This may be controversial, but I've been mulling it over so I'm going to post it. :-)
Last night at a surgery support group, we were talking about how some people think WLS is "the easy way out". Lots of folks bristled at that, and were getting angry. (I do believe the phrase, "who the F**K do they think they are?" was said more than once . . . )
Naturally, surgery is never easy. I have a friend (someone who I actually mentored while they were readying themselves for the surgery) that died from this surgery. But, then again, I've had more relatives die from obesity than have died from the surgery. So I guess WLS is easier than remaining obese.
And for me . . . I have to admit, having WLS was "the easy way out" in terms of method of losing weight, as well. I mean, I had tried other diet methods and failed. If I had continued "dieting", I have complete faith I'd be well over 400 lbs by now. I lost 82 lbs in the first three months, and 180 lbs in the first year, with relatively little effort. With other diet methods, I'd be lucky if I lost 30 lbs in 5 months before I gave up out of sheer frustration, hopelessness and deprivation. If it wasn't the "easy" way to lose weight-- if having surgery made it HARDER to lose weight than doing so via diet and exercise, NO ONE WOULD HAVE IT!!!
Sure, I had surgical recovery time of 3 weeks, and pain from the surgery, but I'd re-do the surgery every year if I needed to to keep the weight off-- rather than having to return to 350+ lbs and then "diet" my way back to my current weight. ****, if surgery would take off the 30 lbs of bounce I've had, I'd do it again for that. Diet and exercise SUCKS. ;-) And the surgery gave me HOPE for the first time regarding my weight and my life, and that made it infinitely easier than anything I had tried prior.
And then I got to thinking . . . since when is "the easy way out" a negative thing? Why do people think we are less deserving of praise because we took "the easy way out"? Isn't it something miraculous that we love ourselves enough to do what we need to-- despite, sometimes, what our friends and loved ones and the general public may think of our decision-- in order to take care of ourselves? We're easier on family and friends than we are on ourselves; I try to make my husband's life "easier". Why do others view it as a negative when I try to make MY life easier, and why do we shame ourselves and react in rage when people tell us that we've, in essence, been NICE to ourselves? I think the next time someone tells me I took the "easy way out", rather than becoming defensive and having to "protect" my decision, I'm going to tell them, "YES! I did! I loved myself so much that I chose the medical treatment necessary to cure myself of morbid obesity. The hard way didn't work, and left me at risk of death from my condition every day that I remained obese. Why keep fighting when I could be kind to myself, take 'the easy way out' and have some success?"
I wonder what the detractors would say to that. I imagine it might change their perspective a bit, or at least give them something to chew on.
I don't think I would have come to this realization at a year out. I think I had to get to the point I'm at (nearly 3 years out, and struggling to lose 30 lbs of "bounce" weight "the hard way"-- via diet and exercise and battling head issues) to think of it in this way. I understand that there are people out there who have not had as smooth a journey as have I (my only complications are chronic GERD as a result of the surgery, and iron deficiency anemia), and may indeed have had months and months of recovery. I'm not addressing that when I talk about surgery as "the easy way out", because I think that the majority of people who say that to post-ops are saying it in reference to the weight loss.
Just my two cents-- take and do with it what you will.


