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Before & After

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Goals

Have a visible collar bone

42 People
 in progress, 
48 People
 achieved this

I want to buy clothes in the normal size section of the store

19 People
 in progress, 
13 People
 achieved this

To hit the 100lbs lost mark by Christmas!

2 People
 in progress, 
0 People
 achieved this

Exercise three times a week

35 People
 in progress, 
9 People
 achieved this

Loose 25 pounds between surgery and my son's college graduation

0 People
 in progress, 
1 Person
 achieved this
Surgeon Testimonial

Ward, Dunnican
RIP Dr. Dunnican. I will be doing my happy dance at my two year appointment without you but you will certainly be there in my heart. Ward truly understood where we coming from and the struggles we had. A wonderful person and a brilliant surgeon. The WLS community has lost a bright star. He will be missed.
Latest Surgery Support Comments

  • Comment by Stacy S. on 3/30/09 5:24 am
    Sending you the warmest of wishes your way for steady improvement day after day, And when you’re all recovered and feel good once more, May life treat you better than ever before!~ Sending you good vibes for a uneventful surgery and a speedy recovery !! ALL THE BEST
  • Comment by Renée M. on 3/29/09 10:38 am
    Prayers for you tomorrow as you start the beginnin gof the rest of your life! Remember to sip and walk! You will do great!!!!
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debbie13's Blog
debbie13's Blog


Whales
on May 16, 2012 6:13 am
 


Post title says it all. Never going back. Well to visit my friend yes, to that size, no way!!!!!!!  
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Movement
on May 16, 2012 6:02 am
 No - not poo! The scale. It is moving. Slowly but surely. 10lbs in 10 weeks. I'll take it. 

Reading a great book. Its reinforcing the things that I should have been doing all along. Why does it take a brick upside the head to "get it?"

This was my original before/after. I want to get this back, the after that is.  It will happen.
 



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Group
on May 5, 2012 11:27 am
I must be crazy. I started a support group here. I finished my leader training through OH and decided that not only do I want to continue to help my local group, but I wanted to get an on-line one going too. Wish me luck. 
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Not Great
on May 5, 2012 10:19 am
 Wish I could say I was doing better. Still battling regain and I have this lovely thing in my arm.

 
 

A PICC line. For iron infusions. So damn deficient that I need 12 weeks of them. Doctor is hoping to get my ferritin over 100. He even told me not to take the oral stuff any more. Not processing it one bit. 

As for the regain, yeah it is still hanging on. I've got to get control of the damn food I put in my mouth. One day at a time. Discovered yesterday that flushing M&Ms down the toilet one hadful at a time is quite satisfying. 5 pounds of them were in my desk at work. What the F**K was I thinking?? If it is there it gets eaten. No more junk in the desk. 


On a great note -- this is my pretty!!! My granddaughter - Mackenzie Rose. She is six weeks old in this picture. My joy, my life. 


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A feeding tube to loose weight? Why, why, why?
on April 16, 2012 4:26 pm
Why would someone want a feeding tube to help them loose weight? I don't get it.

I am battling regain in a big way. I need to loose 45 pounds to get back to my lowest. Not one health professional has suggested a feeding tube to me. Maybe I should ask. Yeah that's the ticket - 800 calories a day of some of the most vile liquid I have ever had the pleasure of sniffing.

Wait a minute. I am doing about 800 calories a day. Through food. Lean meats. Vegetables. The occasional piece of fruit. Hmmm and yummm. Real food. Things I like to eat. 

Have you ever tried some of those tube feeding formulas? They are vile. Really. I know. I use them every day at work. There aer better ways to loose weight than a feeding tube. 

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/47061726/ns/today-today_health/#.T4yjZ6uJeXs 

Get real ladies - this is not the way to loose the baby weight. Yes, you will have to deal with that too. Or are you just planning on a bottle right along with your baby? 
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My Story

I've always been a big girl. Not huge, just big. My family used to tell a story that when I was about four, I got on the scale and put my hands on my hips and said "I've got to loose some weight". Sad for a four year old to come up with that. But it tells you something about what was going on around me. Larger women always on a 'diet'. My Grandfather (bless his heart) thought that little story was sooooo cute, he submitted it to Reader's Digest and it got printed. So I had my 15 minutes of fame 44 years ago.

Fast forward to now -- I am 48 1/2 years old and have been fighting morbid obesity since the birth of my children 25 and 23 years ago. Never lost the baby weight. Luckily I am not in horrible bad health and can still be fairly active. I had a major scare -- not mine -- that made me wake up and realize where I was headed. My best friend lost her toes on one foot and the lower portion of her other leg due to complications of diabetes. She is 50. I was diagnosed with diabetes two years ago. I don't plan on loosing any body parts just pounds. 

Early last year (2008) I went to a Diabetes Fair sponsored by Albany Medical Center. One of the speakers was a nutritionist that was part of the Bariatric Center at this hospital. Up until I heard her speak I would never have considered a lap band much less gastric bypass. After hearing her speak about the results of bypass I started my research. I quickly realized I had based my previous opinions of this surgery without a good knowledge base. After doing tons of research I decided that I wanted to talk to my GP to see what she thought. She felt it was a good idea and helped me get an appointment with a surgeon.

Most people see the PA first at this surgery office, but because she made the arrangements, my first appointment was with Dr. Ward Dunnican in July 2008. After meeting with him for two hours I decided that this was definitely for me. I got scheduled to see a dietitian and pulmonologist so I could start the process.

There are so many requirements, both for the hospital and the insurance. They want all sorts of consults -- psychiatrist, pulmonologist, cardiologist, dietitian, and nutritionist. They also want a minimum of two support group sessions before they schedule your surgery and two after it. That had me a little nervous at first because I don't always do well in large groups, but this has been a God-send. I don't see myself not going after I meet the requirement. I would recommend regular attendance at a support group for any one going through this. 

All my consults went very well except one. The cardiology visits turned into a nightmare. What should have been a simple stress test, turned into an echocardiogram, then a nuclear stress test and a cardiac catheterization (not a nice thing at all). All that to tell me what I already knew --- I'M FAT AND ALMOST 50!!! There was no damage to my heart, my big boobs got in the way of the when they did the first two tests. Then my ever loving cardiologist doesn't believe in this kind of surgery, hands me a pedometer and tells me I need to walk more. This from the rail thin doctor that could fit into one leg of my pants and still have room to move. He even had the nerve to write on his progress note that he would hold off on clearance with no explanation as to why. My surgeon would not schedule me til that got cleared up. Thank heavens the cardiologist finally listened to ME and gave clearance. That was Jan 12.

The next big hurdle for me was the 10% weight loss prior to scheduling surgery that my program requires. I know that there are alot of programs that put you on a liquid diet for two -six weeks prior to surgery, but not mine. They really want you to relearn how to eat and they start this process before surgery. It was tough but I did it. I researched how I was going to need to eat after the surgery and applied that. Low carb, lean protein, low fat, etc. It really worked and the weight flew off. Ofcourse, there were alot of people that said if you can do it now why bother with the surgery. Because I know me -- it would be so easy for me to get off track and start overeating. I need this tool to help prevent that. 

I got my date on March 2nd. I was so excited. And very surprised that I was able to have it four weeks later. Most of the people in my program end up waiting six to eight weeks from scheduling to actual surgery. I think mine was quicker because I was going to one of the least senior surgeons. I wasn't picky, I trusted my program enough to know they would only hire very good surgeons.   

My story doesn't end there. Just not enough time to finish right now.