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monkeygrip

LAP-BAND Patients
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    4
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About monkeygrip

  • Rank
    Newbie
  • Birthday 12/21/1971
  1. Happy 41st Birthday monkeygrip!

  2. Happy 40th Birthday monkeygrip!

  3. 1 years has passed since you registered at LapBandTalk! Happy 1st Anniversary monkeygrip!

  4. Hello all, I have what may be an odd-ball question. I've read a bunch of posts on the forum and I feel that I pretty much fit right in there with a lot of the folks so I'll not bore you with the details. I will just leave it at this; I can relate to most of the posts about abandoned child-hoods, been fat since I've been walking, binge eating, can't stop thinking about food when I see it, seeing my reflection in the bottom of the cookie jar, fast food addictions, all that stuff. Anyway, a little back ground to my question, I've trained Judo for 2.5 years (lost 45 lbs) and I've been training Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu for 6 months (lost ~20 lbs) but I am still over 330lbs. I struggle just getting through the 15 minute warm-ups, and rolling 20 minutes at the end of class is awful for me. I truly love this stuff, and I do not want to give it up, but I am getting very discouraged because of the limitations of having all these rolls of fat are causing. My question: Would the impact from throws or the straining to execute sweeps affect the band; would I still be able to play Judo/BJJ if I had a lapband? I talked to a surgical group here and I got conflicting answers from the presenters. I think its because the doctors don't really understand what Judo or BJJ is all about. Seems like when they hear the words "jiu-jitsu" or "judo" they lump it into the "All_Things_Karate" category. It is like night and day from that kind of stuff. Thinking it may clear things up, I tried to explain that Jiu-Jitsu and Judo have much more in common with college wrestling, there is a lot of impact hitting the floor after going over someones shoulder. There is the impact from throws, stress from straining to establish better positions on the ground, and trauma from struggling while being smashed under the weight of another person. After explaining it, the doctor said, "I see, well, (pause) I believe all the punching and kicking would be great aerobic exercise. Any more questions?" Ugggggggg.... I know some of the positions like knee-on-belly or double leg take downs are pretty harsh to your torso. Also, the higher flying Judo throws like seoi nage or seoi goshi cause a lot of trama and impact so I am wondering if the lap band would break or slip or something during those techniques? Are there any Judo, BJJ, or MMA guys/gals in here that have had the lap band surgery? If so, what has been your experience?
  5. monkeygrip

    Banding an Competitive BJJ

    What a great thread, would you mind updating it? Now that you guys have had the band for a while, what do you think about BJJ, Judo, or MMA. Have you seen any limitations or issues training these kinds of high-impact, competitive & aggressive martial arts?

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