Reflections A Year After WLS: 222.4 Pounds Lost (Pic Included)

pinkjellybean
on 1/24/13 9:29 pm - Canada
VSG on 01/25/12

I remember January 25th, 2012 like it was yesterday because that’s really how fast I feel this year has flown by. I had a strange sense of calm about me that day when generally I am an anxious worry-filled person but something inside of me whispered that I was going to pull through the RNY surgery I was going to have and everything was going to be ok. I remember opening one eye with a squint in the post-op recovery room and then closing it again to take a deep breath and say to myself “I did it….I woke up”. Then I heard the nurses and other professionals in the recovery room using the word “sleeve gastrectomy” and then they would refer to my name. I flashed open my eyes and started trying in my altered state to ask questions. “What do you mean sleeve gastrectomy?” All the nurses would tell me is that someone would be along shortly to talk to me but a lot of time passed and nobody came. I was having some problems with my oxygen levels and stayed longer in the post-op recovery room than anticipated but finally they wheeled me upstairs to my room and as I arrived out of the elevator to the floor where I would be admitted I came across my husband Michael and my mother for the first time since I had left them in the morning. “What happened?” I asked them over and over again and they too said they would tell me once I got into my room. It wasn’t even a few minutes after I arrived in my room that my surgeon arrived and explained what had happened.

When they opened me up for surgery they discovered I had a condition known as a complete non-rotation of my intestines. The condition combined with my severe morbid obesity made it impossible to maneuver the intestines into a safe position to perform the RNY surgery and after a long time of exploring and calling the head of bariatrics into my operation to consult…..my surgeon decided the safest thing to do would be to go with Plan B which was to perform the VSG surgery which I had signed off on as the back-up plan. My doctor explained that in Ontario the results were not as solid about the sleeve gastrectomy surgery but that some people experience similar results to the RNY surgery and other people don’t. He added that weight loss may be slower for me due to a lack of malabsorption but that if I didn’t make it below a certain BMI (35) that at some point they could re-evaluate to see if there was enough room in my belly to reposition my intestines and attempt a re-routing like in the RNY.

I was upset. I was so upset, pissed off, and sad because everything I knew in my head was about the RNY and in my gut and heart I felt the RNY surgery was the one that was going to help me “save my life from the clutches of obesity”. I cried….a lot.

It took me a couple of weeks to finally wrap my head around what had happened. I was/am a type A personality who prepares hard core for everything…but I never prepared myself for the VSG surgery I was given. I finally woke up one day and decided to stop feeling sorry for myself. The VSG was a tool that I had been given and just like I had prepared myself for the RNY…I simply needed to figure out how to use the tool I was given to do the best work possible. I jumped into what I now refer to as “just do it mode” and started researching everything I could about the VSG and messaged people on OH whom had had brilliant success with their sleeve. I got a lot of advice and after much research I took the advice that made the most logical sense in my head and was based on real successful results and I got to work.

My pre-op weight was 390 pounds.

The day of my surgery I was 368.8 pounds

Today at exactly one year out from my unexpected VSG surgery I weighed in at 167.6 pounds.

Here is what I have learned about myself through this process…

I am blessed to have had the VSG surgery. It is a brilliant surgery and in my opinion if you use this tool correctly you can and will have all the success in the world with your weight loss. I feel fortunate that I have a fully functioning stomach and that there are not many long term health and nutrition risks for me related to my surgery.

WLS is 5% about the food and 95% psychological. The food and nutrition plans are dictated and handed out to you – the amount of success you will have with your tool is not about the food – it’s about YOU. You are in the driver’s seat with the capacity to turn your car anyway you choose. EVERY. SINGLE. DAY food will be everywhere tempting you, enticing you, begging you to be friendly with it….but EVERY. SINGLE. DAY you have to be psychologically strong enough to stand up to it, stare it in the face, and say not today.

Success is a staircase not a doorway. WLS is hard work. It is not the easy way out and quite frankly it is not the best way out of obesity for everyone. Making the referral was the door opening but everything else since then has been taken one step at a time.

I am still in “weight loss mode” and I will remain so until I hit a goal weight that for me will come sometime between 140 and 150 pounds but I suspect 150. I am 3.6 pounds away from the top of a healthy BMI of 164 pounds.

I have lost a total of 222.4 pounds of weight……

That number astonishes me every time I see it or say it. 222.4 pounds of weight…..I have lost two small women and still have a person standing in front of me when I look in the mirror.

Every day I eat between 600 and 800 calories of food…….80-100plus grams of protein and keep my carbs under 40 grams but usually under 20 grams per day. I do not track fat because I believe if I stay within the parameters I just mentioned the fat content will just fall into place….and it does. I will continue with this plan until I decide that I have lost enough weight and then I will alter my plan for maintenance.

From 390 pounds….to 167.6 pounds…..

I took this picture the other day when I bought my first pair of SIZE 8 jeans…and a size Small top! I used to wear Size 32 jeans and tight fitting 5X tops…..I was somewhere between 170-172 pounds at the time.

 

SURGERY at Toronto Western Hospital - VSG JANUARY 25th, 2012!!

5'9 - HW - 390 SW - 368.8  GW - 150

    

mary d
on 1/24/13 9:37 pm

Excellent!!!  The VSG is my favorite WLS and I am glad you ended up with it.  You look fabulous.

Lap Band 2006  

VSG 2008

sleevegirl
on 1/24/13 9:40 pm - Austin, TX

You are a rock star, girl. Totally freaking amazing! I'm SO proud of you!

Candy from Austin, TX  |   Website  |  MyFitnessPal  |  My OH Blog

5'6" / HW 375 / SW 355 / CW 150 / Maintaining 155-159 - Goal Reached! 225 Pounds Lost
  

Shizzle
on 1/24/13 9:43 pm
VSG on 01/08/13 with

Wow!! You are pure inspiration! Being 2 weeks post op your story is just what I need to hear right now, thank you For posting this. Just amazing!

 

    

kimberleyann
on 1/24/13 9:48 pm - Kingston, NS, Canada

Wow , just Wow! Congratulations you rocked your sleeve.

    
       

   
   

rhearob
on 1/24/13 9:56 pm - TN
Awesome job! You look amazing!

_____________________________________________________________________
 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

ravenbrown
on 1/24/13 9:57 pm - TX
VSG on 10/08/12

Your transformation is incredible!  I love your story and your attitude!  Congrats and I can't wait to see your goal post :)

    

Nikke2003
on 1/24/13 9:57 pm - PA
VSG on 05/13/13

Congratulations!! You are AMAZING! I want to be just like you after surgery lol - very inspirational!

For more info on my journey & goals, visit my blog at http://flirtybythirty.wordpress.com

  

hope2013
on 1/24/13 10:10 pm - Philadelphia, PA
Wow! You truly inspired me!! Congratulations on your success! You did it.
JerseyGirl_1213
on 1/24/13 10:12 pm

Wow!  What a inspiration you are to people like me who are just starting out!!  My surgery is scheduled for 2/19 and I hope and pray that I can be as successful as you have been!! 

Congrats...you look fabulous!!

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