I'm new here and I hope it's ok for me to do a bit of wittering on about myself for a moment

I was diagnosed with PCOS when I was 18 years old. I was overweight - very overweight - and had terrible problems with excess hair and absent periods. Before my diagnosis I was sent from one doctor to another, with no one seeming to know quite what was 'wrong' with me. I eventually saw an endocrinologist who diagnosed PCOS.
The appointment was probably one of the most upsetting days of my life - not because of the diagnosis (one of the alternatives being bandied about was a pituitary tumour
) but because of the way the doctor spoke to me. "Go away, lose weight" was pretty much all he had to offer, and in a tone that can only be described as dismissive and smug. I was pretty depressed because of the various symptoms, and whilst it was true that I was overweight, the off-hand way he spoke to me really knocked me back. I supposed I was also shocked that he was insinuating that my problems were my fault for being overweight. I spent most of the next week in tears.It's strange how the mind works, but I was so angry with the doctor's dismissive attitude that I decided I would lose weight, if nothing else to prove to him that I could. I know, it's ridiculous

I won't say it was easy, because it wasn't. But since that appointment I've lost nearly 100lbs. Lots of exercising, watching what I ate and training as a dietitian all helped! I've gone from 217lbs to 120lbs.
Anyway - to cut a long story short (perhaps too late!). I've recently got married and moved house, and changed to a new doctor's surgery. My GP was surprised when I said I had PCOS and asked to do some tests. An ultrasound and blood tests found no sign of PCOS. Normal ovaries, normal hormone levels. My GP and I both reasoned that losing weight has normalised my hormone levels by reducing how much body fat I have.
So even though that smug doctor (I'm still miffed at him!) upset me all those years ago, I do feel thankful to him for spurring me on to do something about my weight. Although I do wish he'd been nicer about it! I can't say that weight loss will work for everyone. But I can say that it's made a huge difference to my life.
Rambling over


i know how upsetting it can be to have someone be mean about the weight and make u feel ashamed and whatnot but what im wondering is...do u think that was his plan all along? maybe he knew that by acting that way, you would get angry and be more determined to get the weight off..no matter what it was...u did it!!
and i bet you feel so proud of yourself and extremely happy that u did.

