Job & Exercise
I've almost completed my pre-op requirements, so I'm probably looking at a month or 2 before the lap band is put in. Any response would be appreciated.
Thanks
Keep some paper and a pen with you and when you think of a question, write it down and then post it here when you get online. Don't be afraid to ask ANYTHING here, no matter how trivial you think it is. We are ALL here to help. Best of luck to you on the journey to the new you.
--==Rich==--
By all means, I am no doctor and I just shared my personal experiences. Listen to your doctor, but whatever you do, error on the side of caution and you will be happier for it in the long run.
Hope this helps, Taz
Good luck with your DS and your journey, and keep coming back here when you need info. There's lots of guys who've been where you're going and are willilng and able to be of assistance, even if it's only informational in nature. JF
The free man owns himself. He can damage himself with either eating or drinking....... If he does he is certainly a damn fool, and he might possibly be a damned soul; but if he may not, he is not a free man any more than a dog.
I had my DS in two phases because I was a revision and the removal of the lap-band was very complicated. That being said, I have been through 3 of these surgeries all lap. I know financial considerations can be significant when you are out of work, but if you ru**** you will lose even more in the long term due to the extraordinarily long time it takes to recover from something like a leak. (Not to mention, the potential of losing your life.)
One of the things after major surgery is the level of exhaustion you will experience the first few weeks out. You still have anesthesia in your system, you have been on pain meds a while and your body is trying very hard to heal itself from the trauma. You will be fine one minute and need to lie down and sleep the next. Even folks who go back to office jobs too soon get this.
Lifting, climbing and wielding a sledge are major activities. They require strength, flexibility and repetitive actions. Any 1 of these can present a problem. Walking is not so bad, but what you are doing sounds more like hiking. You will need to walk at least a half hour a day around the house to avoid blood clots initially. Doing so outside, in difficult terrain is another matter and the potential for a slip or fall adds to the potential for an adverse event. Your stomach muscles will still be healing and your natural reflex to catch yourself combined with the incisions can create a problem.
I don't know what your relationship is with your employer, or if you are self-employed, how you stand with your customers, but the sooner they see you back, the sooner they will just assume you are 100%. I would avoid being in that position, unless someone can guarantee you a desk job for a few weeks or month plus.
Talk this all over with the DS surgeon. Make sure he realizes what you do. I don't know what your boss is like, but if it is anything like where I have worked in the past, you can't return unless you get a medical clearance. The website is a fantasy for the "Optimal patient" Someone who sits all day and types on a PC or shuffles paper. You work hard. You will need to heal well before you go back. Wish I had better news. The good news is that your overall health will improve so much, and down the road, when you are fully healed and thin, you work day will be so much easier. Good Luck.
Peace,
William
To teach something is to have it. To have something you must be it. Teach peace, for that is what you are.
To listen to me sing: www.youtube.com/watch
