I am expecting to get some angry comments on here but its just something I have to ask!
Why do so many people eat something they shouldn't so soon after their operations? and I am mainly talking about NHS patients here!
"Why are you singling out people who had their operations funded by NHS? Anyone who has had weight loss surgery can have a bad day food wise. This statement in itself to me is slightly offensive. My funding was on the NHS and I have good and bad days. I am not afraid to admit that as this is my life I and I will live it as I see fit. The band inside me helps me control portion size. My surgeon has said time and again to me this is NOT a diet it is a lifestyle change and one you have to live with for a long time and to make it work, food now has to be about balance and normality. A calorie is a calorie, your body doesn't know if it was a from a biscuit or a slice of cheese and a cracker, it's just fuel. As long as you keep calories lower and exercise to burn it off, you can enjoy the occasional treat.
I would have never gone down this road otherwise...for me it was always about portion control as I was a binge eater of both savoury healthy foods and sweet foods too.
You cannot pigeon hole people...thats not fair. We are all indivuduals with our own considerations. If someone has had a bad day, we should offer a hand of friendship and help them through that, not judge of make them feel guilty.
Guilt got some of us to this point...guilt and issues about how we feel about ourselves and that food was our only friends when we were troubled. The operation does not act like an off switch...that is so daft to think so.
We took years to get ourselves into a mess, it might take a period of adjustment. Some cope really quickly and move forward but others don't cope so well with all the changes and old habits can return.
It doesn't mean they are wasting the tool they were given, just adapting to massive life changing event, and there are no timetables"
I'm not interested in stories about how you were costing the NHS more by the meds etc you were on, I am just so curious to know WHY when you have been given an operation on the NHS to you go against guidelines and your teams advice? It is no different to the likes of George Best being given the liver transplant and continuing to drink, why when you have been given the gift of a bypass/band do you continue to eat foods that caused you to get fat in the 1st place and that YOU KNOW could cause old habits to creep back in again
"Okay, if George Best was your dad, would you deny him a liver?????"
Private patients should know better aswell
"WHY???? Does paying for something out of your own pocket mean you are more intelligent???
but at the end of the day their op was paid for privately so if they want to jeopardise it then so be it its well for them that have money to burn but when so many people get their funding turned down etc do you think its fair that those who allow old habits back in and start on the downward spiral of putting on weight again should continue to cost the NHS money?
I dont post alot on here but I do spend some time reading through old posts and the amount of times I have read about people having bad days and just eating whats infront of them is just mind boggling!
"To you, this is your view. What about the person who on that day when they make a bad choice is in conflict and feels bad, they probably don't like that feeling and is made worse by most of your post as you have added a whacking great dollop of guilt and guilt is destructive. I prefer the non judgemental, help them through it approach."
I also know we are only human but at the end of the day you swore blind to your team that you would follow their guidelines and do as they say, if you were to tell them before your op that you might have bad days and eat things you shouldn't risking pouch damage etc...do you think they would give you the operation...I doubt it!!
"I was honest with my NHS surgeon that I wanted to have a normal realationship with food after the op and be able to have the occasional freedom to have something nice, he said thats fine as long as you don'y go mad and that you work it off wth exercise"
I really hope people dont have a go at me, its something that I have wanted to ask for weeks and here is the only place I am able to get an answer
"I think you should be more wary of how you came across. To me it sounded snobbish and judgemental and it upset me as I had operation on NHS"