Had to buy bigger clothes...
Replies
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My previous eating disorder and ocpd make me ridiculously accurate at logging. I don’t drink soda, use fake sweeteners or eat much meat. With the exception of alcohol and coffee with milk and sugar, I only drink water and unsweetened tea. I don’t chew gum. I log candy. I eat the same meals over and over. Generally I have a Greek yogurt, banana or skip breakfast. I eat lots of chick fil a Cobb salads with nuggets and no dressing. Sometimes I have two of day with a Greek yogurt for breakfast. That with my yougurt and coffee is 1200 calories...
Calories are what matter for weight loss. It doesn't matter what you drink, whether you chew gum, whether you skip breakfast, etc. It doesn't matter what specific foods those calories come from. All that matters is making sure that you are consistently in a calorie deficit.
You state that you frequently eat food that you did not prepare yourself. This means you don't know how many calories are in that food. The portion you're served is often significantly larger than the portion used to calculate the nutrition information on the website. Having a logging error every now and then is not a problem, but when you are frequently estimating your calories rather than being able to weigh and log accurately, those errors can add up very fast. And when you are talking about fried food like chicken nuggets, a small variation in portion size can mean a substantial increase in calories.
Bottom line is that it is extremely likely you're eating well over 1200 calories on a regular basis.15 -
My previous eating disorder and ocpd make me ridiculously accurate at logging. I don’t drink soda, use fake sweeteners or eat much meat. With the exception of alcohol and coffee with milk and sugar, I only drink water and unsweetened tea. I don’t chew gum. I log candy. I eat the same meals over and over. Generally I have a Greek yogurt, banana or skip breakfast. I eat lots of chick fil a Cobb salads with nuggets and no dressing. Sometimes I have two of day with a Greek yogurt for breakfast. That with my yougurt and coffee is 1200 calories...
You are not the first person to come through here convinced you are logging correctly and also convinced you have a problem with a more complicated answer than just eating more than you realize. I really don't know the answer for you but I do have an observation.
That salad you are eating could easily be double the calories you think it is. There is not an employee in the back very carefully weighing all the ingredients to make sure the salad is consistent. More likely there is no measuring going on at all and you are getting handfuls of ingredients.
I don't mind getting a big salad from somewhere and even recording the calories from a website on occasion. I do not, however, trust any salad over 150 calories from a restaurant to be a regular part of my plan.12 -
Do you strength train? Maybe having some muscle mass will help your metabolism?3
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Do you strength train? Maybe having some muscle mass will help your metabolism?
The OP has stated elsewhere that she has no desire to build muscle. However, given her current stats, if she were truly eating 1200 calories a day she would be losing weight. Now that she's mentioned eating take out salads very frequently, that's probably the issue and not her metabolism.
OP, you cannot claim to be logging accurately if you're eating out. You just can't. Start making your own salads with similar ingredients - you can prep a bunch in advance to take with you to work or whatever during the week. It'll save you money and you'll have complete control over the ingredients - if you weigh and log everything accurately. I'm willing to bet you'll start to see some progress if you cut out the Chick Fil A meals.15 -
My previous eating disorder and ocpd make me ridiculously accurate at logging. I don’t drink soda, use fake sweeteners or eat much meat. With the exception of alcohol and coffee with milk and sugar, I only drink water and unsweetened tea. I don’t chew gum. I log candy. I eat the same meals over and over. Generally I have a Greek yogurt, banana or skip breakfast. I eat lots of chick fil a Cobb salads with nuggets and no dressing. Sometimes I have two of day with a Greek yogurt for breakfast. That with my yougurt and coffee is 1200 calories...
Just as a follow up, to show you how you're contradicting yourself... the two bolded statements are at odds. You cannot possibly be "ridiculously accurate" if you're eating a lot of take out food. You can't trust restaurant nutrition info for something you're eating on a regular basis, every person will make it differently and like someone said above, the ingredients are most likely not weighed.11 -
rheddmobile wrote: »On another thread several people were discussing weight gain with IUDs. Whatever causes it, these were long time MFP users who had no trouble maintaining until they got the IUD, gained a noticeable amount of weight in a short time, then lost it without difficulty when it was removed. For some a different variety of IUD did not cause the weight gain. Some felt they were eating more because the hormones made them constantly hungry, others felt they were eating as before but gaining weight, but regardless, getting rid of the IUD solved the problem. So if you do feel this is the cause of your issues, it may be worth exploring other birth control.
Thanks for sharing this. It just dawned on me my Mirena could be why I'm always hungry and why I'm steadily gaining over time. I always figured the fault was mine, even though I weigh and log everything down to my vitamins. It was so frustrating that I kinda gave up for a while. When you keep hearing CICO is the end all be all, it's easy to overlook other causes.7 -
I think if I were you I would bring my logs to a dietitian or nutritionist and talk to her/him about this issue. Especially given a history of an eating disorder, professional advice is warranted!7
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Do you strength train? Maybe having some muscle mass will help your metabolism?
The OP has stated elsewhere that she has no desire to build muscle. However, given her current stats, if she were truly eating 1200 calories a day she would be losing weight. Now that she's mentioned eating take out salads very frequently, that's probably the issue and not her metabolism.
OP, you cannot claim to be logging accurately if you're eating out. You just can't. Start making your own salads with similar ingredients - you can prep a bunch in advance to take with you to work or whatever during the week. It'll save you money and you'll have complete control over the ingredients - if you weigh and log everything accurately. I'm willing to bet you'll start to see some progress if you cut out the Chick Fil A meals.
Actually I did see that after I posted. She doesn't want to build "nasty" muscles Each to their own I suppose...
I agree also re the 1,200 calories. People tend to underestimate the calories consumed and overestimate calories burned.6 -
New_Heavens_Earth wrote: »rheddmobile wrote: »On another thread several people were discussing weight gain with IUDs. Whatever causes it, these were long time MFP users who had no trouble maintaining until they got the IUD, gained a noticeable amount of weight in a short time, then lost it without difficulty when it was removed. For some a different variety of IUD did not cause the weight gain. Some felt they were eating more because the hormones made them constantly hungry, others felt they were eating as before but gaining weight, but regardless, getting rid of the IUD solved the problem. So if you do feel this is the cause of your issues, it may be worth exploring other birth control.
Thanks for sharing this. It just dawned on me my Mirena could be why I'm always hungry and why I'm steadily gaining over time. I always figured the fault was mine, even though I weigh and log everything down to my vitamins. It was so frustrating that I kinda gave up for a while. When you keep hearing CICO is the end all be all, it's easy to overlook other causes.
The OP stated her age before. Should she opt for something like Paraguard, and it works for her, she'll have a real winner. The way this works is, that for women in their 40s, a new one of these will likely be the very last one they'll ever need. Statistically, when it's 10 years are up, it will not likely be 'needed' considering the woman's age, and it'll just stay in until post menopause. I'm guessing, doctors don't make as much money on it.... My niece had the same weight gain issues with the Mirena. Hormones made her hungry as well. Her body didn't cope with the copper, and she found an entirely different option, involving her hubby. Snip...4 -
New_Heavens_Earth wrote: »rheddmobile wrote: »On another thread several people were discussing weight gain with IUDs. Whatever causes it, these were long time MFP users who had no trouble maintaining until they got the IUD, gained a noticeable amount of weight in a short time, then lost it without difficulty when it was removed. For some a different variety of IUD did not cause the weight gain. Some felt they were eating more because the hormones made them constantly hungry, others felt they were eating as before but gaining weight, but regardless, getting rid of the IUD solved the problem. So if you do feel this is the cause of your issues, it may be worth exploring other birth control.
Thanks for sharing this. It just dawned on me my Mirena could be why I'm always hungry and why I'm steadily gaining over time. I always figured the fault was mine, even though I weigh and log everything down to my vitamins. It was so frustrating that I kinda gave up for a while. When you keep hearing CICO is the end all be all, it's easy to overlook other causes.
I’m sorry to be the barer of bad news but birth control is and cannot be literal reason for your weight gain. Only a surplus of calories. However, it can explain water retention and hunger. But many people with this knowledge have maintained and lost weight knowing how to accurately log their food with a scale. Try not to be defeated by this, but empowered instead.14 -
msalicia07 wrote: »New_Heavens_Earth wrote: »rheddmobile wrote: »On another thread several people were discussing weight gain with IUDs. Whatever causes it, these were long time MFP users who had no trouble maintaining until they got the IUD, gained a noticeable amount of weight in a short time, then lost it without difficulty when it was removed. For some a different variety of IUD did not cause the weight gain. Some felt they were eating more because the hormones made them constantly hungry, others felt they were eating as before but gaining weight, but regardless, getting rid of the IUD solved the problem. So if you do feel this is the cause of your issues, it may be worth exploring other birth control.
Thanks for sharing this. It just dawned on me my Mirena could be why I'm always hungry and why I'm steadily gaining over time. I always figured the fault was mine, even though I weigh and log everything down to my vitamins. It was so frustrating that I kinda gave up for a while. When you keep hearing CICO is the end all be all, it's easy to overlook other causes.
I’m sorry to be the barer of bad news but birth control is and cannot be literal reason for your weight gain. Only a surplus of calories. However, it can explain water retention and hunger. But many people with this knowledge have maintained and lost weight knowing how to accurately log their food with a scale. Try not to be defeated by this, but empowered instead.
Thank you but when I'm hungry my deficit obviously goes out the window right? I never said it made me gain as if by magic. It stimulated my appetite. That and you also don't know my history.16 -
I eat the same as I always have and gained the weight. You can see on my progress chart the steady climb.
I showed my doctor. He did agree that it does appear to be a steady 50 lb gain every time I get an iud and a 50 lb decrease when it expires.
He tested my hormones and said it was all normal so he does not see how the iud causes it.
I am 40 and not yet menopausal. I don’t want to take chances on an unwanted pregnancy. We struggled with finding birth control that prevented pregnancy. The iud works in that area
I've tried many forms of birth control over the years and by far the best was him getting a vasectomy. He was in minor discomfort over the weekend. After the test showed he was now "shooting blanks" - conjugal bliss!10 -
My previous eating disorder and ocpd make me ridiculously accurate at logging. I don’t drink soda, use fake sweeteners or eat much meat. With the exception of alcohol and coffee with milk and sugar, I only drink water and unsweetened tea. I don’t chew gum. I log candy. I eat the same meals over and over. Generally I have a Greek yogurt, banana or skip breakfast. I eat lots of chick fil a Cobb salads with nuggets and no dressing. Sometimes I have two of day with a Greek yogurt for breakfast. That with my yougurt and coffee is 1200 calories...
Just as a follow up, to show you how you're contradicting yourself... the two bolded statements are at odds. You cannot possibly be "ridiculously accurate" if you're eating a lot of take out food. You can't trust restaurant nutrition info for something you're eating on a regular basis, every person will make it differently and like someone said above, the ingredients are most likely not weighed.
You really can't trust them to make it the same every time, I watched Undercover Boss last week, it was about the guy who owns the Muscle Maker Grill and one of his franchisee's was literally eyeballing the portions he was putting into very specific dishes aimed at people adhering to very specific macros. They were probably hundreds of calories off and that's from a place specifically aimed at healthy people.
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I spent the day shopping for bigger clothes. I am watching my calories, sticking to 1200 calories without eating back my exercise calories, using my elliptical and gaining weight. Go me...
I just don’t lose on 1200 calories. I am pretty sure it has something to do with me having an eating disorder in my younger days. My body learned to use less calories. I did a few calculators online and it said I need to be in the 1000 range to lose weight.
I am being so exact that today I drank a margarita so I have only eaten chicken and fajita vegetables as my only meal.
I feel like I am destined to have to exist on eating salads with no meat and dressing for the rest of my life, in order to get my slim body back. Or spend hours a day working out.
Did you make the margarita yourself? If not, you have no way of knowing how exact the calories are. It sounds like you are consuming a lot of sugar (in your coffee, in your alcohol, margarita mix, probably in the salad dressing), and that will make you gain weight. Try cutting out sugar altogether. You'll feel better too.31 -
mbaugh0265 wrote: »I spent the day shopping for bigger clothes. I am watching my calories, sticking to 1200 calories without eating back my exercise calories, using my elliptical and gaining weight. Go me...
I just don’t lose on 1200 calories. I am pretty sure it has something to do with me having an eating disorder in my younger days. My body learned to use less calories. I did a few calculators online and it said I need to be in the 1000 range to lose weight.
I am being so exact that today I drank a margarita so I have only eaten chicken and fajita vegetables as my only meal.
I feel like I am destined to have to exist on eating salads with no meat and dressing for the rest of my life, in order to get my slim body back. Or spend hours a day working out.
Did you make the margarita yourself? If not, you have no way of knowing how exact the calories are. It sounds like you are consuming a lot of sugar (in your coffee, in your alcohol, margarita mix, probably in the salad dressing), and that will make you gain weight. Try cutting out sugar altogether. You'll feel better too.
Hi and welcome to MFP.
You may start to notice that your post will begin accumulating 'woo' votes (none from me). This is because you have posted a myth as a weight loss fact. Sugar does not cause weight gain. You gain weight when you eat more calories than you need for the energy you expend. You lose weight when you are in a calorie deficit. Sugar can be part of either.
You should also be careful making blanket statements like "you'll feel better too" because that will not the be the case for everyone.
I believed a lot of wrong things in the past that eventually held me back from losing weight. It is even easier now since the internet is full of diet myths that seem to have evidence supporting them. I watched a video one time about "leaky" gut and even though I knew it was nonsense it still sounded convincing.
For some people cutting out sugar will lead to rage quitting and/or binging. Some people need added sugar in their diets or they feel deprived.32 -
grinning_chick wrote: »I eat the same as I always have and gained the weight. You can see on my progress chart the steady climb.
I showed my doctor. He did agree that it does appear to be a steady 50 lb gain every time I get an iud and a 50 lb decrease when it expires.
He tested my hormones and said it was all normal so he does not see how the iud causes it.
I am 40 and not yet menopausal. I don’t want to take chances on an unwanted pregnancy. We struggled with finding birth control that prevented pregnancy. The iud works in that area
Yay, another doctor who treats the labs and not the patient! Yay!
[/snark]
Seriously, get a Paragard IUD then. The Paragard was here before the Mirena and it works, just no progestin like the Mirena. You'll likely have heavier bleeding, longer bleeding, and uterine cramping with but there will be no exogenous hormones to argue with such a MD/DO if they are/are not affecting you systemically.
He will balk because of the cost of the IUD in removing it/replacing it, but it's really not his choice. Go to a Planned Parenthood if you have to for removal if he continues to refuse, and you won't fire him over it, and you are not comfortable removing yourself to force the replacement without his input.
Is that the copper one? I can’t have it because of the heavy bleeding. We are treating anemia as well. I am not anemic when I don’t get heavy periods.
At this point I would cut it all out but he seems to feel like that is an issue with me being only 40 with hormones and stuff.
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grinning_chick wrote: »I eat the same as I always have and gained the weight. You can see on my progress chart the steady climb.
I showed my doctor. He did agree that it does appear to be a steady 50 lb gain every time I get an iud and a 50 lb decrease when it expires.
He tested my hormones and said it was all normal so he does not see how the iud causes it.
I am 40 and not yet menopausal. I don’t want to take chances on an unwanted pregnancy. We struggled with finding birth control that prevented pregnancy. The iud works in that area
Yay, another doctor who treats the labs and not the patient! Yay!
[/snark]
Seriously, get a Paragard IUD then. The Paragard was here before the Mirena and it works, just no progestin like the Mirena. You'll likely have heavier bleeding, longer bleeding, and uterine cramping with but there will be no exogenous hormones to argue with such a MD/DO if they are/are not affecting you systemically.
He will balk because of the cost of the IUD in removing it/replacing it, but it's really not his choice. Go to a Planned Parenthood if you have to for removal if he continues to refuse, and you won't fire him over it, and you are not comfortable removing yourself to force the replacement without his input.
Is that the copper one? I can’t have it because of the heavy bleeding. We are treating anemia as well. I am not anemic when I don’t get heavy periods.
At this point I would cut it all out but he seems to feel like that is an issue with me being only 40 with hormones and stuff.
What about a vasectomy? Those are able to be reversed and the procedure is much easier than a tubal.12 -
kshama2001 wrote: »grinning_chick wrote: »I eat the same as I always have and gained the weight. You can see on my progress chart the steady climb.
I showed my doctor. He did agree that it does appear to be a steady 50 lb gain every time I get an iud and a 50 lb decrease when it expires.
He tested my hormones and said it was all normal so he does not see how the iud causes it.
I am 40 and not yet menopausal. I don’t want to take chances on an unwanted pregnancy. We struggled with finding birth control that prevented pregnancy. The iud works in that area
Yay, another doctor who treats the labs and not the patient! Yay!
[/snark]
Seriously, get a Paragard IUD then. The Paragard was here before the Mirena and it works, just no progestin like the Mirena. You'll likely have heavier bleeding, longer bleeding, and uterine cramping with but there will be no exogenous hormones to argue with such a MD/DO if they are/are not affecting you systemically.
He will balk because of the cost of the IUD in removing it/replacing it, but it's really not his choice. Go to a Planned Parenthood if you have to for removal if he continues to refuse, and you won't fire him over it, and you are not comfortable removing yourself to force the replacement without his input.
Is that the copper one? I can’t have it because of the heavy bleeding. We are treating anemia as well. I am not anemic when I don’t get heavy periods.
At this point I would cut it all out but he seems to feel like that is an issue with me being only 40 with hormones and stuff.
What about a vasectomy? Those are able to be reversed and the procedure is much easier than a tubal.
Another vote for vasectomy here. I mean, in retrospect I should have said “yes” when my doc asked whether I’d like a tubal ligation during my c-section, but I hadn’t planned on a repeat cs and did a bit of magical thinking “if I don’t about it, it won’t happen.” (Rolling my eyes at myself here.) My husband was only sore the day of and the next day, and honestly was kind of grateful for a good excuse to spend the weekend binge watching shows while I ran around with the big kid and newborn!4 -
Vasectomy has worked well here for birth control (especially as I can no longer use any hormonal treatments), but of course, didn't help my heavy periods - can you have another chat with your doctor?
My doc has put me on tranexamic acid tablets for the heaviest bleeding days. Really has made a big difference to my energy/iron levels, and also means I can leave the house without masses of extra supplies and clothes on those heavy days! Oh, the joys of periods.
I realise that's only my own personal experience, so not the be all and end all for everyone, but I just wish I'd known there was such a thing available years ago!0 -
grinning_chick wrote: »I eat the same as I always have and gained the weight. You can see on my progress chart the steady climb.
I showed my doctor. He did agree that it does appear to be a steady 50 lb gain every time I get an iud and a 50 lb decrease when it expires.
He tested my hormones and said it was all normal so he does not see how the iud causes it.
I am 40 and not yet menopausal. I don’t want to take chances on an unwanted pregnancy. We struggled with finding birth control that prevented pregnancy. The iud works in that area
Yay, another doctor who treats the labs and not the patient! Yay!
[/snark]
Seriously, get a Paragard IUD then. The Paragard was here before the Mirena and it works, just no progestin like the Mirena. You'll likely have heavier bleeding, longer bleeding, and uterine cramping with but there will be no exogenous hormones to argue with such a MD/DO if they are/are not affecting you systemically.
He will balk because of the cost of the IUD in removing it/replacing it, but it's really not his choice. Go to a Planned Parenthood if you have to for removal if he continues to refuse, and you won't fire him over it, and you are not comfortable removing yourself to force the replacement without his input.
Is that the copper one? I can’t have it because of the heavy bleeding. We are treating anemia as well. I am not anemic when I don’t get heavy periods.
At this point I would cut it all out but he seems to feel like that is an issue with me being only 40 with hormones and stuff.
Ask your provider about a partial hyster. They leave the ovaries but take the uterus and cervix. This can minimize the hormone issues. My mother had one due to endometriosis when she was 42. No problems. No early menopause. Just no more kids or periods. Still had the ovaries which are the primary hormone creators for that stuff. Worth a chat at least.1 -
Vasectomy has worked well here for birth control (especially as I can no longer use any hormonal treatments), but of course, didn't help my heavy periods - can you have another chat with your doctor?
My doc has put me on tranexamic acid tablets for the heaviest bleeding days. Really has made a big difference to my energy/iron levels, and also means I can leave the house without masses of extra supplies and clothes on those heavy days! Oh, the joys of periods.
I realise that's only my own personal experience, so not the be all and end all for everyone, but I just wish I'd known there was such a thing available years ago!
Yes, I am taking tranexamic acid as well and it has reduced the bleeding by 33 - 50%.
I had to inform my GYN about it, and it took some time to get it approved by the VA as it is not in their formulary for this purpose, but it was worth the struggle.0 -
You're not eating 1200 calories. Guaranteed. The milk and sugar in the coffee. The alcohol. The take out salads.6
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The price shouldn't be an issue, as those will last 10 years. I think, I went through 4 of this type in 30 years, and never had a problem, especially not with weight gain. (I blame my chocolate addiction for a few pounds off and on.) However, they work with a copper layer, and if there is a sensitivty to copper, then there might be an issue. Never make an attempt to remove those yourself, though. Bad idea and worse advise. Also, removal and not having an immediate replacement means no protection. That's probably not the idea of the exercise..
The cost I am referring to is the one equal to removal one recently installed IUD (IUD #1 cost) and replacement with a different IUD (IUD #2 cost). FWIW, that little piece plastic with a tiny bit of small gauge copper wire wrapped around was $650 at a PP back in 2009. I can only imagine how much it is today.
I mention price because that is exactly the argument the OB/GYN at PP argued, wanting me to keep in a Paragard that was causing BV and go on what would have been endless cycles of metronidazole instead of removing as I requested, six weeks after insertion. Lucky for me, I know how advocate successfully for myself when it comes to medicine/medical treatments. Many do not.
As such, if doctor's are refusing to remove an IUD, and you want it out of your body, you can indeed DIY as long as you don't rip the retrieval strings off of it. There is no special tool for removal that only doctors have access to. Research (especially things that can go wrong/when to seek medical help) and a healthy dose of common sense is required, so I guess I should have caveated both since the latter does seem to sometimes be in short supply these days. Arguing to suck it up and leave one in when you don't want it in your body anymore but doctors are playing gods with you and refusing to remove it, thinking they know better than you what is good for you, is a bad idea and worse advice from this armchair.
If a woman does not know that no more IUD in her = no more protection from unwanted pregnancy, and to take appropriate back up measures until another one is installed/other form of BC takes effect/seeks permanent sterilization, I would argue there are larger issues in play in need of address...
4 -
grinning_chick wrote: »I eat the same as I always have and gained the weight. You can see on my progress chart the steady climb.
I showed my doctor. He did agree that it does appear to be a steady 50 lb gain every time I get an iud and a 50 lb decrease when it expires.
He tested my hormones and said it was all normal so he does not see how the iud causes it.
I am 40 and not yet menopausal. I don’t want to take chances on an unwanted pregnancy. We struggled with finding birth control that prevented pregnancy. The iud works in that area
Yay, another doctor who treats the labs and not the patient! Yay!
[/snark]
Seriously, get a Paragard IUD then. The Paragard was here before the Mirena and it works, just no progestin like the Mirena. You'll likely have heavier bleeding, longer bleeding, and uterine cramping with but there will be no exogenous hormones to argue with such a MD/DO if they are/are not affecting you systemically.
He will balk because of the cost of the IUD in removing it/replacing it, but it's really not his choice. Go to a Planned Parenthood if you have to for removal if he continues to refuse, and you won't fire him over it, and you are not comfortable removing yourself to force the replacement without his input.
Is that the copper one? I can’t have it because of the heavy bleeding. We are treating anemia as well. I am not anemic when I don’t get heavy periods.
At this point I would cut it all out but he seems to feel like that is an issue with me being only 40 with hormones and stuff.
Has your doctor talked to you about an ablation? It does nothing for birth control, but can help with your heavy periods.0 -
Maybe 5:2 IF or calorie cycling would help to make meeting your calorie goals easier to meet?0
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grinning_chick wrote: »I eat the same as I always have and gained the weight. You can see on my progress chart the steady climb.
I showed my doctor. He did agree that it does appear to be a steady 50 lb gain every time I get an iud and a 50 lb decrease when it expires.
He tested my hormones and said it was all normal so he does not see how the iud causes it.
I am 40 and not yet menopausal. I don’t want to take chances on an unwanted pregnancy. We struggled with finding birth control that prevented pregnancy. The iud works in that area
Yay, another doctor who treats the labs and not the patient! Yay!
[/snark]
Seriously, get a Paragard IUD then. The Paragard was here before the Mirena and it works, just no progestin like the Mirena. You'll likely have heavier bleeding, longer bleeding, and uterine cramping with but there will be no exogenous hormones to argue with such a MD/DO if they are/are not affecting you systemically.
He will balk because of the cost of the IUD in removing it/replacing it, but it's really not his choice. Go to a Planned Parenthood if you have to for removal if he continues to refuse, and you won't fire him over it, and you are not comfortable removing yourself to force the replacement without his input.
Is that the copper one? I can’t have it because of the heavy bleeding. We are treating anemia as well. I am not anemic when I don’t get heavy periods.
At this point I would cut it all out but he seems to feel like that is an issue with me being only 40 with hormones and stuff.
Vote for a tubal ligation an endometrial ablation. All the plumbing stays where it is (no hormone issues), but the faucet is permanently turned off. Worth it!0
This discussion has been closed.
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