Skip to main content

To Do: Figure my shit out!

It’s been on my TeuxDeux list for months now, just rolling over to the next day and the next. Every time I open my laptop or check the app to make sure I’m on top of schoolwork and life admin, it’s staring at me: make appt with bariatric dr.

When I can’t take it anymore I move it ahead a few days, manually, telling myself I’ll do it when things are calmer or the apartment is quieter or it stops raining… These excuses are bunk, of course – for one thing, a Pacific-Northwesterner* should never wait to do anything until the rain stops.

But I’ve been putting it off, because I’m scared. I’m terrified that I’ll be weighed and measured and found…what’s the opposite of wanting? Overabundant? I’m afraid I’ll succumb to pressure and tacitly agree that the weight is the problem, not my attitude about it (or my hoped-for response, the whole reason I’m going to a bariatric doctor at all: that my post-GB body processes food and exercise differently and there’s some key element I’m missing in my attempt at a healthy lifestyle). I’m also just, on a normal/normal-for-fat-people level, afraid of doctors. My hope is that a doctor whose specialty is bariatrics will necessarily know more about obesity, and therefore be more empathic toward fat people, but…yeah, I don’t have a lot of faith in doctors’ humanity.

It started back in May, when I told my fiancé** that I felt trapped between my desire to control my body and my desire to accept it, and the lack of control over even this small thing (my attitude about going up a size) was making me crazy. He listened patiently, as is his wont, and eventually he suggested, ever so gently, that maybe I should see a bariatric specialist. “A doctor who knows about what the surgery does to your metabolism, who can assess you with that knowledge in mind instead of comparing you to everyone else who hasn’t had their insides rearranged.”

I made some joke about how “then I’ll have a doctor in my contacts when I decide it’s time to tighten up my GB,” because I’m the worst, but then I paused to think about it. Maybe he was right: maybe a doctor with experience in bariatric surgery and post-GB patients could actually help me. Even if s/he just said that this is where my body wants to be when I behave in a healthy (non-obsessive) way about food and exercise regularly, and ran a bunch of tests to make sure my hormones/blood sugar/etc are all at the right levels, I could walk away knowing that accepting this change truly is the best path.

And then I could (maybe, with the help of a lot of wine and encouragement) finally get rid of all the clothes that don’t fit me anymore. My heart broke a little just typing that.

Anyway, I haven’t called to make an appointment yet – I called my surgeon first, to see if she could refer me to anyone up here, but she doesn’t know anyone in Washington – but I will. And I will drive all the way down there and have a panic attack in the waiting room and pay the (likely exorbitant) copay on my insurance, and then I will report back. Fingers and toes crossed that I don’t regret making myself vulnerable to the medical profession…too often that’s exactly what happens.



* We moved to Washington in September – it's sooooo much more affordable and it's also gorgeous! We love it.

** Oh, yeah, that’s also a thing – we got engaged in August! Very exciting and also triggering/terrifying, but mostly just happy news that I feel kind of weird about sharing every single time because of my history.

Comments

Faye said…
The lead up to doing something can often be worse than the actual task. Make an appointment ASAP; even if you feel really anxious coming up to it, at least it'll have a set end date.
Anne said…
Thanks, Faye! You're 100% right and your comment prompted me to reach out to the medical center I had bookmarked right now, before procrastinating further – hopefully they'll get back to me and I'll have something concrete to panic about ;)

Popular posts from this blog

Do fat women have it worse than fat men?

I've always said that being fat is harder on women than it is on men.  Not only is there a lot more societal pressure to be stick thin rather than just healthy, which men don't seem to get, but it's a lot harder to be seen as physically attractive if you're even ten or fifteen pounds overweight. Anyway, it seems I'm not the only one thinking these things.  There's an article in the NYTimes today about overweight and obese women doing worse than men financially, an interesting angle on the effects of obesity, and in it they say: Why doesn’t body size affect men’s attainment as much as women’s? One explanation is that overweight girls are more stigmatized and isolated in high school compared with overweight boys. Other studies have shown that body size is one of the primary ways Americans judge female — but not male — attractiveness. We also know that the social stigma associated with obesity is strongest during adolescence. So perhaps teachers and pee...

Memo to medical professionals: the 'weight' issue

I have a bone to pick with the medical community, although it's probably well hidden beneath layers of fat. Yes, I'm talking about the way that doctors and medical professionals deal with weight. A few months ago, I asked my friend if she liked her 'lady doctor,' because I needed to go in for my annual check-up and I don't have a doctor in SF. Her response was something along the lines of "yeah, I like her because she doesn't talk a lot. I mean, except to tell me to lose weight." At this point, she shrugged, as if this is par for the course. For the record, this friend, while not slender, weighs less than I do. So I went online to Yelp (otherwise known as the bible), and I chose a doctor who gets rave reviews. He's a man, unfortunately, but I figured I should just suck it up and give him a try. And I liked him, mostly. The only thing he did that bothered me was that he talked a little too much. Oh yeah, and that he kept slipping in comment...

Exercising with the BF – A Validation Tale

I have something to confess: I haven't worked out in a while.   And by a while, I mean at least a couple of months.  And by worked out, I mean anything besides walking around at a leisurely pace (that includes super low-key yoga/pilates). Amazingly, I'm smaller/lighter right now than I was back in the spring, when I was much better about exercising (well, I say it's surprising, but I guess it's been the case 90% of the last ten years, so I don't know why I continue to be surprised), but nonetheless I've been feeling sluggish and soft lately, and last week I decided to get back on the horse. A friend of mine on facebook has been doing a Jillian Michaels* workout, and she's been posting a lot about how exhausted it makes her and how much it hurts – my kind of workout, when I really want to get stuck in.  I messaged her and we chatted back and forth about the video, and based on her review ("it kills, but it's only half an hour and it isn't bo...