Letter From My aunt

I read it and will continue to be concerned. This women are older than you
and believe me I KNOW it’s not easy. I can’t manage to lose 20 lbs so I’m
not trying to make light of this issue. However, I think that if you are
considering surgery than you should try to eat healthy, not be on a diet, but
make educated choices about the food you eat. Do you want the cookie or
piece of bread more than you want to be thin? If you aren’t eating right or
exercising now how do you make those changes after the surgery. I keep
thinking you are only 27 and you are considering major surgery that will
change your life forever. I’m still for small steps over a long period of
time. That’s how Aunt Karen did it. It will come off a lot faster for you
than it did for her because she is in her 40’s and you are in your 20’s. I
only half listened when people told me the older you get the more diffficult
it is to lose weight. I now know that is the truth, however, there are
plenty of people who manage to do it with diet and exercise. Surgery is such
a drastic and life altering step. I know you want to lose weight and I

support that, at this point it’s just hard for me to support this surgery.

4 Responses to “Letter From My aunt”

  1. Merle Gregoria Says:

    I am a bit confused about this note.Is this verbatim what your aunt wrote
    you? If so then I get it. But if this is your response to a letter from your
    aunt than I am even more perplexed. WHOEVER WROTE IT — this is my answer to
    them:
    I was 26 when I had my surgery and I don’t understand why you believe that
    you have a right to tell someone that they shouldn’t have surgery because
    they should try diet and exercise. You have 20 pounds to lose so therefore
    you understand? Let me just say this — bullshit. 20 pounds is a lifetime
    away from 100, 200 or more that we have to lose when we start considering
    surgery. We have tried dieting. We have tried everything. No one that i know
    of has entered into surgery lightly. We have all thought long and hard about
    it and took it as a last step. Yes it is drastic but I don’t get why you
    think that just because someone is in their 20s that they are taking this
    lightly. You can be all for small steps over a long period of time and
    surgery can help people there. Diet and exercise is fine. HOWEVER it does

    not work except for a very small percentage of people (about 5%). Bully for
    you if that is how you or Aunt Karen did it. Applause all around but how
    dare you decide that you have a right to dictate how someone else decides to
    lose their weight. How dare you decide to judge someone who is doing
    research and learning. Open your mind and learn something for crying out
    loud. Surgery is drastic? Maybe. Surgery is life-altering? HELL YES! It
    alters life in giving people more of it. It allows them to be more active
    and more energetic and healthier. It allows them even to bring more life
    into this world. Educate yourself and find out about it from those who have
    had it. Open your mind rather than being ignorant and judgmental. Dieting is
    the answer for a few but surgery is also an answer for others.
    OKay.. enough of my rant.
    Sincerely,
    Denise Rasley
    mailto: drasley@…
    BTC, Columbus, 10/7/98

  2. Madge Alysia Says:

    Well i know a girl that had the surgery in her early 20’s. She was just married
    and had no children yet. She now had a 4 yr old son, twin girls that are 2 and
    is expecting any day now. People can say oh you can just do it with diet and
    excercise and you know if that works its great for them, but for some of us its
    not that easy. Once you get to a certain point diet and excercise just aren’t
    cutting it. My husband had the surgery in Feb. 2002 and has lost almost 200 lbs.
    He is so much healthier now and does so much more. He is on disability and hopes
    to return to work soon. I myself have just recently been approved for my
    disability, it was to the point that i could not work because if my weight. I
    cannot stand for more that 15 minutes to cook or wash dishes, cleaning my house
    is a full day’s job. I will have Medicare in May and the first thing i am doing
    is making an appointment with the surgeon that did my husband’s surgery. With
    diet and excercise i can take off 20 to 25 lbs and thats great but then it stops
    there and no more comes off. This surgery is not for those who need to just take
    off 20 to 25 lbs it is for those of us who need to shed hundreds of lbs. Well

    sorry for the long post but it just irks me for people that are against the
    surgery to come in here and try to convince us that all we need to do is diet
    and excercise, and the worse part are that the people that always say that to me
    are people that are no more than 30 lbs overweight. They don’t know the life i
    have lived as a fat person. I will be 42 in June and i hope to be having surgery
    for my birthday. I just want to let you know that whatever you do there are
    great people here to support you. Good luck and many prayers.
    Lisa Landrum

  3. mellie_500 Says:

    Hello. I read your letter from your aunt. I have to say that I have
    hear similar things from my family. Reading your letter brought back
    all those things that my family was saying that started to discourage
    me from getting the surgery.
    Well, let me say this first. I am 21 years old. I am now 3 months
    out from surgery as of January 18th(yea me!!). I know very well that
    I didn’t enter this surgery lightly. I researched it for almost 2
    years before I finally had the surgery done. I read just about
    everything on the internet pertaining to the surgery and talked to so
    many people, I can’t even remember all the people that I have talked
    to about this. I also would watch everything on tv that come on that
    even remotely had to do with the surgery, good or bad. I watched the
    surgery shows on TLC.
    Even though I am young, I know what was right for me. I have been
    heavy my whole life. I have been made fun of, stared at, and beaten

    up because I was a ‘chunky’ kid. Obesity runs in my family, on both
    sides. For me, there is no escaping it. I decided after first
    hearing about the surgery that I was going to research it and then
    see from there. I tried every kind of diet or pill. At 15 I was on
    Redux, and at 16 I tried the phen-fen, but that got pulled off the
    market very soon after that. I knew that I didn’t want to go through
    life fat, and dieting was not going to help me. I tried it. The
    most that I lost from a diet was counting calories. I stayed under
    1000 calories per day and did that for about 3 months and lost 45
    lbs. That was good! But then came the holidays, and everything got
    put back on and more! As usual!
    When I was really starting to get psyched about the possibities that
    lie ahead of me if I had the surgery, I started going to support
    group meetings with another girl from my mom’s work that had the
    surgery done. She was 24 when she had it done. Going to those
    meetings really opened my eyes to just all the hardships that I would
    endure as a result from this surgery. But to me, anything that I had
    to deal with from having the surgery, far outweighed all the
    hardships I would endure being fat.
    When I decided that surgery was the thing for me, I was 19. Very
    young, I know. A lot of stuff happened since then that prevented me
    from having the surgery, ie: moving out of state and changing
    insurances. But now I have had it done, and I couldn’t be happier.
    When my mom and I talked to our family about what I was going to be
    doing and why, they were anything but supportive. My grandmother was
    very eager to just put me on another diet. She said that I am too
    young to be making this kind of adult decision. My aunt said that
    she has heard of too many bad things that have happened to people and
    she doesn’t want anything bad to happen to me. This went on for over
    over a year. They kept trying to talk me out of my decision. But I
    finally just told them how it was going to be. I let my family know
    that I appreciate their concern. I love them very much and I know
    that they just tell me this stuff because they love me too. But no
    one can make this choice for me and no one can un-make this choice
    for me. I let them know that I don’t want to go through my life
    being fat. I don’t want to be 40 and have the surgery done and then
    have reget and wonder what if I had the surgery done when I first
    though about it.
    I know that this is the right decision for me. Not for everyone. I
    did not enter into this decision lightly and I am taking the whole
    process very seriously. I do agree with one of the previous
    responses, I was not able to choose my food before and I was not able
    to kick my butt into gear to go exercise. I can now do so much now
    and make better choices for myself than I ever was able to do before
    having this surgery.
    I know that this is a long post, sorry. But I feel very strongly
    about people who think that just because someone is young, that they
    can’t make a life altering decision about their own life. I disagree
    wholeheartedly!! I fell very confident that the life altering choice
    I made will ONLY be for the better!
    I wish you all the luck in the world in pursuit of having the
    surgery. You are in my prayers. And remember, this is your life,
    your body, your decision. If your aunt isn’t going to be there for
    you, then just remember that you have the rest of your family and all
    your friends! Well, you have us too!!
    Good luck!!
    Sarah
    Surgery date: 10/18/2002
    Pre-op: 360
    Post-op(so far): 305

  4. serena_1600 Says:

    I turned 26 on Nov. 22, 2002. I had my RNY on December 2, 2002. I
    have been fat since puberty. My highest weight pre-op (September 2002) was
    314. I weighed myself yesterday on my scale at home and I was at 270. Prior
    to my RNY, seemingly all I could do was gain weight. If I watched what went
    in my mouth every day, briskly walked for 25 minutes (which only got more and
    more difficult), and got on the scale, it still wouldn’t budge. It wasn’t a
    choice of whether I wanted A cookie or A slice bread. My weight on my 5′4″
    frame did not get to be where it was because of a single cookie or a
    sandwich. It got that way because of genes, depression, compulsiveness, bad
    habits, lack of exercise…
    I sat on this decision for over a year. You can cover as many bases
    as you possibly can with facts, you can cover your behind as much as you can
    by arming yourself with every bit of knowledge about gastric bypass surgery
    you can find. If you are comfortable with your decision, it will be enough.
    However, please know that you can’t know EVERYTHING. You will still have

    some questions after you’ve had the surgery. Every week I encounter
    questions that I couldn’t have dreamed up before this surgery- ranging from
    how to deal with interpersonal relationships to something so instinctual-
    eating food. Things I thought I had covered pre-op.
    This is a life changing surgery. One I would do again, if I had to.
    However, there are very difficult parts to this. There are many times during
    the day that my stomach and my head don’t get along. They are no longer
    friends. My head ruled the roost for entirely too long. My stomach is now
    in the drivers seat, and sometimes they don’t agree. I’ve been struggling
    with so many things since the surgery- things that aren’t even related! Some
    moments I catch myself wishing I could just revert back to the person I was
    before because that would be “easy.” However, more and more frequently, I’m
    noticing that those thoughts are replaced by the person who can walk without
    her back hurting, who isn’t afraid that one of her knees isn’t going to give
    out at 26, who gained a smidge more self confidence, and is proud of herself
    when she steps on the scale and sees the numbers going in the opposite
    direction.
    My family was concerned, too. Please do not get the impression that
    they were overjoyed at the thought of their daughter, granddaughter, niece,
    cousin, voluntarily hopping up on a gurney and having major surgery. No one
    wants someone’s life to come to this moment. No parent hopes their child has
    to go through this. But also, no parent should have to fear that their child
    will die of a heart attack. Or will live out her days trapped in her home.
    Or will die of various and sundry other goodies that are specifically linked
    to the fat on her frame. For that matter, forget that others were worried
    and concerned for me. I was concerned for me. I was a grab bag of diseases
    waiting to happen, and I didn’t want to fall victim.
    Your aunt, who has every right to be concerned, also has every right
    to not support you in your decision to do this. But until she can take
    insulin for the diabetes that you are going to eventually get, until she can
    take the brunt of the insults that are hurled your way, until she can deal
    with all the negative aspects of being overweight, rather than you…. You
    are the one who retains all the assets and liabilities of your weight. You
    are the one who will lie awake at night and deal with whatever decisions you
    make.
    Jess S.
    Lap RNY 12/02/02
    Dr. Frederick Finelli
    314/270/???
    Message: 6
    Date: Wed, 15 Jan 2003 18:01:56 EST
    From: Lynn4276@…
    Subject: Letter From My aunt
    I read it and will continue to be concerned. This women are older than you
    and believe me I KNOW it’s not easy. I can’t manage to lose 20 lbs so I’m
    not trying to make light of this issue. However, I think that if you are
    considering surgery than you should try to eat healthy, not be on a diet, but
    make educated choices about the food you eat. Do you want the cookie or
    piece of bread more than you want to be thin? If you aren’t eating right or
    exercising now how do you make those changes after the surgery. I keep
    thinking you are only 27 and you are considering major surgery that will
    change your life forever. I’m still for small steps over a long period of
    time. That’s how Aunt Karen did it. It will come off a lot faster for you
    than it did for her because she is in her 40’s and you are in your 20’s. I
    only half listened when people told me the older you get the more diffficult
    it is to lose weight. I now know that is the truth, however, there are
    plenty of people who manage to do it with diet and exercise. Surgery is such
    a drastic and life altering step. I know you want to lose weight and I
    support that, at this point it’s just hard for me to support this surgery.

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