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don't get me wrong...

LisaLisa

Member
I have been reading this forum and watching a Bariatric FB page for a couple of weeks or so. I've read the good, the bad, and the ugly, and am truly undaunted. I anticipate surgery in September and am entertaining myself during this preparation time by looking at the clothes and shoes I haven't been able to wear in more than a decade.

But don't get me wrong, I know this is not only about appearance. For me it's about my knees, which are showing wear from arthritis, and a case of plantar fasciitis that I can't really shake. Getting up in the morning is dark comedy as I quickly stumble from the bed to the potty. I hope for no more CPAP, and an active life focused on fun physical exercise and healthy food.

That being said, have you all heard of Spanx Arm Tights? Might be a winner for bat wings. Just sayin. :)
 
I love that you haven't let anyone scare you off. The plantar fasciitis stumble is fun for sure. I am only 6 weeks out from surgery and one of the biggest benefits for me is the fact that I can sleep through the night without having to wake up because of the arthritis pain in my hips. So, the bat wings are totally worth it, even if they DO make batman jealous ;) Best of luck on your journey. You'll do great!
 
Oh, I do not agree. Some of my strongest moments of feeling motivated related to a) clothing and b) making my sisters jealous.

I wouldn't even know how to make weight loss surgery into some sort of virtuous pursuit, unrelated to the pursuit of beauty. ,. I was both anorexic and bulimic as a teen and I remember weighing 112 lb and feeling really really fat. I could not stand to look in mirrors. This went on my entire life well into my forties.

I was so sick and tired of being fat. I didn't cause all of the obesity I suffered. Part of it was malpractice, being put on a medicine that cause me to gain an enormous amount of weight and put my adrenal glands into a state of peril.

And yes, I'm actually one of those people who had thyroid disease and had to have my thyroid irradiated. It took years after that to balance my dosage. I had a pair of 30 / 31 Levi's 501's which I pinned to my wall at the foot of my bed. Every time I looked in that direction I saw those Levi's. I never thought I would ever be able to fit in them, but I did. And I still have them even though I can't wear them right now because of some COVID-related weight gain (10#) and edema.

I have several Spanx body shaping garments. They are really tight. Reminds me of being a young woman and wearing a girdle. They are the fashion industry stand for short appearances where you need to look firmer and maybe even thinner. They are very expensive but in my view, completely worth it. I haven't gotten the upper arms girdle but it is in my shopping cart, waiting for the day that I can justify purchasing it.

I was raised as a child to turn the other cheek. But that didn't seem to have a corollary effect on my family's criticism of my body, my stringy hair, my big nose, the fact that I walk like a boy, my days as a drug taking hippie, or just a general big paint brush they applied to my self-esteem, wiping it out like so much graffiti. I was hospitalized 5 times for suicide attempts.

They were just relentless. So, yeah, I did want to make them jealous, but more accurately I wanted to be who I really was physically and I wanted to find myself attractive and I wanted evenge. These are not all the things we'd like to admit and most of us would like to rise above it, but let me just urge you to love the fact that you still have all those clothes and that one day you're going to be back in them and you are going to find yourself beautiful in a physical way that resulted from weight loss surgery and you feel absolutely okay about that.

Physical appearance feeds into self-esteem. Self-esteem is a mental health issue. Your mental health is an issue already for a lot of other reasons or you wouldn't ever have gotten obese. In order to repair that nasty toxic message that you were fed chapter and verse, it is absolutely okay for you to take every moment possible to think about how pretty you are or how nice your hair is or how well you put on makeup or how pretty that dress is. It is all part of the same coin. Most of your life it came up Tails. Now it's going to come up Heads, every single time.
Aw, Diane, you made me shed a tear or two. One for me and one for you. I know none of us get through our lives unscathed and what a poor excuse for a human we would be if our lives were perfect. We'd have no empathy or compassion. We learn from our mistakes and can attempt to do better. Getting surgery is a second chance where we must learn from all the issues of the past and present without using food to comfort us. I know it won't be all rainbows and puppy dogs, but keeping the eye on the prize gets me through. I can do anything knowing there's an end in sight. I can drink 64oz of water if that's what's required. (good thing I love water--makes me feel clean inside!) I'll fall down, but will get back up again, with all of you and your inspiration.

I started to feel my mortality when my knee started acting up and the doctors just said, sorry you're too young for a knee replacement and it's not nearly bad enough yet. There was no solution because it was from a lifetime of wear and a good share of the lifetime spent overweight. I was frightened that I had wasted my 40s and I was going to waste even more years while I got "old enough for surgery" and my knee got worse. (!?) While I understand WLS is not a miracle cure, it will fix a lot that ails me and I can at least embrace the time I have left to do the things I used to enjoy.

So thank you Diane for sharing and also giving credence to what appears to be simply my vanity.

Incidentally, I have gotten two rounds of hyaluronic acid shots in my knee and it has kept me mobile for a while.
 
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