WLS tell folks or keep it quiet.
i've told most of my friends an the family i am close to.. an all have been super supportive an completly know the struggles i have been through regarding my illnesses an weight.. so all are trying to understand how much my life is changing.. etc.. i dont regret tellin my friends and family... i might after the surgery when they all start tellin me to eat cuz im losing so much.. u know? worried im starving myself an so on... not to that stage yet..
I was very open about my surgery, and still am. I am discouraged because my weight has stalled, but that is because when I relapsed on alcohol 14 months ago, I stopped doing the healthy eating that went with the surgery. I basically gave up on myself overall. Now that I have a month of sobriety, I hope to get back the gumption I had to follow the dietary guidelines given me when I had my surgery.
I have been blessed by only having had about two people rain on my parade, but I basically told them I would not listen to their negative talk and to just stuff it. That ended any negativity.
Trish
I have been blessed by only having had about two people rain on my parade, but I basically told them I would not listen to their negative talk and to just stuff it. That ended any negativity.
Trish
Seek always to do some good, somewhere. Every man has to seek in his own way to realize his true worth. You must give some time to your fellow man. For remember, you don't live in a world all your own. Your brothers are here too.
Albert Schweitzer
Albert Schweitzer
I did my surgery in Japan, where there is a certain element of shame about opening up regarding surgery. Most people here never tell anybody.
I couldn't have survived doing that. I needed the help and support of others to be able to get through the whole process. I was not only open, I asked people for help and let them know what I was going through. And they were enormously supportive. I could never have gotten through the most difficult post-op stages without the help of my work colleagues.
Now, I have lost that community and am really struggling to keep motivated by myself.
One thing I have noticed about other patients in Japan is that those who have tended to open up about the surgery have achieved "better" results than those who keep quiet. I don't have any data to back me up on this assumption, but base the judgement on general observation (which is probably biased anyway, because the only post-op patients I meet are those who actively engage in post-op care and thus more likely to make the most of WLS in the first place).
I found very little negativity wherever I went, except during the first few months post-op when people wondered why I would want to cut myself up when I had a stomach that was working perfectly. Once they saw how healthy and happy I was, even these skeptics changed their opinions of the procedure.
I'd definitely make the same decision to be open and seek support, as well as recommend the same for others who are unsure about what to do. But, ultimately, it's the choice of the individual involved and they should go with their, er..gut feeling!!!!
I couldn't have survived doing that. I needed the help and support of others to be able to get through the whole process. I was not only open, I asked people for help and let them know what I was going through. And they were enormously supportive. I could never have gotten through the most difficult post-op stages without the help of my work colleagues.
Now, I have lost that community and am really struggling to keep motivated by myself.
One thing I have noticed about other patients in Japan is that those who have tended to open up about the surgery have achieved "better" results than those who keep quiet. I don't have any data to back me up on this assumption, but base the judgement on general observation (which is probably biased anyway, because the only post-op patients I meet are those who actively engage in post-op care and thus more likely to make the most of WLS in the first place).
I found very little negativity wherever I went, except during the first few months post-op when people wondered why I would want to cut myself up when I had a stomach that was working perfectly. Once they saw how healthy and happy I was, even these skeptics changed their opinions of the procedure.
I'd definitely make the same decision to be open and seek support, as well as recommend the same for others who are unsure about what to do. But, ultimately, it's the choice of the individual involved and they should go with their, er..gut feeling!!!!