WazzuCoug
Member
I'm six days post-op now (as the clock just passes midnight as I write this). I feel like things have gone very well for me so far. There hasn't been much nausea. The pain has diminished every day. I'm walking about a mile and a half each morning. I'm getting in all my protein and liquids. So, for all of that - yay!
However, there is the weird side of things. Although I'm not hungry, I feel like I should be eating more. The desire to have something other than liquid, yogurt, or jello doesn't help. Everything is very sweet, so I dilute it down. I feel like I could just snack all day like I used to, but I desperately don't want to go down that road again. Sometimes, I wonder if my stomach is actually 1/10th the size that it was before surgery, or if it was all fake (not really, but that is the weird stuff I think about). I wonder how I'm going to resist the habits that got me in trouble in the first place. I know what the right things to do are. I know what the right choices are. I know what I want to do, no, what I'm desperate to do.
The day before surgery my wife mentioned her best friend's mother-in-law had a VSG and lost a little weight but basically gained it all back, due to poor choices and fast food. And then another story about someone else the knew who experienced the same thing. She wasn't trying to get me to not have the surgery, but she was also concerned about me making bad choices. The surgery isn't a free ride to Thinsville if you make bad choices.
I'm going to take advantage of a therapist from the weight center to talk about things early and fairly often to help get my mind right about food. I want it to be a much more reasonable relationship. I'm not going to rely on the surgery to do it all. However, it's also scary. Many what-ifs.
If you haven't seen the "Fit to Fat Dad" on YouTube, I'll put a link below. If any of you followed the early years of The Biggest Loser, you might remember Matt Hoover who won the competition in 2005 and married the runner up, Suzie. He, like most of the contestants on that show, gained all of the weight back, plus some. He had a VSG in October 2019 and has been posting pretty regularly, the most recent just the day before yesterday. He has had tremendous success, but it's actually gone too far and he's lost too much weight, which he talks about. It comes from that fear of going back down that road of making bad decisions again. So he's going to start working with a therapist and dietician to try to find that balance so he can gain some weight and then even it out at a healthy level.
Anyway, I just needed to let some of this out, maybe get some feedback on what others have experienced. I'm sure I'm not the only one to go through this sort of thing. We all started out in similar spaces here, right?
Thanks for reading. Here is the link to Matt's YouTube channel if you are interested: Fat to Fit Dad
However, there is the weird side of things. Although I'm not hungry, I feel like I should be eating more. The desire to have something other than liquid, yogurt, or jello doesn't help. Everything is very sweet, so I dilute it down. I feel like I could just snack all day like I used to, but I desperately don't want to go down that road again. Sometimes, I wonder if my stomach is actually 1/10th the size that it was before surgery, or if it was all fake (not really, but that is the weird stuff I think about). I wonder how I'm going to resist the habits that got me in trouble in the first place. I know what the right things to do are. I know what the right choices are. I know what I want to do, no, what I'm desperate to do.
The day before surgery my wife mentioned her best friend's mother-in-law had a VSG and lost a little weight but basically gained it all back, due to poor choices and fast food. And then another story about someone else the knew who experienced the same thing. She wasn't trying to get me to not have the surgery, but she was also concerned about me making bad choices. The surgery isn't a free ride to Thinsville if you make bad choices.
I'm going to take advantage of a therapist from the weight center to talk about things early and fairly often to help get my mind right about food. I want it to be a much more reasonable relationship. I'm not going to rely on the surgery to do it all. However, it's also scary. Many what-ifs.
If you haven't seen the "Fit to Fat Dad" on YouTube, I'll put a link below. If any of you followed the early years of The Biggest Loser, you might remember Matt Hoover who won the competition in 2005 and married the runner up, Suzie. He, like most of the contestants on that show, gained all of the weight back, plus some. He had a VSG in October 2019 and has been posting pretty regularly, the most recent just the day before yesterday. He has had tremendous success, but it's actually gone too far and he's lost too much weight, which he talks about. It comes from that fear of going back down that road of making bad decisions again. So he's going to start working with a therapist and dietician to try to find that balance so he can gain some weight and then even it out at a healthy level.
Anyway, I just needed to let some of this out, maybe get some feedback on what others have experienced. I'm sure I'm not the only one to go through this sort of thing. We all started out in similar spaces here, right?
Thanks for reading. Here is the link to Matt's YouTube channel if you are interested: Fat to Fit Dad