white rabbit
LAP-BAND Patients-
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About white rabbit
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Senior Member
- Birthday 09/06/1970
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white rabbit started following POLL Does Everyone Lose Their Hair??, Is Lapband Removal Dangerous?, Emotion v Eating and and 7 others
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5 years has passed since you registered at LapBandTalk! Happy 5th Anniversary white rabbit!
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Hi, I need advice. I was banded 18 months ago and everything was terrific. Went a little to restricted too fast after 6 months and had a slight defill (back to 1cc in a 10cc band) Everything returned to normal. No pain, 'normal' hunger signals. Great. About 8 weeks ago I went for slight refill (.5cc increase). A week after gorged myself on sweets and alcohol (emotional eater). Severe wind and pain just below chestbone for 3 days - was told to drink peppermint tea and put on antibiotics. Pain went away after 24hrs. Began to get scared mentally. Last two weeks have been aware of mild indigestion at night and a lot of burping. Getting really scared. Although probably minor in the grand scheme of things, this is not something I want to deal with. My consultant said that band removal was not possible. Clearly this is nonsense. I'm aware that I'm probably over-reacting but what's the dangers of having the band removed? My band is stiched in place - is this going to be a problem? Basically I'm terrified and feel in a catch-22: don't want the band in because of all the negatives but taking the band out seems really dangerous too. Any help much appreciated.
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Help.......PLEASE! Anyone else having band problems?
white rabbit replied to taylor.karen's topic in Tell Your Weight Loss Surgery Story
Leeds has a good reputation for obseity surgery. Don't know of any specific surgeon though -- maybe muggle (earlier post) could help you. -
Help.......PLEASE! Anyone else having band problems?
white rabbit replied to taylor.karen's topic in Tell Your Weight Loss Surgery Story
All the best Karen. I know that people we depend on can make us meek and mild, and when we are emotionally vulnerable too, it can make our task even worse. When I'm in situations like this, I write down a list of points that I want answers to - that way I'm not fobbed off or misdirected. And it helps my self-confidence so that I can assert my needs rather than become aggressive or compliant. You seem to have a sound head on square shoulders. Fingers crossed. -
Help.......PLEASE! Anyone else having band problems?
white rabbit replied to taylor.karen's topic in Tell Your Weight Loss Surgery Story
If the Murdoch brothers (who were tycoons could get legal aid), I'm pretty sure a sharp lawyer could work the system to get you legal aid. Where there's rules, there is always a way round them. -
Help.......PLEASE! Anyone else having band problems?
white rabbit replied to taylor.karen's topic in Tell Your Weight Loss Surgery Story
Hi Karen, Several options available: 1. Get Dr A to fit a telemetric band he's been getting a lot of press attention for -- the first in the UK to alter the band restriction digitally without the need for a port, tube or injections (this might help with one of the medical problems) 2. Second opinion -- go to UK hospital group (Anne Diamond recieved corrective surgery there following her disaster in Belgium) or BUPA website on obseity surgery (they suggest 3 different bariatric surgeons: two commercial and one private NHS). 3. Negative press -- GMTV, the Daily Mail and other media outlets would love this kind of story. They may pay you some money -- enough to pay for corrective surgery. 4. find a lawyer on legal aid -- got to citizens advice about legal aid, ask the UK lapband forum for advice on lawyers and generally ask around. Ultimately, it depends what you really want. Dr A will have malpractice insurance so suing him, whilst a nice revenge, isn't really going to hurt him - but it will make you feel better temporarily. Depending on the severity of your problems, it could even make you rich -- but maybe not slim! Before they cut you adrift though, I would make sure that the problems you have suffered have not left you with permanent health problems. That would be the worst of all possible worlds. PM me if you want to talk. -
I couldn't agree with you more! It's amazing how creative you become went you just want to stuff food into your mouth. And it's terrifying when you realise that the band is not the miracle cure you thought it would be. It hasn't magic'd away your demons and after the operation there is nowhere else to run - it's just you, them and a 4 mil band. I have a friend doing a round-the-world yacht challenge to 'test himself'... I realised the other day my challenge doesn't even involve leaving the house, is a lot less exotic, infinitely harder but ultimately more satisfying. With each pound lost my smile gets broader - and I know that when I reach goal, I will get pleasure every day for the rest of my life. Don't let head hunger, compulsion or other food addictions win -- they can be conquered with a little creativity supported by band restriction.
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Jack, I've read a lot of your responses and they always make so much sense to me. I like the 'reach' idea. I'm looking forward to the day when my craving for Water is the same my current desires for chocolate and biscuits! Got to admit guys -- my mentor tells me its going to take 2 years to successfully retrain my brain and habits. That's just downright depressing. But, as the moto goes - never, ever give up. Even if it takes me 5 years, I'll know that I'll have finally conquered this self-inflicted addiction.
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Both -- I don't know whether I was too restricted but everytime I ate Protein I would burp like mad, and it was getting to the stage were I would PB once a meal. So I switched to carbs - chips, biscuits, even chocolate. They were chewy enough for my mouth the think it was eating something and mushy enough to go through the stoma. Problem was, these types of food were completely 'off program' and I hurt my mental attitude. Result: they didn't fill me up - so I ate more of them; they were technically 'illegal' - so I was in a guilt trip and ate more of them; they didn't take much chewing - so I got lazy at chewing and swallowed large chunks... you name it, I did it. Fortunately the damage I've done is minor and correctable. It's been a real wake up call for my eating habits. Problem 1. realising I'm an emotional eater Problem 2. learning the difference between full v satiated v no-longer hungry.
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Hi folks, Emotional eating is sabotaging my efforts to work with my band. It's got so bad that I made an urgent call to my Dr to get an unfil because I've inflamed the restricted part of my stomach. And in the two weeks of unfil I've put on 14lbs!! Whilst the weight gain is getting me down, I'm more worried about the emotional eating. If I can't get a grip, the operation will have been for nothing - and I could do some serious damage to my body. I've been keeping a journal and I'd say that 95% of my eating is driven by non-hunger. Seriously, it's that bad. books on the subject suggest developing self-nuturing strategies to fill the void instead of using food. Thing is, I can't think of any that are appropriate or offer immediate relief. It's a little difficult to take a relaxing bath when you are at work, or mediate when family are demanding things. Any ideas or strategies I could use to control or lessen my emotional eating drives?
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If I nibble rather than bite-and-chew something then I don't seem to get the burps. But I fart all the time. Reach for the TV remote, oops there one goes. Bend over - try not to stand down-wind. Stretch, yawn, smile... you name it and I fart. I wonder if it's because I've had my gall bladder removed?
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SHARE... what you've learned after Banding
white rabbit replied to NewSho's topic in LAP-BAND Surgery Forums
* I've learnt that to survive modern eating lifestyles I have to (i) prepare, prepare, prepare; (ii) overcome shyness and ask the cafe (or whatever) to prepare me something 'off menu'; (iii) invent a socially acceptable excuse or allergy for not eating with people; (iv) persuade my friends to eat at different places. * I've learn't that my brain is my own worst enemy. For the past month I've been trying to eat healthily but with my old eating attitudes. Sausage, bacon and egg might be good sources of Protein but they are high calorie foods. * I've learn't it is easy to slip 'off program' without even realising it. Sucess requires constant viligance -- which I'm hoping will eventually create new unconcious behaviours. For me this means daily monitoring my calories and exercise levels. * I've learn't the band means business. I can either live in pain by eating inappropriately, or I can work with the band and let it teach me a whole new way of living slim. -
For tasty meals, nutrionally balanced and quick to make try the mayo clinic www.mayoclinic/health/heathlyrecipes For loads of recipes (140) that can be coverted at different stages of Lap Band (pureed, semi-solid, solid) try the book "Eating Well After Weight Loss Surgery" by Patt Levine and Michele Bontmpo-Saray. Patt Levine had WLS in 2003 so knows what she is talking about. And the recipes are really easy to make.
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POLL Does Everyone Lose Their Hair??
white rabbit replied to KariK's topic in General Weight Loss Surgery Discussions
I've lost about 15% of my hair and I'm 5 months post op. I've got some Nioxin hair products and that seems to be slowing it down, and I'm taking Vitamins for hair, skin and nails. I've started to wear my hair in a different style to hide the thinning. Can anybody tell me how much Biotin you are taking. I can only get hold of vitamins with 66mg of biotin. (might be a UK restriction).