Guest guest Posted January 20, 2003 Report Share Posted January 20, 2003 I know just what you mean .. I have had friends who were very lean and trim.. and their diets consisted of cheeseburgers, fries, milkshakes, pizza, colas, etc.. They were also very healthy and had normal lab readings.. However, I also saw some of my friends struggle with their weights and eating " skinny " ... lots of water, salads, fat free dressings, baked, broiled meats, low carb veggies.. steamed.. and had cholesterol out the roof, other health issues as well as weight problems.. morbid obesity.. I think you are right.. we have to deal with the hand we are dealt, and I truly believe that genetics plays a big part in our being morbidly obese.. We have a disease, and this surgery we that we have all had is just the tool to put the disease into remission.. We have to continue to work the tool in order to stay in remission and remain as healthy as we possibly can.. Life is not fair.. and also is too short to be playing games here.. Our surgeries give us a life saving tool, not a brain thing.. Sure, we still like the way fried chicken smells, apple pie smells and tastes, ice cream tastes.. but we know the consequences of eating those things .... weight gain and all the co morbidities we have conquered.. Is it really worth it to return to that.. I dont think so .. more worth it to stay healthy.. Hugs, from GA open RNY 12/12/00 Revision 04/18/01 Revision 02/07/02 St wt.... 392 Cw.......187 Wt loss..-205 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2003 Report Share Posted January 20, 2003 In a message dated 1/20/03 3:21:22 PM Eastern Standard Time, vickilines@... writes: > I think in my case I had a double whammy. Obesity runs wild in my > family, I'm not so sure it was " what " you were served. At least for me. I think the biggest issue, for me, was that I was taught to use food to give myself pleasure and was not provided with any other alternatives for pleasure. It is still that way in my house. Everything is about food. No other forms of celebration/joy/recognition are " allowed. " It took me about 10 years to work through this -- first came the realization, of course, and then came like years and years of building a life beyond food. se Baltimore, MD Open RNY 11/22/99, Dr. Sweet, Reading, PA http://www.obesityhelp.com/morbidobesity/profile.phtml?N=L951569336 " >http:\ //www.obesityhelp.com/morbidobesity/profile.phtml?N=L951569336 11/22/99 324, BMI 51 12/6/99 301, BMI 47 1/27/00 280, BMI 44 2/22/00 270, BMI 42 3/16/00 262, BMI 41 5/31/00 244, BMI 38 (no longer extremely obese... just plain obese) 7/22/00 224, BMI 35 9/23/00 220, BMI 34 (and still obese) 10/16/00 216, BMI 34 11/7/00 210, BMI 33 (65 pounds from goal!!!) 5/8/01 196, BMI 31 (new goal 157; I am 5'7 " that would give me a BMI of 24.6; 39 pounds to go) 9/13/01 196, BMI 31 (Stuck!) 1/24/02 190, BMI 29.7 (slightly overweight!! have lost 80.2% of my excess weight) 4/2/02 200, ARGH! Very frightening moment. Hopefully I can lose back down to 190 quickly! 4/28/02 201 (started a starch-free, 4 hours a week of exercise program...weighed in at the gym) 9/22/02 Tummy Tuck, Thigh Lift, and Lower Back Lift, Dr. Shermack, s Hopkins, Bayview, Baltimore, MD -- 12 pounds of skin removed!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2003 Report Share Posted January 21, 2003 In a message dated 1/20/03 8:23:38 PM Central Standard Time, vitalady@... writes: << We're issued the hand we're dealt, you know? >> ------------------------------ Yeah, and sometimes circumstance serves to help make the hand worse. I think the Great Depression had something to do with the family dynamic in which I was raised. My dad ran away from an abusive foster home in rural Sweden and came the the USA knowing not a word of English. Got taken advantage of many times, not paid for work, gypped, robbed, etc. As he got older and got a handle on things, he toughened up, but he was " Thursday's Child " and had far to go. Anyway, when the depression hit, my mom's folks lost their farm in Nebraska and her family moved to Chicago. Mom met Dad, and the early years of their marriage were spent in the Depression. It seemed to have affected my dad a lot more than my mom. He often recounted, with great bitterness, a period just before they married when he literally had only a donut and a cup of coffee to eat each day for about 3 months. Now, that's not long, and it's not exactly starvation. But whenever Mom would try to limit what my brother and I ate, Dad would get on her case and warn her NEVER to deny his children food, bcuz he knew what it was like to want something to eat and not be able to have it. As a kid, I remember dinner almost always consisting of meat, potatoes, salad, and a vegetable. Not bad, really, healthwise. There was ALWAYS dessert of some kind. And whenever there was extra money, food was a celebration. The whole family would go to ville (Swedish naborhood in Chicago) and visit 2-3 delicatessens and Signe Carlson's bakery. We would come home with smoked eel, smoked chubs, 4 or 5 deli salads (dripping with mayo), and a week's worth or more of bakery stuff. And ALL of it would be gone in a day or 2: family pig-out!! And of course we were always expected to clean our plates. If we didn't, we got no dessert. To this day, I have trouble throwing food out. All those starving children in..............(wherever), y'know. BTW, Mom & Dad were both obese. Brother avoided it for awhile, but he is now too. Carol A Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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