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We encourage you to join us as we celebrate ObesityHelp in 1998 and now. Many members will remember the screens shown in this video and will enjoy the walk down memory lane. If you're new, you'll like the strides and successes we've had during our 16 years with our members.
Please like and share on the video from our OH Facebook page.
We proudly present "Making the Journey Together for 16 Years" . . . . . . . .
Hi Mandy,
I'm same day surgiversary as you! I'm down 178 lbs, with about a dozen to meet surgeon goal. Less than forty more and I'll hit my personal goal. I have felt great overall in the last year, being so much more active and less self conscious about my size while doing things. One small drawback in the last couple months have been diagnosed with a umbilical hernia and just had the repair surgery last Friday. Will be recoving for the next week or two. After that I hope to back in full swing & really active again. The hernia was incarcerated (trapped) and extremely painful until the ER doc pushed it back inside each time prior to this surgical fix. That being said, I wouldn't change my decision and feel fantastic overall. Glad you are SO successful practically at goal in just a year. Good for you!!
My 1 year surgiversary was 11/7/12....I feel awesome ! I am down 162 lbs with about 5 lbs more to go. I am more active than ever. I would do it again in a heartbeat :) How are my surgery buddies?
Tomorrow is my official one year surgiversary. I have considered many ways to format this post; A year in a day - playing it out chronologically as if the past 12 months were 24 hours; "**** Skinny People Say" (The **** XXXX say is a tired men, so I will stay away from that). How do I best describe a single calendar year that has been so transformative? The last year that saw so many changes for me started with a sperm cell fertilizing an egg. SERIOUSLY!
I tried to get all of the before an after pics together. I simply avoided the camera too much before this for that to be successful. I couldn't get all of the different photos from various surgeons in time. Maybe for a year end post. I wish now that I had done a better job of documenting my transformation. Take that as a lesson new people. You may have body image issues, you may hate how you look right now, but when you come out the other side you will want a record of just how much you have accomplished.
So lets recap: I have had five surgeries over the past 12 months. Yes, five. I have been doing extreme makeover the home edition. My journey started last September. I was traveling for business. I had just paid a ticket for running a red light in Chicago (Damn Red light cams). I ran the light because I couldn't see it. My vision had gotten that bad. I had a mouthful of loose teeth. The teeth would vibrate and hurt when I spoke in a certain way. I had hypertension that was controlled with drugs. I had Type II diabetes that couldn't be controlled no matter how many injectables and oral meds I tried. The next month would see me start on insulin. The diabetes was leading to circulation and neurological issues. Neuropathy, lymphedema, and probably gangrene were not far off.
I was aging at a rate roughly 30 years ahead the clock. I was having problems that my parents were only starting to have in their late 60s/early 70s. I was dying, and I wasn't being slothful about it.
I started looking into the lap-band. Incidentally enough, my PCP told me about a study at Vanderbilt where they were seeing bariatric levels of weight loss by using one of my diabetes meds off label. He suggested I might be able to get into that study. When I asked about the lap band and mentioned my research, he recommended the doctor who would eventually become my surgeon.
In the next 6 weeks, I did my initial seminar, psych eval, and initial consult. That consultation was on October 25th. I was crestfallen when I went to schedule and the first available date was a month away. I asked if there was anything sooner. From my lips to God's ears. Not five minutes later one of the assistants came in. Another patients surgery had to be cancelled because of a problem with his meds and labs. That patients surgery was to be scheduled the following Wednesday on November second. They gave me that date.
The next week was a whirlwind. Labs, pre-op testing, etc. - You all know the drill. That week was emotionally terrifying for me. I knew that I would die on the table. I would be the one in a million, the curve breaker. The night before my surgery I wrote my farewells to the people I love. I was oddly excited - it would be over one way or another soon. I would succeed or I would die. I slept like a baby that night.
The most nervous I got about the surgery was the morning of in the OR Waiting area. I was alone - no one to be brave for. I was the first surgery of the morning and I was waiting to be taken into the OR. I could hear the nurses gossiping. They were talking about how big a previous patient was. I wondered if they would be gossiping about me later that day. Did you see the guy with the jacked up teeth? God how did they get him on the table?
Finally I was taken in. The last thing I remember was them putting the arm rests under me. I woke up at about 10:20 am in recovery. The first thing I did was to look for a clock and then realize that I had a foley catheter in. Damn I was hoping to avoid that.
That day was the beginning of my journey. The feeling of Anesthesia would become all too familiar over the next 12 months. In addition to the sleeve gastrectomy I would have: months of oral surgeries to fix my teeth, surgeries on both my left and right eyes to remove bilateral cataracts, and finally my lower body lift last month. That surgery was probably the most extensive, taking 8.5 hours.
The cost of obesity? For me 90% of my stomach, 2 teeth, the lenses in both eyes, 7.5 pounds and counting of excess skin. And lets not forget a sum of money in the high 5 figures. I'm not done yet. I have one more surgery to go.
So what is the result of all of this (Click on the links please, OH wouldn't let me actually insert the image!)
Before:
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Today:
Most of all, I am thankful; so very thankful. My journey has been populated with amazing people to help me every step of the way. Not the least of which is my ever loving Thomas who has been with me every day, encouraging me and loving me, never letting me doubt myself or be down on myself. I have been blessed to work for an amazing company who has given me the time to work on myself and who has supported me amazingly at every turn. My parents have given me room when I needed it, and complete unwavering support. I have never doubted their unconditional love for me and never will.
Finally, there have been the people at the Centennial Center for the Treatment of Obesity as well as others. So here goes: Thanks and all of my blessings to Dr. Hugh Houston, Kathy Hungerford, Dr. Janice Livengood, Pamela Helmlinger, Audrey Turner, Dr. Shaun Bivens and his staff, Dr. Erich Groos, Dr. Philip Fleming. Everyone on that list has been a part of being my own personal Rudy Wells - Helping me rebuild myself better, faster, and stronger. I did the work, they set me on the path and help me keep to it.
Popular media has portrayed the bariatric surgery process as being "the easy way". As I mentioned to someone earlier today I want to dropkick someone into another time zone every time I hear that. This has not been easy - either physically or emotionally. I have had to face parts of myself that I have run from since third grade to get healthy. I have had tears and pain - both physical and emotional. I have also had great victories and joys. Most of all, I have my life back in a way that I can live it an love it now.
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160 lbs lost. Surgeons Goal Reached in 33 weeks. My Goal in 37 Weeks.
VSG: 11/2/2011; LBL+Thigh Lift+BL: 10/3/2012; Brach+Mastopexy: 7/22/2013
Come to Atlanta, GA and ask our panel of experts the questions you want answers to! If you are unable to atend the event, email your questions to: [email protected] and we will ask the experts to answer your questions and then we will post them on the message boards after the OH event!
Click here to reserve your tickets today! We hope to see you there!
Its been over six years since we've launched our forums. During this time it has seen thousands of fresh faces, greetings, meetings, partings, arguments, kind words, life transformations, cathartic rants, and simply happy time pass. It has been with us throughout this time, silently observing and facilitating. But like any wise old man, its bones were getting old. Its joints were aching, and it has been needing a new jolt of energy.
A Mobile World
Did you know that over 30% of you visit our website using a mobile device? For those who do visit us via mobile, we owe you a sincere apology, because our forums have been horrendous on a mobile browser. But the big news is that things are about to change! Our new forums are completely mobile friendly and compatible with iPhone, Android, and pretty much any other modern smart phone.
Each post, topic, and forum shows up beautifully, with the full set of features, and in nice large font. See the screenshots for yourself.
You dont have do anything different, just browse to the forums like you normally would. This means that you can finally put these away:
Not Just for Mobile
The interface on your desktop browser has also been cleaned up a great deal. There is now less clutter on the page, and the overall experience is a lot cleaner. Check out some more screenshots here!
You will notice that each post no longer has 400 buttons below it. Only the buttons that are relevant to each post show up, making your screen space a lot less cluttered. Also, when you reply to another person's post, the entire post is indented inside, making it a lot easier to figure out who has replied to whom.
Launching soon! Maybe as early as next week! Maybe.
And do remember that this is not in any way a be-all-end-all when it comes to the forums. We are in the process of constantly learning and improving upon what we have, and this is just one step along the way.
Stay tuned for the changes! We look forward to hearing your thoughts on this.
ObesityHelp Developer
Meet Our Speakers: Colleen M. Cook
Hope & Help for the Pain of Regain
Join 17 year WLS veteran Colleen M. Cook for both a shot in the arm and a kick in the seat as she shares lessons from long-term losers and imparts insight, inspiration, and hope for WLS patients struggling with extended plateaus or weight regain. Her thoughts, stories, and personal experiences will inspire and motivate you to reach and maintain your optimum weight loss.
Also, don't miss her Keynote on Friday: Nothing Succeeds Like Success
We hope to see you in Atlanta, GA October 5th and 6th! Click here to book your ticket today!
Fast Facts About Colleen
-Colleen is the author of The Success Habits of Weight Loss Surgery Patients.
- She is the president or Bariatric Support Centers International, a company that specializes in providing education and support services for weight loss surgery patients and the professionals who serve them.
- Colleen currently serves on the National Advisory board for the Walk From Obesity.
-Known as Ms. Enthusiasm, Colleen helps men and women from all walks of life recognize their extraordinary potential and then inspires then to aspire.
Height:5'1.5 RNY:11/30/11 HW:307 SW:234 CW:136 GW:140 (LOST 73 Lbs. PRE-OP)