REPOST: "The Easy Way Out"

Bette B.
on 7/18/07 12:49 am
[Note: I wrote this quite a while ago, obviously. One too many people had used the phrase "The Easy Way Out" (luckily for them, none to my face!), and it prompted me to start typing. Enjoy. Feel free to pass it on to whomever you like, or whomever is ******g you off. If you post it anywhere, please do credit me as the writer, however.]

The Easy Way Out

“Well, you’ve lost 69 pounds. How do you feel?”    I must have looked at the doctor like he was speaking Swahili. How do I feel ?    Lighter. Overjoyed. Smaller. Happy. Healthy. Exhilarated. Terrified. Doubting.    Is weigh loss surgery a “cheat”? Is it “the easy way out?”     That, unfortunately, seems to be the opinion of a lot of people, probably more than anyone realizes, since most people with that opinion seem to be smart enough to keep their mouths shut.     Hell, if you had any balls, you’d lose weight the old-fashioned way! 

The rest of us are toughing it out with exercise and the ability to push ourselves away from the table! If you had any willpower, any self-restraint, you wouldn’t be fat!  Jeez, try a salad once in a while!  All you had to do was get some doctor to staple your stomach a little and, voila! Instant thin person! Anyone can that!    I can’t imagine that two dieters would say to each other,

“You’re doing low-carb? You’re taking the easy way out!”

“Oh! Weigh****chers – that’s taking the easy way out!”

“Jenny Craig? Hell, you don’t even have to COOK! That’s the easy way out!”

But what damn difference does it make HOW anyone loses weight, as long as the result is the same: better health and a better quality of living.

“The Easy Way Out.” I wish I could have been reminded that I am taking the easy way out five minutes ago when I was throwing up my dinner. Again. You know what I ate? Two baby shrimp and two strips of chicken that, together, were the size of my little finger.     Folks, this IS the hard way. It means that I’ve tried a lifetime of diets: Slim Fast, rice diet, high-carb/low fat, high-fat/low carb, cabbage soup. Hell, I even tried those diet candies called “Aids”. Remember those? Yeesh. What a publicity nightmare that product name turned out to be after about 1985! But they sure were tasty!    The diets never worked or, rather, they worked for a while, then they didn’t. I lost weight, and gained it back. Lost weight, gained it back. It’s like the instructions on a shampoo bottle: lather, rinse, repeat. Diet, gain, repeat. And those returning pounds never came alone; they always brought a bunch of friends with them to take up residence in my ass.    To make the decision to have weight loss surgery is to face the realization that this is it: the end. I’ve heard people call it “the last house on the block.” Your options are gone. You’re never going to get any thinner. You’re certainly not getting any younger. Those knees, hips and ankles are going to need replacing sooner rather than later. And chances are, you might not live much longer. The short time you have is going to be filled with can’ts and don’ts and never agains. Stares, giggles, comments.

“We don’t have anything in your size here.” “Wideload.” “Fatass.” “Orca.”     The short time will be full of big things like diabetes and high blood pressure, of osteoarthritis and edema and congestive heart failure. Of annoying things like recurring yeast infections and skin ulcers. Of little things, like not being able to cut your own toenails or wipe your own ass.     Then, finally, it’s resignation; it’s just giving up. You reach the point of living the rest of your increasingly short life in discomfort, pain, illness and depression, or reaching out and praying that there is one last hope. It’s reaching the point of being willing to subject yourself to dangerous surgery, pain, and possibly even death. It should be given a scenic kind of name, like “Desperation Point”. They could sell postcards:

“GREETINGS FROM DESPERATION POINT”    This IS the hard way. Every meal has to be as carefully and scrupulous studied as if you are on a diet: because you are. Not for a month, or until your vacation, or until the wedding.

For the rest of your life.

But it is so much more than just a diet. There is the missing element of eating as pleasurable. Instead, there’s constant worry. Is that food, which you always loved, going to “agree with you” still, or will it make you sick? Have a couple of bites of your half-cup sized dinner before your last meal has cleared your new stomach, and it’s coming back up. Have one tiny, pencil-eraser sized bite of food too many and it’s coming back up. One chew too few and it’s coming back up. Too much fat or sugar and you’ll get “dumping syndrome”. Not enough protein and your hair will fall out. Not enough iron and you’re anemic. Not enough potassium, and your heart will stop.    This IS the hard way. It’s living with the terror of gaining the weight back and knowing that there will be NOwhere else to go. There are NO other answers. This is it: the last house on the block. It’s there, every minute of everyday. And it’s not “the easy way out”. This is the toughest thing I’ve ever had to do. THIS is the hard way.     And is it worth it? Hell yes. The joy is overwhelming. To be able to buy clothes in a regular store. To tie my shoes. To be able to walk even a block again. To lose the painful edema in my feet. To sit comfortably in an armchair. To wear my cowboy boots again. To know that my blood sugar levels are down and that I don’t need to take as many meds. To know that I’ll be able to spend even a few extra years with the husband I adore.    Worth it? Oh, yes, yes . . . YES!   

    

Banded 10 years & maintaining my weight loss!! Any questions, message me.

orchidsprite
on 7/18/07 1:02 am - indian orchard, MA
Bette ~ you hit the nail on the head, thank-you.  I wish you could post this where every person whom never had to loose weight could read it! Good Job Girl! You lok fantastic!
Katie (KiKi)
310start/175goal/159current
eard1421
on 7/18/07 1:20 am - OH
I sooo loved it!  Thanks for writing it!  I have also read in a book  - if anyone says you took the easy way out- well  you can replay - what idiot takes the hard way on purpose???  Not that wls is easy - it has been far from that - have someone cut 6 holes in your belly and put an artificial device in your body - go on liquids for more then 4 weeks - well.. you said it better.  But anyway, one of the sweetest things my DH has ever said to me - (and he is not known for saying sweet things very often) - about a week after surgery - he said - you know - I think you are a very brave person to have gone through this - and you are doing great.  I had my doubts you would go through with it.  Thanks again for a great post!  Anne
Mico104
on 7/18/07 1:28 am - United Kingdom
I was a bmi of 35 when I begun this journey and I have heard that I took the easy way out and to a certain extent I agree.  My husband was the first one to tell me to diet and excersise and not have the surgery.  To me it was the ONLY way out.  I needed a solution to my lifetime of dieting.  I needed a permanent solution and I was simply and truly, hand in heart, not willing to put myself through the agony of dieting, the sheer deprivation, knowing full well that the weight would come back up. Perhaps if I had more will power I could have done it without the band, perhaps, if I was willing to put up with a lifetime of hunger and deprivation I could have done it with the band. I didnt want to!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  Pure and simple!!!!!  I didnt fancy the agony without the permanent results. I keep my band very loose, I have to date, never vomited and never pb.  I can eat small meals and I do have to have will power to fill up on good food instead of junk.  I treat myself when I want to and not beat myself up about it.  So is this the easy way out???? For me, it was the only way out!!!!!!!!!!!!  Have I found it easier to loose the weight with the band YES, do I feel deprived NO!  Could I have lost the near 30 lbs I've lost so far without the band?  NO WAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It was the ONLY WAY OUT!!!!!!!! Loli
celinejen
on 7/18/07 1:31 am, edited 7/18/07 1:31 am - Kirkland, WA

It's exactly how alot of people think, mostly ones that have no idea what they are talking about. I explain to people I come into contact with (everything) all the gory details ( most of them ) Get the ewww look on their face when I tell them I may have to throw-up ( not just any kind of throw-up ) solids.

OMG!!!!!!! I do remember the "AIDES" diet plan, it came in chocolate and carmel ( in a nice big box ) They were so good to eat ( I ended up eating half the box ) I don't think that was part of the plan. LOL, Cabbage Soup was my favorite, along with the Kaiser diet. Dexatrim ( every varity ) and who could forget the beets and ice cream diet?

Bette thanks for posting that we need this to remind others that this and other lifestyle changes aree not the easy way out.

 

 From: 216  Now: 125   From: 38C Now: 32B From: Size 16  Now: Size 6



      

Alex R.
on 7/18/07 1:31 am - Toronto, Canada
What an exquisite, eloquent post.  Thank you.   I too burn when I hear those words "easy way out".  What is the nobility in repeated, ultimately fruitless, attempts at doing it "the hard way"?
EdieMcGee
on 7/18/07 1:32 am - The Land of Pleasant Living, MD
Back in 1997 when the first doctor suggested that I have a Roo, I told him, "No, that's the easy way out."  What a fool I was -- not to turn down the Roo, but not to realize at the time there was more to it than that, and there were no easy answers.  This needs to be handed out at every doctor's seminar.

all-time high/consult/surgery/current/goal 315/299/292.2/250/150

LAGORDITA
on 7/18/07 1:49 am
This is the hardest thing I have ever done!
Bette B.
on 7/18/07 2:05 am
For me, anyway, it's not the hardest thing I've ever had to do, but it's been no walk in the park, either. Like most of life, it's fallen somewhere in the middle.

    

Banded 10 years & maintaining my weight loss!! Any questions, message me.

Kimberly *******
on 7/18/07 2:18 am - The Boonies of...., ME
The words, "The easy way out" cause my heart to start palpatating, I break out in a sweat, and I get a strange twitch in my right eye.  Other than that, I'm fine with it.
Kimberly  

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