Guest guest Posted September 24, 1998 Report Share Posted September 24, 1998 To Rasley, Yes, I can relate to that as gastric banding was my first general anaesthetic. It put me off for years having this done as I thought fat people died under the knife. Apparently not. You have just as much risk as the next skinny person. What is the problem is that you have to mobilize as soon as possible after surgery to prevent blood clots and embolisms. But so does a skinny person. For me it felt like going to sleep and waking up. I had a bit of a hangover from all the pethidine in the pca, (patient controlled analgesia). But I was up and about and stir crazy 24 hours after the op, but I had it done laproscopically. I know I can never convince you pre op just how safe it is these days having anaesthetic but it is. I believe you surgery is 7th October, which is the same as , I think. Please correct me if I am wrong. I gather you are both in America. Are you physically close to each other as in location??? I was haunted by the thought of being under ga but I realise now it was also a control issue. I am a control freak (just ask my family) and the loss of control was what bothered me. I still feel a bit funny about strangers poking around my tummy and me not knowing exactly what went on. I had a caesarean with my 3yo and that was an awful experience but it was a epidural not a general anaesthetic. The epidural did not work and I felt a lot of pain, so they gave me drugs to put me to sleep but I hallucinated. I was allergic to the drugs. However, I was up and about 24 hours later and my son is the healthiest 3yo there ever was. And I was 139 kilos at the time. My heaviest ever. I used pregnancy as an excuse to eat what I wanted, when I wanted and in whatever quantities I wanted. I was diabetic at the time and on massive amounts of insulin, which made into a 11 lb baby. I still have the guilts about that. I should have looked after the baby better than that, but I have three very healthy children and am grateful to my higher power for giving them to me, especially at my weight range in the five years I had them went from 114 kilos to 139 kilos and technically I should not be able to have sex at that weight let alone fall pregnant. Good luck with your surgery and now there are two people I will be thinking about on the 7th October, 1998. It is an easier struggle with wls. The emotional issues remain but can be dealt with rationally when the weight is not a combined issue. I have to eat " healthy " foods for my emotional well being. Junk food upsets my emotional equilibrium and I get moody and cranky and irritable and mean and angry when I eat lots of fats and sugars. I may as well be an alcoholic on a bender with food instead of booze. But if I eat salads, lean meat, low-fat dairy, I am like a placid pussycat. And my kids and husband get a better deal out of life. If Mum's happy, the rest of the family is happy. Regards Neale 115 kilos to 105 kilos Surgery 4th May, 1998 Age 36 Height 5' 6 1/2 " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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