Heavy on My Mind
Categories: The Good, The Fat and The Hungry, Diet & Weight Loss, Motivation
Photo: Karla Carrington
Still, I wonder if it's more worrisome to be fat already or to be thin and fear fat daily. I recognize that any pluses or minuses I experience on the scale are directly related to my decisions. However, it is my thoughts that inform my decision-making process. As an extremist, it can be difficult to find a happy medium, but with something as delicate and significant as my weight, I must. Living in fear is not an option.
I am acquainted with someone who had gastric bypass surgery and then became anorexic after losing the weight. She'd had several skin-removal surgeries and could have easily been a model. After the onset of her eating disorder, she could easily be the spokesperson for anorexia nervosa -- she is all skin and bones. Even though she is extremely thin, she believes that she is still obese, so she exercises a lot and eats very little. I think she is a serious example of extremism at its finest, and she illustrates how imbalance can be near fatal.
When it comes to me, anorexia can relax. It ranks right up there with pork, so no fear of me touching it either. Although not anorexic, I am sure that I'm experiencing something because I am obsessed with the thought of re-gaining the weight. It has become an innate fear that manifests itself in many different ways. Sometimes I eat too little, but then there are times when the same fear leads me to binge. It's a very tricky situation.
Here's how I try to maintain balance. I have added some "do nots" to my diet. After journaling and recognizing my pitfalls, I've instituted one "don't" at a time to help me stay on track.
Don't No. 1: I don't drink anything but water until my eight glasses are in. This helps me avoid extra calories in other juices and drinks and ensures that I have my full water intake.
Don't No. 2: I don't eat white bread. I try not to eat a lot of bread at all, but if I do, it has to be whole wheat when out, and at home, it's whole wheat with double fiber.
Don't No. 3: I don't start my day without all of my vitamins. As a gastric bypass patient, this is critical. I take a daily multivitamin, omega-3, B-12, iron and calcium citrate. When I miss this step, I can feel the difference.
Don't No. 4: I don't care what others think. My focus is on my own personal goals and meeting them as I've set. Although open to input, the weight is mine alone to lose or gain.
These are not scientific but practical things that are working for me. I've got far too many other things to think about, and being obese again is just not one of them. "For as a man thinketh, so is he..." Proverbs 23:7a. Hence, I think I'm staying right here, fit as a fiddle.
What works for you? How do you keep it balanced without overdoing or underdoing the necessary things?
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
sarah 10-11-2009 @ 11:21AM
Hi there as a gastric bypasser i can relate. I have gained back about 75lbs of my 175 loss...I would love to lose the weight gained back. You obviously have figured out what works for you and I congratulate you.
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Eve 10-21-2009 @ 5:15AM
I am so glad gastric bypass has worked for most who undergo this surgery. But its also important to know there can be very serious complications for some as well. I have a relative over 2 years post gastric bypass [R & Y]. She has been in hospitals more than out the past two years. Sixteen surgeries later, 3 in attempts to save her life, she had to have her entire stomach and spleen removed to give her a fighting chance. She is still not out of the woods. My point is, the bypass is an effective means to loose weight and in most cases no complications arise as "reported". In reality, when someone does have complications from a bypass those very serious complications can be lethal, or result in years of pain and experimental corrective surgeries. One medical professional advised me with the advent of several centers for Gastric Bypass, its unfortunate that not enough centers have risen to deal what he believed to be under-reported complications from Bypass surgeries.
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Karen 10-22-2009 @ 1:20PM
Amen, my Proverbs reading sister! Greater is He who is in us than he that is in the world. The real battlefield is our mind and it has been redeemed. Thank you for your wonderful article!
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