Excited&Scared
Member
Hi, new to group. Preop appt 4/27, gastric sleeve scheduled for 5/17
Hello! I'm new here also. But I'm a "veteran". I am 11 years and almost 2 months post-op! Ask me anything.
Great questions, I need advice on this too.I am also struggling with my upcoming maintenance phase.
How do I know how many calories to eat?
I definitely feel some hunger now at 7 months that I did not feel earlier. I did fall off the wagon after recovering from some viral illness I had and now I have gotten it back under control. I had lost weight from being sick and it did come back fairly quickly, I was eating more calories to "feel better" after losing 15lbs too fast.
I am not afraid of keeping losing, I think it will stop around my lower goal weight, just afraid of gaining instead of maintaining.
Finally figuring out what foods really don't work for me now, mostly anything heavy or complicated like casseroles.
How do we do maintenance?
Do we magically stop at the goal weight the doctor said I would reach? (based on who knows what)
Also the "bariatric team" isn't great and I haven't gotten the support I expected from them so no resource for me there.
I have read and heard from others, that for women maintenance should be 1,000 to 1.200 calories. That seems low to me or at least for me. I probably get between 1,300 and 1.500 depending on the day. And I'm still losing, albeit more slowly. I think you'll have to find what works for you individually. It's hard not having a concrete guide. But your body and metabolism will be different from mine. I am 11 months out and spent about 7 weeks within a pound, so I assumed that was my stop point. I have since lost another few but I'm pretty sure I'm getting close to maintenance. At least, that's all I'm trying to do anyway. I'm comfortable with my intake, meaning I'm not hungry nor do I feel deprived, and I'm pretty happy with my activity level. So, I'm going to keep going with what I'm doing and any more weight loss would be gravy.
My point, exactly. I think that maintenance calories are going to be something we all have to figure out individually. As Ryan pointed out, even if you were to get tested to determine your exact calorie expenditure, there's a big difference in quality and types of calories out there. Some function best on a higher (healthy) fat diet, others love low carb, others need more high quality carbs. Add in personal preference and you can see why science has never been able to give us a one size fits all perfect diet recommendation.Wow, that sounds awfully low for maintenance. I am doing that now easily.![]()
I’m about the same as you missy and I’m 2 years out. My weight has been stable for 18 months and I don’t want to lose any more.I have read and heard from others, that for women maintenance should be 1,000 to 1.200 calories. That seems low to me or at least for me. I probably get between 1,300 and 1.500 depending on the day. And I'm still losing, albeit more slowly. I think you'll have to find what works for you individually. It's hard not having a concrete guide. But your body and metabolism will be different from mine. I am 11 months out and spent about 7 weeks within a pound, so I assumed that was my stop point. I have since lost another few but I'm pretty sure I'm getting close to maintenance. At least, that's all I'm trying to do anyway. I'm comfortable with my intake, meaning I'm not hungry nor do I feel deprived, and I'm pretty happy with my activity level. So, I'm going to keep going with what I'm doing and any more weight loss would be gravy.
Thanks, and I'm glad you got some value from what I shared. Post op life is complicated with many possible paths. You can definitely find yours with some patience and a little experimentation.. And Ryan your before and after's were great, you look fantastic. I reread your great post on goal weights today since I had some time. So interesting and useful.