Guest guest Posted November 18, 2004 Report Share Posted November 18, 2004 _QueenCruiser@..._ (mailto:QueenCruiser@...) writes: << Just reading some of the posts about people gaining, this sounds too scary for me!! .... I will NEVER pay for another weight watchers class that is why I had this done, it didnt work in the first place and I paid and paid and paid. I am only 10 months out still on the losing end...I do get hungry every few hours. I know this is putting me into a bad habit of always stuffing my face....I know our tummys are smaller and shouldnt stretch much but what makes the losing of the fat slow down to a stop around one year? ANYONE? >> Hi There, I can only speak of my own experiences. I, too, somehow thought the MGB would be " the last diet " of my life. I can assure you, for me it is not. My history: I started at 303 lbs (5'4 " ), lost 120 lbs in 1 yr on a low carb diet. I didn't begin walking until 6 mos into that deal. I injured myself exercising (imagine that) and slowly regained about 70 lbs over the course of 4 yrs. My own fault though, I ate badly. When I began feeling stronger, the more I tried to get back on the low carb bandwagon, the more weight I gained. You either eat low carb or you don't. Cheating on that type of diet can be very fattening! I eventually felt out of control, got very scared and finally gave into the MGB as an absolute last resort. I am down 92 lbs in 15 months but it has been a struggle from the get-go. The weight has not " fallen off " and I have rarely had a 10 lb in 1 month loss. I actually gained weight immediately post-op and had 2 months in between where I stayed the same or was up by 3 lbs. I joined E-Diets to keep me honest with healthier food choices. I am a person who admittedly has horrible eating habits by nature and left to my own devices would live on chocolate. My sweet tooth was fueled after the MGB, unlike most people's, and I therefore have to watch EVERY MORSEL that crosses my lips. Prior to E-Diets, (and I was only 9 months out), I had nonproductive months. Since then, I have been losing slowly and steadily and am putting good eating habits to the test. I don't want to say that I'm learning new habits because I already knew them, I was just lazy and didn't follow them. I have learned one new thing, though - I was getting hungry every few hours too, but I forced myself to 3 square meals plus one snack a day. The scale moved very, very slowly. I finally listened to my body and it's clock, so now if I'm hungry, I eat...BUT, I purposely cut my meals in half so I can eat them every few hours. Breakfast is at 8:30 and 10, lunch at 11:45 and 1:15, snack at 3:00, and supper at 6:00 with my last snack at 8pm. My total daily caloric intake is 1500-1600 calories and snacks are usually nutritional, like half cheese sandwich or peanut butter on a banana. I found an awesome bread that is double fiber and low carb by Health Line, in a purple wrapper called Double Fiber. I am not losing by leaps and bounds, but I also feel that I am developing eating habits that I can live with forever and hope to therefore control the regain so many people talk about. I do not know of a single thin person, except maybe a guy or two, that doesn't have to work at achieving or maintaining their bodies. That said, in my opinion, the MGB did exactly what Dr R said it would do. It put me on a level playing field with " normal " people. I have seriously observed many habits of people close to me and have realised that they DO work at staying trim. It is a lifelong commitment that we take great care in our habits and with our bodies, and I feel like I will never be cured of obesity, but I have been given the chance to try and control it. God, I hope I'm right! Then again, is it possible that some of us do have a tendency to set ourselves up for failure? I think the key with this surgery is to look at it in a long-term, like the rest of your life, kind of game plan. The human body is smart, it will eventually figure out that we messed with it's insides. So be kind to it and think long haul. Make smart choices and hopefully develop good habits that will stay with you after the MGB's " magic " wears off. Oh, by the way, by 1 yr post-op I was able to out-eat my skinny friends again. I had to pull them reins back mighty quick! Good luck to all of us! Patty H 8/25/03 Stsvl 253/160/(135) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2004 Report Share Posted November 18, 2004 if you dont eventually return to a more " normal " absorption you will die. at around a year....18 mo. sometimes 2 years... your body adjusts... things level out. at 4 years i have a 7-10 pound struggle. NOT a 150 pound struggle! NO MORE!! some people have their surgery and continue to eat as much as they can of whatever they can (in the early months, this results in weight LOSS) As time passes, 4 crackers that used to fill you to overflow have become 10 crackers. 2 bites of steak and 1/2 cup of salad gives way to a small salad a small steak and a baked potato... and if you have snacks in between..... well you see how it adds up. the capacity never becomes HUGE... but it will empty and if you keep it filled (and bad choices makes it worse!) you are going to gain! we level out we become normal. we cant have mgb and then eat as we please forever -- weight loss doesnt stop at 130 and then we can still eat without concience and the weight just be stable forever.... doesnt work like that. i eat and dont gain very much. i weigh every day and when my weight is up 5#, 7#... ok ok 10#!! i start making better choices (like now). that is how people " do it " no secret... just eat like normal people. i still want a half pound of chocolate covered raisins... and if i am careful, and space the " handfuls " skillfully throughout the day.... and eat one here and there--- i CAN consume a big bag of raisinettes! and if do that every day.... i will gain!! it isnt a mystery. it is logic. good luck!! cathy s in va > > > Just reading some of the posts about people gaining, this sounds too > scary for me!! I know when all is said and done we might gain back > 15 to 20 percent back, but whats the deal? > Is this just a few people or what? What about all you long timers > how are you holding your weight down? I will NEVER pay for another > weight watchers class that is why I had this done, it didnt work in > the first place and I paid and paid and paid. I am only 10 months > out still on the losing end and want to know how to keep losing and > not gain it back. Is it a small percentage of people that are > gaining or alot? I do get hungry every few hours. I know this is > putting me into a bad habit of always stuffing my face. What happens > when we stop losing weight? AND why do we stop losing before all the > fat is gone ANYWAY? I know our tummys are smaller and shouldnt > stretch much but what makes the losing of the fat slow down to a stop > around one year? ANYONE? > > Thanks so much! > ne > 1/5/04 Dr R > 310/291 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 19, 2004 Report Share Posted November 19, 2004 GREAT POST!!!!!!! cathy s in va > > > _QueenCruiser@a..._ (mailto:QueenCruiser@a...) writes: << Just > reading some of the posts about people gaining, this sounds too scary for me!! ... > I will NEVER pay for another weight watchers class that is why I had this > done, it didnt work in the first place and I paid and paid and paid. I am only > 10 months out still on the losing end...I do get hungry every few hours. I > know this is > putting me into a bad habit of always stuffing my face....I know our tummys > are smaller and shouldnt stretch much but what makes the losing of the fat > slow down to a stop around one year? ANYONE? >> > > Hi There, > > I can only speak of my own experiences. I, too, somehow thought the MGB > would be " the last diet " of my life. I can assure you, for me it is not. > > My history: I started at 303 lbs (5'4 " ), lost 120 lbs in 1 yr on a low carb > diet. I didn't begin walking until 6 mos into that deal. I injured myself > exercising (imagine that) and slowly regained about 70 lbs over the course of 4 > yrs. My own fault though, I ate badly. > > When I began feeling stronger, the more I tried to get back on the low carb > bandwagon, the more weight I gained. You either eat low carb or you don't. > Cheating on that type of diet can be very fattening! I eventually felt out of > control, got very scared and finally gave into the MGB as an absolute last > resort. > > I am down 92 lbs in 15 months but it has been a struggle from the get-go. > The weight has not " fallen off " and I have rarely had a 10 lb in 1 month loss. I > actually gained weight immediately post-op and had 2 months in between where > I stayed the same or was up by 3 lbs. > > I joined E-Diets to keep me honest with healthier food choices. I am a > person who admittedly has horrible eating habits by nature and left to my own > devices would live on chocolate. My sweet tooth was fueled after the MGB, unlike > most people's, and I therefore have to watch EVERY MORSEL that crosses my > lips. Prior to E-Diets, (and I was only 9 months out), I had nonproductive > months. Since then, I have been losing slowly and steadily and am putting good > eating habits to the test. > > I don't want to say that I'm learning new habits because I already knew > them, I was just lazy and didn't follow them. > > > > > I have learned one new thing, though - I was getting hungry every few hours > too, but I forced myself to 3 square meals plus one snack a day. The scale > moved very, very slowly. I finally listened to my body and it's clock, so now if > I'm hungry, I eat...BUT, I purposely cut my meals in half so I can eat them > every few hours. Breakfast is at 8:30 and 10, lunch at 11:45 and 1:15, snack > at 3:00, and supper at 6:00 with my last snack at 8pm. > > My total daily caloric intake is 1500-1600 calories and snacks are usually > nutritional, like half cheese sandwich or peanut butter on a banana. > > I found an awesome bread that is double fiber and low carb by Health Line, > in a purple wrapper called Double Fiber. > > I am not losing by leaps and bounds, but I also feel that I am developing > eating habits that I can live with forever and hope to therefore control the > regain so many people talk about. I do not know of a single thin person, except > maybe a guy or two, that doesn't have to work at achieving or maintaining > their bodies. > > That said, in my opinion, the MGB did exactly what Dr R said it would do. It > put me on a level playing field with " normal " people. I have seriously > observed many habits of people close to me and have realised that they DO work at > staying trim. It is a lifelong commitment that we take great care in our > habits and with our bodies, and I feel like I will never be cured of obesity, but > I have been given the chance to try and control it. > > God, I hope I'm right! Then again, is it possible that some of us do have a > tendency to set ourselves up for failure? > > I think the key with this surgery is to look at it in a long-term, like the > rest of your life, kind of game plan. The human body is smart, it will > eventually figure out that we messed with it's insides. So be kind to it and think > long haul. Make smart choices and hopefully develop good habits that will > stay with you after the MGB's " magic " wears off. > > Oh, by the way, by 1 yr post-op I was able to out-eat my skinny friends > again. I had to pull them reins back mighty quick! > > Good luck to all of us! > > Patty H > 8/25/03 Stsvl > 253/160/(135) > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 19, 2004 Report Share Posted November 19, 2004 Patty, thank you for sharing. I have developed a sweet tooth, 9 weeks out and have just recently been thinking farther ahead than today, realizing that NOW is the time to work on developing the good habits, because later may be too late. And yes, it is JUST a tool, not a solution. >From: NCGorgeous1963@... >Reply- > >Subject: Re: WHY GAINING??? THIS sounds very SCARY >Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 19:40:01 EST > > > >_QueenCruiser@..._ (mailto:QueenCruiser@...) writes: << Just >reading some of the posts about people gaining, this sounds too scary for >me!! ... >I will NEVER pay for another weight watchers class that is why I had this >done, it didnt work in the first place and I paid and paid and paid. I am >only >10 months out still on the losing end...I do get hungry every few hours. >I >know this is >putting me into a bad habit of always stuffing my face....I know our >tummys >are smaller and shouldnt stretch much but what makes the losing of the fat >slow down to a stop around one year? ANYONE? >> > >Hi There, > >I can only speak of my own experiences. I, too, somehow thought the MGB >would be " the last diet " of my life. I can assure you, for me it is not. > >My history: I started at 303 lbs (5'4 " ), lost 120 lbs in 1 yr on a low >carb >diet. I didn't begin walking until 6 mos into that deal. I injured myself >exercising (imagine that) and slowly regained about 70 lbs over the course >of 4 >yrs. My own fault though, I ate badly. > >When I began feeling stronger, the more I tried to get back on the low >carb >bandwagon, the more weight I gained. You either eat low carb or you don't. >Cheating on that type of diet can be very fattening! I eventually felt out >of >control, got very scared and finally gave into the MGB as an absolute last >resort. > >I am down 92 lbs in 15 months but it has been a struggle from the get-go. >The weight has not " fallen off " and I have rarely had a 10 lb in 1 month >loss. I > actually gained weight immediately post-op and had 2 months in between >where >I stayed the same or was up by 3 lbs. > >I joined E-Diets to keep me honest with healthier food choices. I am a >person who admittedly has horrible eating habits by nature and left to my >own >devices would live on chocolate. My sweet tooth was fueled after the MGB, >unlike >most people's, and I therefore have to watch EVERY MORSEL that crosses my >lips. Prior to E-Diets, (and I was only 9 months out), I had nonproductive >months. Since then, I have been losing slowly and steadily and am putting >good >eating habits to the test. > >I don't want to say that I'm learning new habits because I already knew >them, I was just lazy and didn't follow them. > > > > >I have learned one new thing, though - I was getting hungry every few hours >too, but I forced myself to 3 square meals plus one snack a day. The scale >moved very, very slowly. I finally listened to my body and it's clock, so >now if >I'm hungry, I eat...BUT, I purposely cut my meals in half so I can eat >them >every few hours. Breakfast is at 8:30 and 10, lunch at 11:45 and 1:15, >snack >at 3:00, and supper at 6:00 with my last snack at 8pm. > >My total daily caloric intake is 1500-1600 calories and snacks are usually >nutritional, like half cheese sandwich or peanut butter on a banana. > >I found an awesome bread that is double fiber and low carb by Health Line, >in a purple wrapper called Double Fiber. > >I am not losing by leaps and bounds, but I also feel that I am developing >eating habits that I can live with forever and hope to therefore control >the >regain so many people talk about. I do not know of a single thin person, >except >maybe a guy or two, that doesn't have to work at achieving or maintaining >their bodies. > >That said, in my opinion, the MGB did exactly what Dr R said it would do. >It >put me on a level playing field with " normal " people. I have seriously >observed many habits of people close to me and have realised that they DO >work at >staying trim. It is a lifelong commitment that we take great care in our >habits and with our bodies, and I feel like I will never be cured of >obesity, but >I have been given the chance to try and control it. > >God, I hope I'm right! Then again, is it possible that some of us do have a >tendency to set ourselves up for failure? > >I think the key with this surgery is to look at it in a long-term, like the >rest of your life, kind of game plan. The human body is smart, it will >eventually figure out that we messed with it's insides. So be kind to it >and think >long haul. Make smart choices and hopefully develop good habits that will >stay with you after the MGB's " magic " wears off. > >Oh, by the way, by 1 yr post-op I was able to out-eat my skinny friends >again. I had to pull them reins back mighty quick! > >Good luck to all of us! > >Patty H >8/25/03 Stsvl >253/160/(135) > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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