jaxx
New Member
...and I still struggle with my relationship with food. I'm having to be strict with myself now as old habits crept back. For the past 6 months I've been hovering around the 15 stone mark and not losing much. I realise now that even though I've had a bypass I still need to control my mental urges. Ok I don't get the raging hunger like I used to but I can still put a fair amount of food away during the course of a day.
I was so pleased when I realised I could make sugar free biscuits just because I could have a little treat. I limited myself to just 4 biscuits a day but that soon crept up and I found myself getting stressed if I didn't have any. After 6 months of stalling I realised I had to do something. So I stopped making biscuits, stopped relying on carbs for snacks and upped my exercise. I've been complacent and thought the weight would continue to fall off like it did just after my surgery.
I now go to the gym 3 times a week for 30 minute workouts and I now walk part way into work for 30 minutes 3 days a week and after one week I'm already seeing results. I now take fruit into work for snacks (I have a boring job and used food to keep me occupied), adjusted my portion size further and am trying to drink more fluids.
I think what I'm trying to say by telling you all this that the struggle to lose weight will continue after surgery and I knew I had to make changes but I never realised how much work it would still take. Having the bypass makes that work a bit easier than before surgery but it can still be a struggle especially in times of stress. Another consideration is the lose skin I now have. I think I didn't want to lose much more weight as it already looks horrible and if I lost more weight it would look worse. But My health is still at stake so the last few stone have to go and I will have to learn to live with what I've done to my body.
I don't want to put any pre-opers off but just to let you know that although the physical aspect of overeating is taken care off with the bypass, that is just the beginning. The bypass is a tool to help you lose weight but you still have to make the right choices for it to work. I knew that going in but I didn't realise how much of a struggle it would still be. I used to get suicidal when I tried to diet before my surgery. Now my bypass makes making the right choices easier but you still have to make the right choices.
Ramble over with lol.
I was so pleased when I realised I could make sugar free biscuits just because I could have a little treat. I limited myself to just 4 biscuits a day but that soon crept up and I found myself getting stressed if I didn't have any. After 6 months of stalling I realised I had to do something. So I stopped making biscuits, stopped relying on carbs for snacks and upped my exercise. I've been complacent and thought the weight would continue to fall off like it did just after my surgery.
I now go to the gym 3 times a week for 30 minute workouts and I now walk part way into work for 30 minutes 3 days a week and after one week I'm already seeing results. I now take fruit into work for snacks (I have a boring job and used food to keep me occupied), adjusted my portion size further and am trying to drink more fluids.
I think what I'm trying to say by telling you all this that the struggle to lose weight will continue after surgery and I knew I had to make changes but I never realised how much work it would still take. Having the bypass makes that work a bit easier than before surgery but it can still be a struggle especially in times of stress. Another consideration is the lose skin I now have. I think I didn't want to lose much more weight as it already looks horrible and if I lost more weight it would look worse. But My health is still at stake so the last few stone have to go and I will have to learn to live with what I've done to my body.
I don't want to put any pre-opers off but just to let you know that although the physical aspect of overeating is taken care off with the bypass, that is just the beginning. The bypass is a tool to help you lose weight but you still have to make the right choices for it to work. I knew that going in but I didn't realise how much of a struggle it would still be. I used to get suicidal when I tried to diet before my surgery. Now my bypass makes making the right choices easier but you still have to make the right choices.
Ramble over with lol.
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