Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/03/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Sonny I hear you. Two years ago I went to my orthopedic surgeon and we looked at my x-rays - no cartilage in my knees - bone on bone contact both of them. I was taking full doses of anti-inflammatory drugs. I was 56. My weight had been rising for a decade or so to hit a max of 350 then a decline to 280 but then it was rising again. (I'm 6' 2") The long-term outcome for good knee replacements, those that last, was derived from men (in my case) who weighed less that 180 pounds and were older than I was. If I had a knee replacement(s) I'd likely have to have a second whose success was less likely to be as positive. I'd been wrestling with weight issues for a long time. Finally we sought out a local center whose reputation was very good and who had been in business for almost 20 years. We listened to the doctor and last January (2006) we began a medically monitored fast. I went in weighing 300 pounds. I now weigh 187 plus or minus a few depending. During the fast we learned about nutrition, about how to deal with failure (because diets always have failure in them) and how to make supportive decisions. Saw a physician every week. Had EKG monthly along with blood work. My weekly support group is really important. I KNOW I'll be in this program for the rest of my life. Maybe I'll not need to go every week at some point but I know I'll go at least once a month to touch base, have my records recorded (I track EVERYTHING I eat because it's important for me that I do that . . . I have to own the responsibility for my food choices.) Programs like the one I'm in are relatively rare but not impossible to find. But I wasn't ready until my surgeon and I had a heart to heart. Now I can walk miles. I can ride my bike 20 miles and my knees don't kill me. My blood chemistry is in the best shape of my life and I eat more fruits and veggies than I imagined possible. And I'm picky as hell about what I put in my mouth. I negotiate with restaurants about portion sizes and content and tip accordingly when well taken care of because that's valuable to me. In my head I still weight 350 pounds. I test chairs in case they might collapse under me. I expect people to cringe when they see me want the seat beside them on the airplane or the bus or the train. I expect the off-hand nasty comment -- the kind of thing you'd hear in the 50s said to a black person who was inconvenient. I'm not sure that will ever go away. I wish you good luck with your knees - I know where you're coming from. Intimately. My solution isn't yours. I respect everyone who struggles with issues of weight because I know how desperately hard it is. I'm much more understanding of those who are trying to quit smoking too because their task is almost as hard. Good luck! And I do thank Tina for the good words about her own knee surgery because they give me hope that my own - when it's time - will be as successful. Adam Bridge