Healthy Living

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Body of Work: Two years out from weight-loss surgery

Exactly two years ago today, I woke up in a hospital room to find that the Democrats had taken the House, and the surgeon had taken a big chunk of my stomach and a long length of my intestines. I've recovered from the surgery, but I still haven't entirely recovered from the physical fact of it--I elected to have a portion of my anatomy removed, and my intestines re-routed. Two years later, I am an entirely different person, in an entirely different place, with an entirely different life from the one I had started with. Once upon a time, I was three hundred and twenty pounds.

At one hundred thirty five pounds, I am not living the happily-ever-after I expected to be--things are every bit as turned upside-down as they used to be, and my problems have not been solved. Some things are far easier when you're skinny, when you fit into airplane seats, when the first thought someone has about you is less likely to be a judgment about your size or your shape, when the very act of buying clothes (and even shoes) is much more simple than it ever was. These are all things that have made my life different, and in some ways better. (Read more about the magical rewards of being skinny.)

But my tendency toward depression--not cured by a single-digit at the back of my pants. I still procrastinate, I still have a temper. The secret wonderful parts of my personality that I was convinced were packed in fat--as if fat is like dry ice--did not emerge from their cocoon, overshadow the parts I don't like, and make me blossom into a whole new rainbow-colored me.

That fat girl cliché: I don't think I gained all the weight to protect myself from the world, to hide and cower and never have to engage--but it is entirely possible that I used being fat as an excuse to be unhappy, as a scapegoat for all my problems, as a reason for why nothing could ever change, because my body would never change. It is possible that that is why I got weight-loss surgery--by god, something was going to change. By god, did things change.

Two years out, I am supposed to have adjusted to being an unexpected size, to have adjusted to an unexpected shape and an unexpected way of being looked at by the world. I am supposed to have just gotten on with living my life as a person you wouldn't have guessed was obese, but I am still getting tangled up in the politics, the strange guilt, how to talk about it, when to talk about it, what has changed about who I am when you get right down to it, what ought to change, what I wish I could change. The catch is that I am like an old-fashioned broken television set, still, and I keep fiddling with the dial. (Sometimes, losing weight can make you more self-critical.)

Two years out, the good outweighs the difficult, the happiness outweighs the confusion, all the tiny things that normal-sized people take for granted still far outweigh the frustration, and I think I am on my way toward saying yes, it is one of the best things I've ever done.

Related: Is gastric-bypass surgery a weight-loss miracle or more dangerous than it's worth?

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Comments 1-5 of 5
  • Rowdygirl's Avatar
    Posted by Rowdygirl Wed Nov 5, 2008 12:25pm PST

    I read all your posts on this subject and can agree with most everything. I had surgery 5 years ago, and even though mentally I knew that things wouldn't all of sudden be perfect, somewhere in the back of my mind I think I was still hoping that's exactly what would happen. My life as a normal sized person would have to be better and more fulfilling. After all, weren't normal sized people happy, with no problems? ha ha and more ha... My surgeon always says "the surgery doesn't fix your head, it just shrinks your stomach. If you had food/body issues before, you'll still have them afterwards.. he's 100% right.

    You hit it on the head again !

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  • Eryn_Lindsay's Avatar
    Posted by Eryn_Lindsay Wed Nov 5, 2008 2:55pm PST

    ...I say... Deal with it. Because the rest of us have to deal with things like depression and self doubt and on top of that have to actually WORK to lose weight...no sympathy from me...Sorry.

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  • Steph's Avatar
    Posted by Steph Thu Nov 6, 2008 7:58am PST

    No sympathy from me, either. I've lost 30 pounds and I could use to lose another 20 or 30. I'm not overweight enough to get surgery which is the easy way out. I actually have to work for it. I'm also really depressed in general which has a lot to do with my size...No quick fix for me. Aren't YOU lucky.

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  • Jammie's Avatar
    Posted by Jammie Sun Nov 9, 2008 10:04am PST

    Actually, surgery is not neccesarily an easy way out. You still have to change your lifestyle to eating healthy and working out. But with surgery you go a long time only eating very small portions and lots of protein. Some people can only eat a quarter of what someone without surgery can. You can make mistakes people who have the surgery and make food mistakes will get very sick. I am very proud of anyone who chosses to change there life for the better no matter what route you take its not easy and takes alot of courage.

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  • Anna's Avatar
    Posted by Anna Thu Jan 29, 2009 8:12pm PST

    Ok all you skinny people, and all you who have been very fortunate to actually be capable of loosing the weight on your own.

    This surgery is and was designed for those of us who have tried and actually dedicated most of our lives to getting out of this coat of blubber we were blessed to live in. Many reasons why we have been incapable are due to hormonal changes, genetics, medications, depression,massive weight gain during pregnancy along with hormonal changes and the list goes on!

    True, there are those who have used this just because they simply did not have the will power to get up from the table, but most moral physicians who truly believe in the basis behind this surgery, have spent months with their patients, having them try diets under their care, as well as having them take numerous psychological tests to make sure they were dedicated to having this surgery for the right reasons.

    I am almost 6 years out from my gastric bypass.

    My reasons for having it were:

    number one my health; my blood sugar was on a steady rise and having dieabties in my family and seeing the dreaded issues scared me to death! Now there was also the climbing blood pressure, the back pain, the knee pain from carring all that. Now with heart attacks, and artritis also in my genetic tree, again scary! Now the emotional part was hard. Not being able to play with my children! I had horses that I could no longer ride for the simple reason my knee wasn't strong enough to support me to pull up! I couldn't play baseball with my boys; couldn't run! And I was getting to the point when I came home from work I was miserable from walking and standing all day.

    Now at 297 the day of my surgery, I vowed to leave that person that had grown to be someone I hated at the hospital when I left, and that's exactly what I did.

    Yes; I still have depression issues. Yes; I still have most all the character defects that I had prior to the surgery. My self esteem comes and goes, just like any normal person.

    But when I walk past a mirror and stop to think back, my most grateful thing I can think of is because I took the life threatening risk, had the surgery, I am still here and able to walk past that mirror to go play with my son!

    (and by the way; don't look half bad either!)

    If you think this is an easy fix, use your computer for something more than posting on a topic you obviously know nothing about! RESEARCH ring a bell?

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