Heather! You have a name!!
It's funny how some doctors are shocked that 'eat less, move more' actually works! It seems like they're trained to believe that there's a medical/surgical solution for every problem, so if you're obese - write an RX for a pill or rearrange your insides. But, as we know, sometimes what's needed isn't medical or surgical - it's a lifestyle change: changes in habits, choices, thought patterns ... certainly not what's taught in medical school.
Believe it or not, I actually had a doctor get angry at me for losing weight without surgery. He said that it was 'impossible' and called me a 'freak'. Obviously my weight loss brought up some personal issues of his own, as he was obese and considering WLS for himself, but it still stung. Other doctors just seem baffled and shake their heads when they hear what I've done. They seem to think that it's beyond the realm of the possible for most people, which is nonsense. But unfortunately, too often that seems to be the message the medical system is putting out.
I wish that our medical system today provided more support for people trying to lose weight without surgery or drugs. Or how about support for people post-weight loss, who are trying to maintain? I've mentioned before that the University of Pittsburgh here has a program called 'Life After Weight Loss' that provides nutritional, psychological, and reconstructive surgery support for people who have lost weight .... Cool, huh? Sorry, it's only for people who had WLS. Nada for those of us who did it by 'eating less and moving more'.
No point to this ... just rambling about doctors and weight loss.
