Hi Sue,
My name is Diane and I have only been on this site twice. I posted once when I signed up and the second time, I read the posts. Between work, home and 2 other lapband sites, I keep pretty busy. However, after reading your post, I just had to speak up. I was banded on February 7, 2006 and am almost 9 months out. I have lost 77 pounds and am getting closer to my goal everyday, although the closer I get, the slower it goes. It does get frustrating sometimes.,
I know a lady who had her surgery the day after I had mine. She is now in the process of having her band removed. She feels it just didn't work for her - and sometimes that happens. I have found that the majority of the time, it DOES work, BUT you have to work with it. Before she was 2 weeks out, she was eating pizza cheese and Cookies and all the wrong things. Her choices since then have never really been very good and, in my opinion, she never really gave the band the chance. This is not a cure, it's not something that will perform magic - it's a tool. A wonderful too, but you MUST have the committment in your head and your heart to make it work. The food choices you have been making are killing your chances of success. You definitely need to incorporate all the behavior modification changes you learned about pre-op. The band does not keep you from making bad choices and if you don't follow a pre-thought out, well scripted plan, you will not succeed. It IS hard and it IS frustrating. No one ever said it would be easy, but if you can't committ to whatever it is you need to do, then it wasn't worth the $10,000, or any amount of money. We didn't go through surgery and have a permanent foreign object implanted into us just so we can fail. I have struggles everyday, but I try to take things one day at a time - one meal at a time. Also remember, everyday you have the chance to start over again. Are you exercising? There really is no restriction until you start getting fills. You probably won't even feel the first one, but until you start to feel something, you have to buckle down and try to make this work. It's not going to happen by itself. Now, you went through all the pre-op testing, classes, had the surgery - this all took a lot of courage. You need to dig deep inside yourself and find that courage again. Willpower is very hard, but it's the only way this is going to work - for you, for me, for any of us. Do you drink enough fluids? Sometimes you think you're hungry but you're really thirsty/ If the foods you are eating create so much of a problem for you, get them out of your house!! I have a husband who makes him own stuff - like spaghetti (my personal favorite). It's hard to stay away, but I know I didn't do this for nothing. I have added years onto my life - my diabetes is well under control and I am coming off most of my meds - my blood pressure is way down and my doctor says my heart rate and pulse are now in "training mode" because of the exercise. Remember, the more of the "bad" stuff you eat, the more your body will crave it and the harder it is to stop. You have to find a point and say - enough! Just for today, I'm taking control again and making this work. Try it hour by hour if necessary, but do it! Otherwise, you're setting yourself up for failure. Good luck, and God bless...
Dy