GET OVER IT!
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his thanksgiving dinner?
i'll take time, effort, and learning to manage my health for the rest of my life as opposed to a quick fix...at least this way i'm learning
Keep up the hard work, life will get in the way, but you (whomever the you was he was talking to) can do this! And we are here for support and advice!0 -
Did the OP have gastric bypass surgery ? .........If he did , he may want to realize that some people dont have insurance that will pay for it, or they just don't have the money
I lost, I got it, but I never critized anyone along the way.......Sheese, lets all play nice0 -
OP: maybe the people you are complaining about are not quite " there yet ". Maybe they are today where you were before. Maybe just like you they need to go through a process and that needs time. I think you need to practice patience and some understanding as far as your fellow MFPers are concerned.
That's the thing... he will never have that understanding it's a process and the patience needed cuz he never went thru that. He went directly under the knife. Now it's just that he has to eat a little. So he'll never have that sympathy. That's why he's all "I'm successful and you're not cuz you're whiny crybabies." He needs to get over it.
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OP, I posted a supportive kudos to you in your success stories thread. But in response to this particular post, I'd like to remind you that the vast majority regain their weight within 5 years of losing it.
I hope your tough love words don't come back to haunt you. And I mean that sincerely.
If you are interested in helping other morbidly obese who are just not getting over it, like Sheepotato said, maybe fill in the details of how you did it.
As inspirational as your before and afters are, some practical advice to your morbidly obese brothers and sisters would be even more inspirational.
Beautifully stated. Love the eloquence!0 -
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best backfire I've seen in a while.0
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So Much Love.
don't step there. That's love. Let me get the mop.0 -
LOL!
http://www.breaktopic.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/demotivational-posters-this-will-not-end-well1.jpeg
I hear what you are saying but "get over it" does not help me. It takes forever to lose weight when y ou get over 50. You had gastric bypass, that is easier than trying to lose 20 pounds once you get as old as I am.0 -
This kind of sanctimony, acrimony and disharmony is usually found in "Motivation & Support".
Not that I'm complaining.0 -
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Lasmartchika wrote: »OP: maybe the people you are complaining about are not quite " there yet ". Maybe they are today where you were before. Maybe just like you they need to go through a process and that needs time. I think you need to practice patience and some understanding as far as your fellow MFPers are concerned.
That's the thing... he will never have that understanding it's a process and the patience needed cuz he never went thru that. He went directly under the knife. Now it's just that he has to eat a little. So he'll never have that sympathy. That's why he's all "I'm successful and you're not cuz you're whiny crybabies." He needs to get over it.
Not defending the OP whatsoever but most people who do gastric have to go through a lot before going "under the knife." They do have to try other diets first. That being said - I'm doing it the calorie counting way because I will NOT get surgery if there's any other option. I've seen the complications my parents had from their bypass surgeries. Unless I'm physically unable to lose anymore and am still at risk for health complications (right now my cholesterol is a tad high and there's family history to consider) I'm going to do it this way.0 -
Two thirds of gastrics end up regaining the bulk of the weight inside of five years.
And then what...?
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Two thirds of gastrics end up regaining the bulk of the weight inside of five years.
And then what...?
This is something I've been curious about. If they are physically unable to overeat because of the surgery, how do they regain? I mean obviously they start consuming more calories than they expend, but shouldn't there still be a stopgap because of the surgery? Does the "stop you're full" sensation go away?0 -
daybehavior wrote: »Two thirds of gastrics end up regaining the bulk of the weight inside of five years.
And then what...?
This is something I've been curious about. If they are physically unable to overeat because of the surgery, how do they regain? I mean obviously they start consuming more calories than they expend, but shouldn't there still be a stopgap because of the surgery? Does the "stop you're full" sensation go away?
A lot of posters above touched on it - by taking a surgical short cut like this, subjects don't learn proper eating habits. So, eventually, they stretch their insides back out.
Add in a dose of self-righteous arrogance about "getting over it", and it's a disaster waiting to happen.
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daybehavior wrote: »Two thirds of gastrics end up regaining the bulk of the weight inside of five years.
And then what...?
This is something I've been curious about. If they are physically unable to overeat because of the surgery, how do they regain? I mean obviously they start consuming more calories than they expend, but shouldn't there still be a stopgap because of the surgery? Does the "stop you're full" sensation go away?
They stretch their smaller stomachs to fit more, I'm sure it's incredibly painful. There is the lapband where the stomach is not cut but restricted with a band, people have had them slip off or their stomach burst.
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daybehavior wrote: »Two thirds of gastrics end up regaining the bulk of the weight inside of five years.
And then what...?
This is something I've been curious about. If they are physically unable to overeat because of the surgery, how do they regain? I mean obviously they start consuming more calories than they expend, but shouldn't there still be a stopgap because of the surgery? Does the "stop you're full" sensation go away?
A lot of posters above touched on it - by taking a surgical short cut like this, subjects don't learn proper eating habits. So, eventually, they stretch their insides back out.
Add in a dose of self-righteous arrogance about "getting over it", and it's a disaster waiting to happen.
Ha! Funny because a lot of WLS proponents like point out that they still have to learn to eat correctly and the surgery is just a tool, etc. Didn't know the relapse rate was so dismal.sheepotato wrote: »daybehavior wrote: »Two thirds of gastrics end up regaining the bulk of the weight inside of five years.
And then what...?
This is something I've been curious about. If they are physically unable to overeat because of the surgery, how do they regain? I mean obviously they start consuming more calories than they expend, but shouldn't there still be a stopgap because of the surgery? Does the "stop you're full" sensation go away?
They stretch their smaller stomachs to fit more, I'm sure it's incredibly painful. There is the lapband where the stomach is not cut but restricted with a band, people have had them slip off or their stomach burst.
yikes. Yeah I'd think it'd be painful too but apparently its not enough to discourage people from relapse.0 -
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did OP ever come back?????????0
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