DELETE THIS ACCOUNT! 12,703 Posted July 9, 2012 It seems to me there is a lot of misunderstanding out there when it comes to restriction. Over and over, I read post after post of the following statements: "I have had fills but can still eat whatever I want" While some people do have issues eating certain foods, there is absolutely no truth that you shouldn't be able to eat foods like breads, Pasta, and rice. If you are following a low carb diet that's one thing, but being banded doesn't mean you shouldn't be physically able to eat them anymore. Many of us can still eat absolutely everything we ate before surgery. "I have had fills but I can still eat more than 1 cup of food" This may be true, however, just because you can eat more than a cup of food doesn't mean you should. More often than not, if you eat slowly and stop after eating no more than 1 cup of food, you will find that you are satisfied and no longer hungry despite the fact you could still physically eat more. Quit trying to test your band to see how much you can eat, because the only one that will fail the test is you, not the band. "I have had fills but I don't feel full" Big misconception- the band will make you feel full. Wrong. It's true some people do feel full but it's a different full sensation than we had before banded. In fact, it's almost uncomfortable. The band is not supposed to make you feel stuffed full, it's supposed to make you feel satisfied with less food for longer periods of time. If you keep getting fill after fill because you don't feel stuffed full, you are going to end up one of the many people who have bands too tight and slips as a result. Being satisfied means you are no longer hungry, not that you feel as though you just ate a seven course Thanksgiving dinner. Quit trying to feel full and start listening to your body because it will tell you when it's satisfied. I encourage everyone to educate themselves on the Lap-Band, what it does, and what it doesn't do. Too many people are walking around banded completely ignorant to the facts and I fear many will have complications and slips because of it. It's your body, take responsibility for educating yourself on it. Be well all 8 bnoff, ☠carolinagirl☠, Vanilla sky and 5 others reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jeani81 93 Posted July 9, 2012 I totally agree with you. Too many people have not educated theirselves well enough on what the lap band is truly about. 2 ☠carolinagirl☠ and DELETE THIS ACCOUNT! reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
NoMoBand 278 Posted July 9, 2012 Great post! The only meter I use for a fill is if I'm feeling hunger in between meals (4-6 hours). 1 adorkbl reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
elcee 3,341 Posted July 9, 2012 Very true. How often do we hear about someone who has a fill and then goes out straight afterwards and has a big mac/pizza/sub whatever because they want to test their band. 2 DELETE THIS ACCOUNT! and kll724 reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DELETE THIS ACCOUNT! 12,703 Posted July 9, 2012 Very true. How often do we hear about someone who has a fill and then goes out straight afterwards and has a big mac/pizza/sub whatever because they want to test their band. Ugh yes, it always make me cringe too! I literally sit here thinking "well, there's the next candidate for a slip" 1 ☠carolinagirl☠ reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mayasgram 351 Posted July 9, 2012 I agree with almost everything you have said . The exceptian being about the bread I can not ever eat bread with out getting stuck. I do wonder at folks eating pizzas, big Macs, and submarine sand, I just shake my head like you and wonder when they will post again about an unfill or a slip. Don't they get info from the Docs or at least the nutritionist. We say over and over it is a tool but some people want t he magic bullet to be honest we all wish it but it just ain't so.. 1 ☠carolinagirl☠ reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Puppypaws57 137 Posted July 9, 2012 I can't eat bread either and can't even fathom having enough room for a Big Mac, pizza or submarine sandwich. Of course they all have bread, so I couldn't eat them, but I wouldn't have room for any of it - even without the bread! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Skyvic 226 Posted July 9, 2012 I agree in all this...but I am no longer able to get bread or pastas cooked a certain way and rice. Many people simply cannot get certain foods down. I've tried a nibble of bread and it did go through ( tiny tiny). But overall it doesn't feel good. I'm glad for this because these items are what got me here in the first place. Our goal is to stay in green zone, I definitely try not to "feel" like I've had thanksgiving. This is all a learning process for all. I certainly don't want to feel too "restricted" and the satisfied feeling is the goal. Surgeon told me eat three small meals, two healthy Snacks, 60 grams Protein overall...and plenty of low cal liquid no soda. Educating ourselves is so important. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vanilla sky 28 Posted July 10, 2012 I agree! I am able to eat anything I want I just don't. Big macs and pizza are what got me to needing the lap band in the first place. 1 ☠carolinagirl☠ reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
♕ajtexas♕ 3,771 Posted July 10, 2012 Mis73 I couldn't agree more. Remember Protein first! 1 ☠carolinagirl☠ reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bigenuff 302 Posted July 11, 2012 WOW I was just thinking about posting something like this !! Thank you !! I just keep rolling my eyes as I read some of this stuff.they will be the band haters on the sleeve site.and then screw that up too Because they are not listening.I know that there are incompetent drs in the world but reading some of these posts makes you think half of the band doctors are ignorant !! I know it's not true , I think people hear what they Want to hear and if they look at the actual paper work it probably will say much of what u said. 4 LBSept09, ☠carolinagirl☠, DELETE THIS ACCOUNT! and 1 other reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jennifer1 180 Posted July 11, 2012 Amen! Amen! Amen! Soooo glad you posted this..once again it amazes me how many people get the band and have no clue of what to expect...don't do any research and then whine that it doesn't work! Wow! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jennifer1 180 Posted July 11, 2012 Amen! Amen! Amen! Soooo glad you posted this..once again it amazes me how many people get the band and have no clue of what to expect...don't do any research and then whine that it doesn't work! Wow! 1 ☠carolinagirl☠ reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bnoff 3 Posted July 11, 2012 It seems to me there is a lot of misunderstanding out there when it comes to restriction. Over and over' date=' I read post after post of the following statements: "I have had fills but can still eat whatever I want" While some people do have issues eating certain foods, there is absolutely no truth that you shouldn't be able to eat foods like breads, Pasta, and rice. If you are following a low carb diet that's one thing, but being banded doesn't mean you shouldn't be physically able to eat them anymore. Many of us can still eat absolutely everything we ate before surgery. "I have had fills but I can still eat more than 1 cup of food" This may be true, however, just because you can eat more than a cup of food doesn't mean you should. More often than not, if you eat slowly and stop after eating no more than 1 cup of food, you will find that you are satisfied and no longer hungry despite the fact you could still physically eat more. Quit trying to test your band to see how much you can eat, because the only one that will fail the test is you, not the band. "I have had fills but I don't feel full" Big misconception- the band will make you feel full. Wrong. It's true some people do feel full but it's a different full sensation than we had before banded. In fact, it's almost uncomfortable. The band is not supposed to make you feel stuffed full, it's supposed to make you feel satisfied with less food for longer periods of time. If you keep getting fill after fill because you don't feel stuffed full, you are going to end up one of the many people who have bands too tight and slips as a result. Being satisfied means you are no longer hungry, not that you feel as though you just ate a seven course Thanksgiving dinner. Quit trying to feel full and start listening to your body because it will tell you when it's satisfied. I encourage everyone to educate themselves on the Lap-Band, what it does, and what it doesn't do. Too many people are walking around banded completely ignorant to the facts and I fear many will have complications and slips because of it. It's your body, take responsibility for educating yourself on it. Be well all [/quote'] Thanks these are such great reminders for me! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kll724 3,055 Posted July 11, 2012 You are so right! I am a real believer in the 6 month pre-surgery diet. It taught both me and my son how to eat before we had our surgery. We have both been successful both on the pre-surgery diet and afterwards. But, my surgeon has told us no bread, little Pasta and rice. Most rice is a no-no because it does get stuck. I can eat, and do at times, hard bread, such as bread sticks when we go out to dinner. Never, eat soft breads or muffins, etc. They will cause you to get stuck! Best wishes folks! Karen 1 ☠carolinagirl☠ reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites