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My first official R&R...Bandsters who dont know a damn thing about banding



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Along the same lines as the scars bad stretchmarks good...

Morbid obesity bad, not being able to wear underwear in the OR worse?

Here's my take on it...

No undies here. And I didn't care in the least. Underwear was the farthest thing from my mind. I mean - if I didn't mind laying there with no bra on, and my flab hanging all over the table, a naked pooty in the room with medical professionals certainly wasn't going to phase me. I mean - I have paps, and there the person is trying to look... during the surgery, any sight would be incidental.

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When you work in OR you just get used to everyone being naked. You don't even notice it. When someone that comes in with undies on and you have to remove them, then you notice.

If you don't want people to remember you naked, then don't try to leave undies on thinking nobody will notice.

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Yeah and ladies - remember that good haircare doesn't stop at the waist. :whoo:

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I'll be totally honest here. I have a really hard time cleaning my bellybutton. It has become bottomless. With weightloss, my stomach has kind of collapsed, and my bellybutton went with it. I'm a visual person, so see graphic below.

I try to pry it open in the shower, but it's like trying to pry open the business end of a water-weenie. Seriously. Think of a Water weenie, and trying to get down into its... hole. The minute anything gets down in there, the Water weenie is closing in on it. That's exactly what my bellybutton does. I try to push the shower head against it, on massage mode, to jet water down into it but I have no way of knowing if it's successful. So now it's a combination of shower head, qtips, and trying to work some peroxide down in there.

I seriously don't even want to think about what's in the deepest, darkest reaches of my bellybutton. At least some loose change and probably my missing cell phone, for starters.

Here's what my bellybutton has done. I mean - how do you really clean that? (on a brighter note, I'm going to have my primary doc start recording this stuff, and see her every time the skin gets irritated instead of just piping some neosporin in... may help my TT case with the ins co):

post-205294-13813135705579_thumb.jpg

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Okay, I have another one. Now, I realize there is a fear that goes with surgery and that's fair. BUT, at some point it needs to be put in perspective.

Aren't some people essentially saying, "I have no fear of a heart attack, stroke, blood clots, diabetes complications, or breathing problems from being FAT but OMG, what if the same damn thing happens during surgery so I can get healthy? Is surgical banding really worth the risk?"

When I see people preferring fat over a small chance of surgical complications, the above is what I am hearing.[/quote]

Yeah,.... and then those people get RNY.

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I haven't been banded yet but I have been researching it for 2 years and am still fighting with my insurance company to get the surgery. I have encountered all kinds of people that have had the banding done...on the net, support groups, and people that I know have had it done (I work in the healthcare field). I find that right now my biggest pet peeve is people that I know from my town that have had the surgery and it was paid for by Mn medicaid or Ucare (basically by the MN taxpayers) and they are really non-compliant. Here I am...with 2 different insurance companies that deny my surgery and I am fighting like hell to get it. They get it done for free...and then don't comply with the program. One guy I know that had it done for free wants to have his band loosened so that he can still drink alot of beer.WTF.....He still weighs over 300lbs and has been banded for over a year, but he's at the bar every night. My tax dollars paid for his surgery. OMG...............

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This thread is a crackup!! And just to add to your giggles, I am a n00b at this and have yet to be banded, and have already asked the question about sexual positions and port discomfort (haha) and was just about to ask about how bad the face wrinkles get after the weight loss :)

(Seriously - is it bad for most? There's not a lot of things about my body that I feel good about but being 45 and having NO wrinkles on my face is one of them. Most people guess my age at around 35. My brother, who had a similarly youthful face, lost weight a year ago and for the first time looks his full years of 50 - a fit and healthy 50 year old, true, but when a little overweight, you'd never have picked him for being past 40.)

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I haven't been banded yet but I have been researching it for 2 years and am still fighting with my insurance company to get the surgery. I have encountered all kinds of people that have had the banding done...on the net, support groups, and people that I know have had it done (I work in the healthcare field). I find that right now my biggest pet peeve is people that I know from my town that have had the surgery and it was paid for by Mn medicaid or Ucare (basically by the MN taxpayers) and they are really non-compliant. Here I am...with 2 different insurance companies that deny my surgery and I am fighting like hell to get it. They get it done for free...and then don't comply with the program. One guy I know that had it done for free wants to have his band loosened so that he can still drink alot of beer.WTF.....He still weighs over 300lbs and has been banded for over a year, but he's at the bar every night. My tax dollars paid for his surgery. OMG...............

I read a post on another board where someone had a band at tax payer's expense and she was furious when she discovered she might have to pay something like a $20 fee for fills so she wanted to have tax payers pay for revision surgery to RNY.

Yep, we self payers understand your frustration. Better to have tax payers pay an ADDITIONAL $30K+ for revision surgery to save her $20 for a fill.

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This thread is a crackup!! And just to add to your giggles, I am a n00b at this and have yet to be banded, and have already asked the question about sexual positions and port discomfort (haha) and was just about to ask about how bad the face wrinkles get after the weight loss :)

(Seriously - is it bad for most? There's not a lot of things about my body that I feel good about but being 45 and having NO wrinkles on my face is one of them. Most people guess my age at around 35. My brother, who had a similarly youthful face, lost weight a year ago and for the first time looks his full years of 50 - a fit and healthy 50 year old, true, but when a little overweight, you'd never have picked him for being past 40.)

Everyone is different but I know that my full, wrinkle free face is now growing a rooster thing under my chin (where my other chins used to be) and I have fine wrinkles around my eyes that used to be puffed out quite well with fat.

YMMV.

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*sighs* Yes, I think that is going to be the trade off :) Ah well...nobody died of wrinkles that I know of, and I know this weight is killing me...not a hard choice when put that way, eh?

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[Ticker removed coz it's just too depressing until I get my band]

BTW, while I understand... that is just WRONG! We ALL started out with a humiliating ticker. I swear to you, nobody notices the high ticker, we ALL notice the weight loss. Every bloody pound is from sheer effort banded or not, we KNOW that.

Okay, three posts in a row. I'm at my limit. Okay, I'm not. But it's nice to write anyway.

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Re removing the ticker: Well it's not so much the humiliation, it's just the constant reminder that I have to WAIT and I'm not the most patient of people. Of course, I could use that waiting time to start on the loss on my own, but that would be being sensible, wouldn't it? I've never claimed to be sensible :)

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