HOW do you get your water in?
I am 3 weeks out (revision from vsg and then complications that landed me in ICU). Try as I might, I cannot get my water in. I am lucky to manage maybe 16 oz.
Please, what are the tricks, since swallowing much at once is impossible. I have been home a week, and am NOT losing, and it suspect the lack of water intake is to blame.
I'd appreciate any help out there.
G
Carry fluids with you absolutely everywhere, even as you walk through the house, and take regular sips. You'd be surprised at how much you can get in this way. Eventually you'll be able to take a couple swallows at once, and slowly increase.
My regular routine includes bringing a water bottle into the bathroom with me and I drink it as I get ready for work. By the time I'm done, I've drunk a full bottle. Of course ! I'm almost two years pot, but started this habit a few weeks after surgery. It helps!
good luck!
DD
DD gave you some great strategies. Just sip, sip, sip and then sip some more. Take a water bottle with you everywhere, set an alarm to remind you, make a rule of sipping through commercials when watching TV - anything to get it in you. Good luck.
Karen
Ontario Recipes Forum - http://www.obesityhelp.com/group/ontario_recipes/
Yeah, I actually gagged and threw up 'plain' water twice since the surgery. I've always got Mio, Crystal Light, or some other flavouring with me. I keep them at the office, at home, in my purse, anywhere! Try that trick.
And sip all day long. Don't try to get it in at once, or by swallowing in gulps. Sipping all day is really the only way. Keep a water bottle with you at all times. By your bed. By the TV. Sitting at the computer. Reading. Whatever you're doing. I just keep it in front of my sight and it's a visual reminder to pick it up and sip. Every time I possibly can. In the early days, I filled it half full (it'd get too warm if I filled it all the way) and kept it physically in my hand! I never put it down and sipped that puppy until it was empty. I would refill and start again. It might take an hour while I was watching TV or whatever, but it was worth it.
Please keep an eye on your hydration levels. At this stage, I'm sure you know already that dehydration is the main problem that people run into.
OTTAWA -- 2011 - Contemplated WLS Feb. 15, 2013 - GP Feb. 20 - lung functioning Feb. 22 - blood work Feb. 27 - Referral April 19 - orientation, bloodwork July 10 - nurse July 23 - rheumatologist (VSG) Sept. 12 - Behaviourist & Dietician Oct. 23 - Echocardiogram Nov. 6 - Pre-surgery Class Nov. 12 - Surgeon Jan 13, 2014 - Optifast (3 wks) Jan. 27 - PATTS Feb. 3, 2014 - Surgery (VSG)
HEIGHT: 5'5" HW 303 Pre-Opti 297 SW 271 GW 170 CW 200 (Feb. 8, 2018 - damn the regain!) VSG with Dr. Yelle