Friday, May 30, 2008
Tired of Talking About It
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Struggling with Weekends
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
I'm not drinking enough water
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
What's on my Grocery List?
- mixed greens
- matchstick carrots
- baby portabella mushrooms/sliced
- grape or cherry tomatoes
- sunflower seeds
- Kraft light zesty italian dressing
Tortilla Pizza Fixings (I have a basket in my fridge with all this stuff in it, so it's easy to pull out and fix a pizza)
- mini Flat Out wraps
- pizza sauce in a jar
- turkey pepperoni
- use the mushrooms and tomatoes from above
- mozzerella cheese - pineapple chunks (sometimes)
Chicken Zucchini Casserole Fixings (I usually make this casserole once a week and eat it for lunch everyday)
- frozen chicken tenders
- cheapo italian dressing (for the marinade)
- sliced mushrooms
- baby zucchini
- onions, garlic, seasoning
- TGIFridays frozen artichoke spinach dip
- Cheddar cheese
Snacks, Mini Meals or Lazy Day Meals
- Synders Soy Chips (or Trader Joe's Soy Crisps if I happen to get over there)
- dill pickles
- deli sliced turkey, chicken, beef or ham
- SF Popsicles
- 100 calorie bag popcorn and flavored seasoning salts
- fresh fruit (apples, bananas, etc)
- frozen fruit (for protein smoothies)
- Wasa Crackers (for chicken or tuna salad)
- Vanilla Bean Roasted Almonds (eat these sparingly)
- Dry roasted edamame
- frozen edamame beans
- milk
- South Beach Diet frozen dinners
- baked tortilla scoops (fill w/ taco seasoned beef and top w/ cheddar cheese, microwave)
- Sargento mozz cheese sticks (I hate every other brand)
- Carb Master Yogurt (Kroger brand, 12g protein, 3g carbs)
- Kashi Go Lean Crunch granola -- to top my yogurt with
Protein Supplements
- Body Fortress Chocolate and Vanilla Protein Powder (from Wal-Mart)
- South Beach Protein Bars (chocolate, peanut butter or maple nut)
- Zone Perfect Snack Size protein bars
Just thought I'd share some of my shopping items.
~Pam
Monday, May 19, 2008
My new favorite self portrait
Sunday, May 18, 2008
What are you doing right?
Here's the list that I posted: --- Here's what I'm doing that's good:
- I log all my food on www.fitday.com --- this keeps me accountable to myself and also helps me ensure that I get all my protein per day. It's also a reality check for me on some foods that I think are fine, but after logging them I discover I was mistaken (i.e.: brats for dinner last night was a no-no). Logging also helps me mid-day know if I need to adjust my eating for the rest of the day. If I'm low on protein I know it right away and can adjust accordingly.
- I'm training for a half-marathon. I still have a problem wrapping my head around that concept. In less than a year I will have gone from morbid obesity to a half-marathon... how is that even possible? But I can see the finish line in my head and I know I can get there. I signed up for a 20-week walking training program - at the 15-week mark I'll do a 10 mile walk, then 6 weeks later is the half-marathon. I'm walking nearly everyday and it feels great!
- I'm working on more than just the eating and exercise. When else in my life will I have the opportunity to make dramatic changes in my life? For the next 6 months I'm adding a new aspect of my health each month. Here's my schedule of goals:
- May 13- June 13 Spiritual Health
- June 13- July 13 Financial Health
- July 13- August 13 Emotional Health
- September 13- October 13 Relationship Health
- October 13- November 13 Intellectual Health
- Being the leader of my local support group really forces me to connect with other people. Before surgery I avoided other people and was content with being a homebody. Now I'm thrilled to be making new friends and helping others realize their weight loss goals. I've found some awesome, life long friends because of WLS.
- Besides the support group that I lead, I also attend 2 other support groups. One through my surgeon's office and another in a nearby town. Again, more friends, which is great. But also the more people I meet who have had WLS, the more I learn and the better equipped I am to face my own journey and struggles with this new lifestyle.
- I'm supporting my community by shopping regularly at Goodwill. LOL! I'm keeping a running tally of how much I am spending on clothes since surgery... it'll be interesting to see what that ends up being. And everything I collect along the way (and all those clothes from pre-surgery) will be sold at a yard sale later this summer to raise money to buy a whole new wardrobe.
- I'm a big believer in "knowledge is power." If I see a question here on OH or read something interesting on a website ... I will dig deeper to learn what I can about that topic. I spend more time doing research now as a post-op than I ever did in any college class in my life. I've learned so much in the past year, I amaze myself. I try to share the things I've learned with others by posting on my blog and profile.
- I took a 10-week group therapy class shortly after my surgery through the psychologist's office who works with my surgeon. This class helped me identify exactly why I got fat in the first place, taught me about how to have a healthy relationship with food, helped me set goals for my future life after WLS and helped me develop coping techniques for cravings and negative self-talk. I wish every WLS patient was required to take a class like this after surgery - it's amazing what you can learn about yourself if you just take the time to look deep enough inside.
- Giving back. When I first started my WLS journey a lot of people helped me by providing information, advice and links to awesome resources. Now that I'm on the other side of the journey, I feel like it's my duty to give back to those who are just starting. Helping others is becoming a passion.
- A schedule is very important to me now. I eat and take my vitamins on a very specific schedule. If I didn't have this regimine I could quickly get off track and fall back into old bad habits. Using my cell phone's alarm feature really helps me remember what I should be doing. Most of the schedule is ingrained in my day already, but there are a few things that I tend to forget, so I've got those things programmed into my cell phone and an alarm reminds me what I need to do when.
That's all I can come up with at the moment. Thanks for posting this thread. So often we focus on the negative aspects and what we're doing wrong. But when we're reminded of what we are doing RIGHT, we know we're on the right track and can keep plugging along toward that finish line of success.
Pam
Friday, May 16, 2008
6 Months -- Goal Update
Sometimes it feels like I’ve been doing this thing forever and my memory of life before surgery gets foggy at times.
I feel normal and healthy and like this is how I’ve lived all along. I guess the reality must be somewhere in between those two extremes. At the beginning of this WLS journey I took a 10-week group therapy class that helped me focus on a whole life Wellness Plan.
In that plan I set specific goals for myself in various areas of my life. I didn’t want this journey to be only about eating and exercising – I wanted to take the opportunity for change and really work on any area of my life that I felt needed work.
- Spiritual health
- financial health
- intellectual health
- emotional health
- relationship health
- vocational health
I’m doing great on eating and exercise – that seems to be a given at this point. I’ve lost 83 pounds, I’ve dropped five pant sizes, I’m wearing XL shirts (sometimes L) and people are calling me skinny (even though I’ve got a ways to go before that title is actually true).
I’ve joined the Crim Fitness Training and I'm training for a half-marathon - I’m exercising regularly, so I’ve got that part covered too. But I feel like I haven’t been working on any of those other goals on my list.
Yes, I know that during the first few months after surgery that I can’t do much besides focus on eating and exercising, so I shouldn’t be too hard on myself. But these past few weeks I’ve felt like I’ve let myself down in some ways. I’ve been so driven to get physically healthy, that I’ve been ignoring the other areas of health I want to focus on. The thing that’s been bothering me for the past few weeks is that I feel like I’ve failed because I haven’t been working on those other goals. Got a lot of self-talk going on in my head lately. The devil side keeps saying how bad I am and what a failure I’m going to be because I can’t even accomplish the goals I’ve set for myself. “Bad Pam!” But the angel side reassures me that I’m doing good and how successful I’ve been so far and reminds me of what great things I have in store for myself. “Go Pam!”
So where do I go from here?
Well, I’m at the 6-month mark and I really want to deal with the rest of these goals in the next 6 months. There are 6 remaining goals to tackle. So I will focus on one single goal for each of the next six months. Each new goal will be added on top of the heap – meaning just because the month changes doesn’t mean I’ll abandon the goal from last month, I’ll continue working on each as I go along, just add a new task each month. So here’s my schedule:
- May 13- June 13 Spiritual Health
- June 13- July 13 Financial Health
- July 13- August 13 Emotional Health
- September 13- October 13 Relationship Health
- October 13- November 13 Intellectual Health
November 13th will bring me full circle to my 1 year surgery anniversary. So I’m pushing back the devil and listening to the angel.
I can accomplish my goals.
I will succeed!
I am brave enough.
I am stronger than myself!
~Pam
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Is my nutritionist full or crap or is it me?
Monday, May 12, 2008
6 Month Lab Results

Friday, May 09, 2008
How Much Protein?

- Protein sources have a high nitrogen level. Nitrogen is broken down in the liver and a biproduct of that process is is ammonia. Ammonia is poisonous and can be harmful to cells in the body.
- Stress on the kidneys can occur when the body has to process more than 2g of protein per kg of ideal body weight. (Which translates to 122g for my body.)
- High protein levels can decrease Vitamin B6 levels and cause deficiency.
- Increased calcium excretion has been associated with high intakes of protein from animal sources - leading to osteoporosis.
- Excess protein is converted to blood glucose in the body. Excess blood glucose is stored as fat. (Remember that the body also gets blood glucose from any carbs we eat, which is plenty of fuel for the body.)
But what about all the extra exercise I'm doing?
Studies have shown that professional athletes who do extreme strength training need only about a 50% increase in their protein intake. So for a 150lb man who is an avid body builder his normal need would be 54g of protein intake per day. Increase that by 50% and he'd only need 81g of protein.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.... that's not what THEY will tell you or what they even want to hear. They will say they need "1g of protein pre pound of current body weight." But I ask them to please check out that list I just wrote above about the risk factors for taking in excess protein. I really don't want to enter myself into that huge fight... so that's all I'm saying on that topic. LOL!
So there you go.... more information about protein then you ever wanted to know.
~Pam
Thursday, May 08, 2008
A solution to mindless eating
I have a lot to say....
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Where are Nutrients Absorbed?
Any nutrient that falls within the shaded area of bypass will no longer be absorbed from the food you eat. Those absorption points are designed to grab nutrients from food as the food passes by - but if the food never enters that area again, no nutrients can be absorbed. This is why we must take supplements for the rest of our lives.

