someone told me six months ago that I was going to take up dance (Zumba) and totally LOVE it, I would have said they were nuts!

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What a great question! I hope you get a lot of POSITIVE feedback. Like so many other things with this process, "your results may vary."

I'm 3 years out.

For me, I did A LOT (I mean A LOT) of advance preparation, both physically and mentally/emotionally. I was well equipped with the knowledge that my poor eating habits were the exact reason I was obese, and that processed foods/fast foods and simple carbs could no longer be in my life. My new lifestyle's eating plan had to be lean Protein and veggies/fruit for the rest of my life.

I feel that many bariatric programs don't seem to prepare patients very well for the mental/emotional part of WLS. For many sleevers whose hunger eventually returns (not everyone's does), they are caught totally off guard by not knowing that the emotional work needs to be done. MOST of us will have to deal with the returning hunger and/or cravings, and I think many of us do not realize that will happen. This sets us up to go right back to eating the way we had for so long.

Even I, who DID BIG-TIME PREPARE, thought that my hunger and cravings would be MUCH less from what they were pre-surgery. I definitely still DO get hungry and I DO have cravings. I have done a lot of difficult (but so worth it) head/emotional work to learn that I must make the CHOICES, every time, that are healthy and nutritious to deal with my hunger and cravings. The personal accountability and responsibility of every bite that passes my lips is my CHOICE is still sometimes hard to reckon with, especially since I spent so many years of my life NOT being accountable. Is it worth it??? Nothing has EVER been MORE worth it!!!

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What a great question! I hope you get a lot of POSITIVE feedback. Like so many other things with this process, "your results may vary."

I'm 3 years out.

For me, I did A LOT (I mean A LOT) of advance preparation, both physically and mentally/emotionally. I was well equipped with the knowledge that my poor eating habits were the exact reason I was obese, and that processed foods/fast foods and simple carbs could no longer be in my life. My new lifestyle's eating plan had to be lean Protein and veggies/fruit for the rest of my life.

I feel that many bariatric programs don't seem to prepare patients very well for the mental/emotional part of WLS. For many sleevers whose hunger eventually returns (not everyone's does), they are caught totally off guard by not knowing that the emotional work needs to be done. MOST of us will have to deal with the returning hunger and/or cravings, and I think many of us do not realize that will happen. This sets us up to go right back to eating the way we had for so long.

Even I, who DID BIG-TIME PREPARE, thought that my hunger and cravings would be MUCH less from what they were pre-surgery. I definitely still DO get hungry and I DO have cravings. I have done a lot of difficult (but so worth it) head/emotional work to learn that I must make the CHOICES, every time, that are healthy and nutritious to deal with my hunger and cravings. The personal accountability and responsibility of every bite that passes my lips is my CHOICE is still sometimes hard to reckon with, especially since I spent so many years of my life NOT being accountable. Is it worth it??? Nothing has EVER been MORE worth it!!!

Thank-you for this response. I agree...the mental/emotional preparation of the pre-surgery weight loss program I attended was slim to nothing. For a while I felt that it was simply a machine to funnel patients to the surgeon. As in most things, we must seek out our answers and educate ourselves. There is a lot of information out there. The choice is ours to utilize it.

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Which someone had told me about this sooner!!!!! :)

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Preop I pretty much lived on this and two other forums, reading every single post for months. I read books and asked questions of others who'd had WLS. I felt very prepared...mentally, emotionally and physically. And there hasn't really been any big surprises. I had the can't drink Water, coffee upset my tummy, lactose intolerance things, but generally a smooth recovery. I've had stalls, I still get hungry and I still have cravings. I have to make good choices everyday.

But after all I read I figured pretty much anything could happen. There seem to be more exceptions to the "rules" than there are actual rules. I didn't read about anyone else getting a C. diff infection and needing a fecal transplant, but it happened to me, so expect anything.

Edited by Kindle

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I'm almost 3 months post op. I've lost 68 (including 28 preop). I regret nothing. And there wasn't anything that surprised me. I read, and read, read before surgery. I think I underestimated a few things: the mind boggling frustration of a stall, how hard it is to drink plain Water, how easy it could be to "cheat". Those were the biggest things that really required an adjustment. The psychological preparation should not be underestimated. From the way others see you change to your own self esteem. It's a major lifestyle change (for me anyway). It is probably worth stating that it's different for everyone with many common themes. And also - try not to judge your progress against everyone else's - unless you want to make yourself cuckoo. :)

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There is an EXCELLENT thread titled: 4 Things I Wish I Would've Known Pre Op. It's long and wonderful and so very helpful. If I was more techy, I'd know how to put a link here but I can never successfully do that on an iPad or my phone. Search for it, it's worth reading if you are preop.

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I wish some had told me my hunger could return so quickly. I mean, I knew it would return at some point, but I didn't expect it a week after surgery. I eventually worked it out, but being hungry and on liquids for the next month was not a happy time :)

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After surgery you can have blurry vision...from drugs...I did not realize that.

I'm so glad you posted this!

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The funny thing (to me) is that I think everyone, particularly the surgeon's office, TRIED to tell me everything. There was a lot I didn't absorb, some I ignored so as to save my own sanity, and some that I simply couldn't comprehend.

My approval to surgery time was very quick, and that prevented me from really dwelling on the possible complications. I don't think anyone is really prepared for the first stall. Or the second. Or third. I know people who had complications were not prepared, really, for those.

Overall though I would say that the best thing I did was have a couple of WLS buddies in real life. I know it's not easy to always find those people; I was lucky enough to have a friend go through it 4 months before me. It completely helped with the little questions and the immediate post-recovery period.

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Here is the link of the other thread that was mentioned:

http://www.bariatricpal.com/topic/289288-4-things-i-wish-i-wouldve-known-pre-op/?hl=%2Bthings

Great info!

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    • Theweightisover2024🙌💪

      Question for anyone, how did you get your mind right before surgery? Like as far as eating better foods and just doing better in general? I'm having a really hard time with this. Any help is appreciated 🙏❤️
      · 2 replies
      1. NickelChip

        I had about 6 months between deciding to do surgery and getting scheduled. I came across the book The Pound of Cure by Dr. Matthew Weiner, a bariatric surgeon in Arizona, and started to implement some of the changes he recommended (and lost 13 lbs in the process without ever feeling deprived). The book is very simple, and the focus is on whole, plant based foods, but within reason. It's not an all or nothing approach, or going vegan or something, but focuses on improvement and aiming for getting it right 80-90% of the time. His suggestions are divided into 12 sections that you can tackle over time, perhaps one per month for a year if a person is just trying to improve nutrition and build good habits. They range from things like cutting out artificial sweetener or eating more beans to eating a pound of vegetables per day. I found it really effective pre-surgery and it's an eating style I will be working to get back to as I am further out from surgery and have more capacity. Small changes you can sustain will do the most for building good habits for life.

      2. Theweightisover2024🙌💪

        That sounds awesome. I'll have to check that out thanks!

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