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	<title>Comments on: This is it</title>
	<link>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/</link>
	<description>About types of surgeries available, dietary, family, work, emotional..</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 03 Dec 2008 05:41:52 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: Isabel Jodee</title>
		<link>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3749</link>
		<author>Isabel Jodee</author>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Feb 2007 17:35:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3749</guid>
		<description>I want to thank everyone for your fantastic words of encouragement. You all
can't imagine how much this has helped me. My trepidation now makes perfect
sense to me, and hearing your stories has helped prepare me for the big day.
Sure, I'm still freaked, but I'm not alone. Thank you all.
Josh</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I want to thank everyone for your fantastic words of encouragement. You all<br />
can&#8217;t imagine how much this has helped me. My trepidation now makes perfect<br />
sense to me, and hearing your stories has helped prepare me for the big day.<br />
Sure, I&#8217;m still freaked, but I&#8217;m not alone. Thank you all.<br />
Josh</p>
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		<title>By: Marcelo Odette</title>
		<link>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3747</link>
		<author>Marcelo Odette</author>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Jan 2007 18:10:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3747</guid>
		<description>Heather (and Josh)
 After I read Heather's response, "What I am irate at is how I was
 treated by "normal" people when I was 300+. I am ashamed that I
 wasn't strong enough to stop putting food in my mouth and exercise
 more than I did. But those are my issues, and I have to work through
 them."
 I have to reply. #1, Heather, please don't beat yourself up about
 your willpower and personal strength. That goes back to how you were
 treated pre-op by "normal" people. I have seen "normal" people eat
 7,000 calories at one sitting and spend hours sitting on their rumps
 and not gain weight. I have been a morbidly obese person who worked
 out at the gym more often than any of my friends or family members
 and ate less calories per day than them as well and still managed to
 gain weight. I spent years trying to combat my obesity issues on my
 own. I finally know what it feels like to sit in a chair and not
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 check it out before hand to make sure it looks big enough for me and
 most importantly strong enough for me. Guess what? I still work out
 more than my thin friends and I now eat WAY less than them. I don't
 beat myself up about it, though. I stopped losing weight almost a
 year ago, but I am still hopeful that I will get to goal. My body is
 still reshaping and I still exercise and try to eat right.
 I, too, get irritated at how well people respond to me now as opposed
 to the years of being invisible. It is hard not to be angry or
 suspicious. Would this person invite me to lunch if they met me when
 I weighed over 300 pounds? I don't know. Would that guy wink at me
 or smile or hold the door? I do know most would NOT have.
 It is what it is. Try to enjoy the life you are gaining back.
 good luck,
 Mary</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Heather (and Josh)<br />
 After I read Heather&#8217;s response, &#8220;What I am irate at is how I was<br />
 treated by &#8220;normal&#8221; people when I was 300+. I am ashamed that I<br />
 wasn&#8217;t strong enough to stop putting food in my mouth and exercise<br />
 more than I did. But those are my issues, and I have to work through<br />
 them.&#8221;<br />
 I have to reply. #1, Heather, please don&#8217;t beat yourself up about<br />
 your willpower and personal strength. That goes back to how you were<br />
 treated pre-op by &#8220;normal&#8221; people. I have seen &#8220;normal&#8221; people eat<br />
 7,000 calories at one sitting and spend hours sitting on their rumps<br />
 and not gain weight. I have been a morbidly obese person who worked<br />
 out at the gym more often than any of my friends or family members<br />
 and ate less calories per day than them as well and still managed to<br />
 gain weight. I spent years trying to combat my obesity issues on my<br />
 own. I finally know what it feels like to sit in a chair and not<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 check it out before hand to make sure it looks big enough for me and<br />
 most importantly strong enough for me. Guess what? I still work out<br />
 more than my thin friends and I now eat WAY less than them. I don&#8217;t<br />
 beat myself up about it, though. I stopped losing weight almost a<br />
 year ago, but I am still hopeful that I will get to goal. My body is<br />
 still reshaping and I still exercise and try to eat right.<br />
 I, too, get irritated at how well people respond to me now as opposed<br />
 to the years of being invisible. It is hard not to be angry or<br />
 suspicious. Would this person invite me to lunch if they met me when<br />
 I weighed over 300 pounds? I don&#8217;t know. Would that guy wink at me<br />
 or smile or hold the door? I do know most would NOT have.<br />
 It is what it is. Try to enjoy the life you are gaining back.<br />
 good luck,<br />
 Mary</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Toby Karrie</title>
		<link>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3746</link>
		<author>Toby Karrie</author>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Jan 2007 09:33:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3746</guid>
		<description>hello Josh!
 i, too, had my process go very fast once i had the consult.(I am in Canada,
 so the wait time for the consult is usually over a year and then after the
 initial consult it takes anywhere from 1-2 more yrs for the surgery). I saw
 a new dr in our province and from calling his office tosee what i needed to
 get a consult to teh surgery date was a month and a half...*unbelievably*
 fast here in Canada!!!!
 They called me the Thursday before my surgery date of the following Monday
 with a admittance day of Sunday afternoon! Needless to say I was so scared
 I cried the entire few days i had to wait. After waiting for years on
 waiting lists to suddenly being BOOKED was too much for my head to grasp.
 I, like you, knew I wanted it done...i had no thoughts of backing out, but i
 was scared sooooo much of dying! And, to be honest, i was already starting
 to "mourn" the loss of the "high" I would get as an emotional overeater. I
 ate everything in site and then some. I felt I had to cram all the
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 forbidden foods in right before i went in becasue i knew that i probably
 wouldn't be able to handle them for quite some time to coem afterwards. I
 even made sure i ate a sub right before the midnight deadline of eating and
 drinking. I had my "last supper" of a sub and 2 cans of full sugar soda and
 some chips. I even squeezed in 4 cups of water before the midnight
 deadline...i knew i was going to be PARCHED the next day!!!
 DO NOT feel ashamed in ANY way. I was *very* pre-occupied with the loss of
 the food. So many things in our lives are interconnected with food.
 Holidays, parties, birthdays, even getting sick usually brings about a
 favorite meal or home made chicken soup! I was someone who felt great with
 the world if my cupboards were full and so was my tummy. We could be hours
 away from gettign our phone cut (as an example), but as long as I had
 somethign to eat, everything was going to be OK!
 I was feeling awful about not being able to eat whatever I wanted, whenever
 i wanted. I loved the freedom of not having to plan for meals and I didn't
 have to let ppl know i can't eat certain things at gatherings or dinners. I
 liked being able to stop at a 24-hr place and pick up anything i wanted to
 eat and not have to worry about dumping or getting somethign stuck or is it
 "good" for me---and I knew it wasn't going to be the case after the surgery.
 Even a month and a half out from the surgery I was still seeing only
 negative...i had an incision that got infected (I had a lap rny) and the
 staples ripped open so i had to contend with that....I was 451 lbs, so even
 30 or 40 lbs down was BARELY noticeable in my body(just in my face,
 actually) and how I felt in daily life.....I was constantly throwing up,
 even the tiniest bit of extra lean hamburger crumbles....and I was mourning
 food BIG TIME!
 It has only been within the last say, 6 weeks or so that I have been findign
 this as a positive experience. Not saying that there aren't some days where
 i wish i could just eat my "normal" way for one last day or eat the "bad"
 things that make me dump or get me nauseous now....but I feel mostly
 positive now!
 You are SOOOOO normal and I don't think looking at The Date as "looming" is
 anything to feel bad about. It's not like you are going in to get a mole
 removed---a little snip snip and youa re done. this is life-altering
 surgery and like someone else said, I think I would be MORE worried if you
 didn't have some sort of dread.
 What i did to *help* ease the pre-occupation of the sacrifice was I focused
 on how good people were feeling after the surgery...the LITTLE things they
 could do now...the BIG things they could do now....the general tone of
 happiness in their posts. I also looked at their numbers of lbs
 down...especially those that were in my weight range (which there aren't as
 many as I had hoped, but i suppose that is a good thing lol). While I know
 everyone is different, I figured that i would be somewhere in the middle and
 thought of all the different things i could achieve at that much down and
 the new clothes i cuold wear (instead of teh almost-10-yr-old-pants i
 currently wear still) and the things i could do with my husband and son that
 i could never do before the surgery.
 My best advice i could give you is try to focus on teh positive...the things
 that made you want the surgery in the first place. and also don't beat
 yourself up about feeling a bit negative about your date. It is natural and
 shows you have a real grasp as to how hard this surgery will be not only on
 your body, but on your head as well! It is a long road (and i am only a few
 short months into the journey myself), but so far it has been worth it and I
 am sure with every pound I lose it will get THAT much better. just keep
 your eyes on the prize of being healthy and better able to move around!
 and of course..always post to the list if you haev any concerns...we are all
 here and you someone has to have had similar feelings as you at one time or
 another and would love to listen or give you soem advice :o)
 GOOD LUCK!!!!!
 Ann
 WLS 2/2/04
 74 lbs down</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>hello Josh!<br />
 i, too, had my process go very fast once i had the consult.(I am in Canada,<br />
 so the wait time for the consult is usually over a year and then after the<br />
 initial consult it takes anywhere from 1-2 more yrs for the surgery). I saw<br />
 a new dr in our province and from calling his office tosee what i needed to<br />
 get a consult to teh surgery date was a month and a half&#8230;*unbelievably*<br />
 fast here in Canada!!!!<br />
 They called me the Thursday before my surgery date of the following Monday<br />
 with a admittance day of Sunday afternoon! Needless to say I was so scared<br />
 I cried the entire few days i had to wait. After waiting for years on<br />
 waiting lists to suddenly being BOOKED was too much for my head to grasp.<br />
 I, like you, knew I wanted it done&#8230;i had no thoughts of backing out, but i<br />
 was scared sooooo much of dying! And, to be honest, i was already starting<br />
 to &#8220;mourn&#8221; the loss of the &#8220;high&#8221; I would get as an emotional overeater. I<br />
 ate everything in site and then some. I felt I had to cram all the<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 forbidden foods in right before i went in becasue i knew that i probably<br />
 wouldn&#8217;t be able to handle them for quite some time to coem afterwards. I<br />
 even made sure i ate a sub right before the midnight deadline of eating and<br />
 drinking. I had my &#8220;last supper&#8221; of a sub and 2 cans of full sugar soda and<br />
 some chips. I even squeezed in 4 cups of water before the midnight<br />
 deadline&#8230;i knew i was going to be PARCHED the next day!!!<br />
 DO NOT feel ashamed in ANY way. I was *very* pre-occupied with the loss of<br />
 the food. So many things in our lives are interconnected with food.<br />
 Holidays, parties, birthdays, even getting sick usually brings about a<br />
 favorite meal or home made chicken soup! I was someone who felt great with<br />
 the world if my cupboards were full and so was my tummy. We could be hours<br />
 away from gettign our phone cut (as an example), but as long as I had<br />
 somethign to eat, everything was going to be OK!<br />
 I was feeling awful about not being able to eat whatever I wanted, whenever<br />
 i wanted. I loved the freedom of not having to plan for meals and I didn&#8217;t<br />
 have to let ppl know i can&#8217;t eat certain things at gatherings or dinners. I<br />
 liked being able to stop at a 24-hr place and pick up anything i wanted to<br />
 eat and not have to worry about dumping or getting somethign stuck or is it<br />
 &#8220;good&#8221; for me&#8212;and I knew it wasn&#8217;t going to be the case after the surgery.<br />
 Even a month and a half out from the surgery I was still seeing only<br />
 negative&#8230;i had an incision that got infected (I had a lap rny) and the<br />
 staples ripped open so i had to contend with that&#8230;.I was 451 lbs, so even<br />
 30 or 40 lbs down was BARELY noticeable in my body(just in my face,<br />
 actually) and how I felt in daily life&#8230;..I was constantly throwing up,<br />
 even the tiniest bit of extra lean hamburger crumbles&#8230;.and I was mourning<br />
 food BIG TIME!<br />
 It has only been within the last say, 6 weeks or so that I have been findign<br />
 this as a positive experience. Not saying that there aren&#8217;t some days where<br />
 i wish i could just eat my &#8220;normal&#8221; way for one last day or eat the &#8220;bad&#8221;<br />
 things that make me dump or get me nauseous now&#8230;.but I feel mostly<br />
 positive now!<br />
 You are SOOOOO normal and I don&#8217;t think looking at The Date as &#8220;looming&#8221; is<br />
 anything to feel bad about. It&#8217;s not like you are going in to get a mole<br />
 removed&#8212;a little snip snip and youa re done. this is life-altering<br />
 surgery and like someone else said, I think I would be MORE worried if you<br />
 didn&#8217;t have some sort of dread.<br />
 What i did to *help* ease the pre-occupation of the sacrifice was I focused<br />
 on how good people were feeling after the surgery&#8230;the LITTLE things they<br />
 could do now&#8230;the BIG things they could do now&#8230;.the general tone of<br />
 happiness in their posts. I also looked at their numbers of lbs<br />
 down&#8230;especially those that were in my weight range (which there aren&#8217;t as<br />
 many as I had hoped, but i suppose that is a good thing lol). While I know<br />
 everyone is different, I figured that i would be somewhere in the middle and<br />
 thought of all the different things i could achieve at that much down and<br />
 the new clothes i cuold wear (instead of teh almost-10-yr-old-pants i<br />
 currently wear still) and the things i could do with my husband and son that<br />
 i could never do before the surgery.<br />
 My best advice i could give you is try to focus on teh positive&#8230;the things<br />
 that made you want the surgery in the first place. and also don&#8217;t beat<br />
 yourself up about feeling a bit negative about your date. It is natural and<br />
 shows you have a real grasp as to how hard this surgery will be not only on<br />
 your body, but on your head as well! It is a long road (and i am only a few<br />
 short months into the journey myself), but so far it has been worth it and I<br />
 am sure with every pound I lose it will get THAT much better. just keep<br />
 your eyes on the prize of being healthy and better able to move around!<br />
 and of course..always post to the list if you haev any concerns&#8230;we are all<br />
 here and you someone has to have had similar feelings as you at one time or<br />
 another and would love to listen or give you soem advice :o)<br />
 GOOD LUCK!!!!!<br />
 Ann<br />
 WLS 2/2/04<br />
 74 lbs down</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>By: Marcella Hess</title>
		<link>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3745</link>
		<author>Marcella Hess</author>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Jan 2007 23:51:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3745</guid>
		<description>Josh,
 What do you think you are sacrificing?
 Looking back at over five years out here is what i have found i sacrificed:
 If I didn't have the surgery I would have gained a lot of physical pain and
 agony as my health deteriorated.
 I have gained so much more than what I have lost. My gains:
 A CHILD!
 mobility
 flexibility
 the ability to breathe and move at the same time
 self confidence
 I could continue the list but it would go on ad nauseum
 Health
 I dont really think I sacrificed anything of importance. I can eat anything
 I desire. Things taste great. I have a sense of fullness and am not always
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 hungry. What is it you are afraid you are sacrificing?
 There is no reason you should be ashamed of how you are feeling. When I was
 approved I had an overwhelming sense of calm. I just felt it was right but I
 was still afraid of the unknown. But I was more afraid of what I did know.
 Josh, don't be ashamed of what you are feeling. Acknowledge it and try to
 understand it. There is nothing wrong with that. But what is it you are
 afraid you are sacrificing? Tell us and maybe we can help you address it.
 Denise
 mailto: dferguson@...
 BTC, Columbus, 10/7/98</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Josh,<br />
 What do you think you are sacrificing?<br />
 Looking back at over five years out here is what i have found i sacrificed:<br />
 If I didn&#8217;t have the surgery I would have gained a lot of physical pain and<br />
 agony as my health deteriorated.<br />
 I have gained so much more than what I have lost. My gains:<br />
 A CHILD!<br />
 mobility<br />
 flexibility<br />
 the ability to breathe and move at the same time<br />
 self confidence<br />
 I could continue the list but it would go on ad nauseum<br />
 Health<br />
 I dont really think I sacrificed anything of importance. I can eat anything<br />
 I desire. Things taste great. I have a sense of fullness and am not always<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 hungry. What is it you are afraid you are sacrificing?<br />
 There is no reason you should be ashamed of how you are feeling. When I was<br />
 approved I had an overwhelming sense of calm. I just felt it was right but I<br />
 was still afraid of the unknown. But I was more afraid of what I did know.<br />
 Josh, don&#8217;t be ashamed of what you are feeling. Acknowledge it and try to<br />
 understand it. There is nothing wrong with that. But what is it you are<br />
 afraid you are sacrificing? Tell us and maybe we can help you address it.<br />
 Denise<br />
 mailto: <a href="mailto:dferguson@...">dferguson@&#8230;</a><br />
 BTC, Columbus, 10/7/98</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Adrienne Jacque</title>
		<link>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3744</link>
		<author>Adrienne Jacque</author>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Jan 2007 19:37:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.obesity-surgery.wordpress-by.org/2007/01/30/this-is-it/#comment-3744</guid>
		<description>Normal? God, yes it's normal. Thinking, "WHAT AM I DOING?" Do I really want
 to give up pizza and soda and ice cream and donuts and eating so much I
 could burst whenever I want to? Sure, you're going to feel that way. You
 wouldn't be normal if you didn't. The day of surgery for me, all my DH would
 have had to say, was "Please, don't do this" and I would have chickened out.
 Do I miss the foods I can never eat? Sometimes. But am I glad I went through
 it? You bet your life I am! From not fitting into a booth in a restaurant,
 to having to refuse clothes that are now too big in less than six months.
 From a woman's 30 to a woman's 18. Health problems gone, energy galore, and
 looks of admiration from my DH have made it all worth while. It's ok to be
 scared. That means your head is in the right place it should be. Just don't
 let the fear rule you like we all have let food rule us. You are the one in
 control. You decide. Not the food or the fear. You may be giving up a few
 things, but you are gaining, (or losing, really) so much more.
 Nona
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 LAP RnY 12/5/3
 299/215.5(finally a loss)/?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Normal? God, yes it&#8217;s normal. Thinking, &#8220;WHAT AM I DOING?&#8221; Do I really want<br />
 to give up pizza and soda and ice cream and donuts and eating so much I<br />
 could burst whenever I want to? Sure, you&#8217;re going to feel that way. You<br />
 wouldn&#8217;t be normal if you didn&#8217;t. The day of surgery for me, all my DH would<br />
 have had to say, was &#8220;Please, don&#8217;t do this&#8221; and I would have chickened out.<br />
 Do I miss the foods I can never eat? Sometimes. But am I glad I went through<br />
 it? You bet your life I am! From not fitting into a booth in a restaurant,<br />
 to having to refuse clothes that are now too big in less than six months.<br />
 From a woman&#8217;s 30 to a woman&#8217;s 18. Health problems gone, energy galore, and<br />
 looks of admiration from my DH have made it all worth while. It&#8217;s ok to be<br />
 scared. That means your head is in the right place it should be. Just don&#8217;t<br />
 let the fear rule you like we all have let food rule us. You are the one in<br />
 control. You decide. Not the food or the fear. You may be giving up a few<br />
 things, but you are gaining, (or losing, really) so much more.<br />
 Nona<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 LAP RnY 12/5/3<br />
 299/215.5(finally a loss)/?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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