Healthy Living

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Body of Work: The unexpected side-effects of weight-loss surgery

You know what I'd like to do? I'd like to be naked in front of someone. Someone who is not my doctor, or my cat, or my beloved. I'd like to stand up, naked, in front of a completely objective person, and ask them exactly what I look like. I don't want them to describe me in sexual terms, or any kind of value-laden language: in terms of attractiveness or not, shapeliness or lumpiness, without using heavily weighted words like "scrawny" or "lumpy."

Is that possible? It might not be. It might be that the language of bodies, the language applied to bodies, is too emotionally weighted, has got too much baggage surrounding it, to ever be stripped free of its associations and applied objectively and dispassionately. But that's what I want. I want someone to look at me, and tell me exactly what they see, because I have no idea, at all, what I look like. I've wanted that all along, all the way down the points on the scale. But now, I feel like I need to know.

I've got all this extra skin, see. It's far, far less skin than I expected--sometimes, I feel like it's way less skin than I deserve, after all those years of being overweight, and then obese. Shouldn't my skin have stretched to its breaking point? Oughtn't I look exactly like a melting candle? That's what happens, when you are fat and then you are thin. But I lucked out. I am droopy in the arm, and very small of breast. The flesh of my stomach crumples, and can be pulled taut, to either side of my waist. There's a pooch, where my fanny pack of fat, the part of my body I unfairly heaped the most hate upon, used to be, but it does not obscure my knees--it hangs down hardly at all. And then my thighs, which sort of ooze slowly downward, wrinkling into my knees, and my butt, rounding down to little folds just above the backs of my legs.

I want to take off my clothes in front of someone and say, What does this look like? I mean, is it awful? Do I look terrible? Do I make you embarrassed to look at me? Do I look a thousand years old? Do you think it'll all go away, if I start lifting weights like an insane mad person? It's all perfectly ordinary, right? Will that solve my problem? Is it a problem at all? Can I live with it? What do you think--could you live with it? Or would you start fantasizing about plastic surgeons, and thinking about how your body's going to finally be okay, once you get rid of this last barrier to being awesome and perfect, with absolute no hand-holds for mockery. There will be absolutely nothing for anyone to pick on me for, right? Once I get rid of the skin? I'll be inviolable, and unflappable. Literally! No flaps! Literally no hand-holds. Unless you count the enormous plastic breasts I'm sure I will be suckered into installing into my chest.

Maybe what I want is someone, with no stake in my self-esteem, with no reason to want me to feel happy, to tell me that it is okay. To give me permission to just give it up and get on with living my life in the imperfect body I've ended up with. I'm a smaller person, and it's changed my life in an uncountable number of ways, so many for the better. Isn't that good enough? It ought to be. That's what I got into this whole mess, with the weight-loss surgery, for. To be smaller, to be healthy, to get on with living my life, without worrying about my body.  Did I really believe that would happen just automatically? It seems to me that I did. I can't believe, however, that I was really that naïve.

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Comments 1-10 of 21
  • LydiaMarie's Avatar
    Posted by LydiaMarie Fri May 23, 2008 10:58am PDT

    I'm skinny and my knees are wider than my calves. Weird, right? Can't wear dresses, especially because i have big feet, and big feet with tiny calves gives me a sort of pelican look. I think there is no getting past our own brain damage, even when our bodies serve their purpose just fine. Wouldn't it be neat to get to the point of not loving a body not for how it looks, but how it works? Wow - I can dance and get down, look at our skinny/fat asses go!

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  • Jessica Ashley, Shine staff's Avatar
    Posted by Jessica Ashley, Shine staff Fri May 23, 2008 11:51am PDT

    I just love this post. I love the honesty and the need to talk in real ways about our bodies. I haven't had weight loss surgery, but I've had a baby, lost weight, gained weight, lost weight again, gotten in shape and let it go and worked back at getting healthier again. Through that all, I've wanted the same things -- to see how accurate or skewed or OK my perceptions of my body were, and really, there aren't lots of ways to do that without feeling s---ty or lied to. Maybe that's cynical but I think we have a lot to talk about in this arena. Thanks for starting the convo, Anne.

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  • maragirl's Avatar
    Posted by maragirl Fri May 23, 2008 5:11pm PDT

    You're so honest Anne I like that and at least you are real with yourself. I also "took the easy way out" also. I would look in myself in the mirror and think,"Hell, if I were a man, I wouldn't want me either". At 5ft 1 1/2", and 228 lbs, then gained 8 more on purpose so my good government insurance would pay for the surgery, I felt as though I needed it. I didn't have any comorbidities, but with diabetes and hypertension on both sides of my family, I was well on my way. Not to mention I looked like fat s--- walking in my clothes. I'm at 137 now and would like to lose more, but I look way better than I did before. It's nice having a neck!

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  • Laura's Avatar
    Posted by Laura Fri May 23, 2008 7:51pm PDT

    I am in exactly the same place as you, Anne, except I have already scheduled my plastic surgeries. I hoped that I would not need them, but that was mostly fantasy. My body looks exactly as you describe, and I ask myself the same questions every day - especially because, with clothes on, I look pretty darn good! I accepted that plastic surgery might be necessary and was prepared to do whatever it took to reach my final goal. I'm so excited about it I can't wait.

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  • kim's Avatar
    Posted by kim Sat May 24, 2008 8:09am PDT

    Anne, what a great post! It so happens I am also in the same place and would love for someone else to be candid with me about the way I look now!

    I have a severe love/hate relationship with my post weight loss body. On most days I am grateful that my body has responded as well as it has. I too have loose skin but when you look at how big I was before the surgery, I feel very lucky to have ended up with the results that I have. In general, the lose skin is minimal and I can live with my arms and stomach but my thighs give me grief. Every day I toy with having plastic surgery to try and correct it. I have already had a breast augmentation because I completely lost all of my breast tissue and literally had nothing left. I felt and looked like a 12 year old boy without them so I chose to have them replaced and love the results. This is why the arms and stomach is tolerable. Now if I could just do something with the thighs....but I doubt I ever will. Exercise will have to be enough. I don't want to spend the money or go through another surgery (a thigh lift supposedly has a VERY painful recovery).

    Maybe one day I will meet the person to whom I can bare my soul and my wrinkly body to and get some honest feedback. Goodness knows i'm not getting it from the mirror right now...;)

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  • wangjel's Avatar
    Posted by wangjel Sat May 24, 2008 8:43am PDT

    ooooooooook

    the endless source of find problems........

    i'm a man but anyway shine is a good family place.

    (and to learn about my wife :d)

    it is good to take care about ourself with a postive attitude always not because soe pieces

    are not fit in the categories of "nice" and (what you never beleive) anyway we love the woman whatever!

    so does not stop to take care about yourself but BE HAPPY IN THE PROCESS ALREADY to take care about us (men) because to biggest porblem what fat can cause is a depressed women in relation.

    and that is a real problem.

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  • wangjel's Avatar
    Posted by wangjel Sat May 24, 2008 9:18am PDT

    ah yes about honest feedback....................you know exactly how you looks like, as i know how i looks like

    i look bad

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  • JustMe's Avatar
    Posted by JustMe Sat May 24, 2008 1:03pm PDT

    "Maybe what I want is someone, with no stake in my self-esteem, with no reason to want me to feel happy, to tell me that it is okay. To give me permission to just give it up and get on with living my life in the imperfect body I've ended up with."

    YOU can be this person. YOU have the choice to think anything you want about your body and because of that YOU decide how YOU feel about your body. Only YOU gets to decide what YOU choose to think and feel. Nobody else has any power over how you feel. Do you want to keep choosing to feel the way you do about your body? What is a perfect body anyway???? Only humans deem things perfect or imperfect. I suffered 16 years of struggling with anorexia, bulima, and BDD. With the help of a professional treatment team...I'm finally choosing to truly be HAPPY with my body and have a strong grip on recovery. It is possible for anyone. I wish you and everyone peace with their physical appearance...our bodies are truly amazing.

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  • Allie's Avatar
    Posted by Allie Sat May 24, 2008 4:05pm PDT

    Our bodies are our friends. So I'd rather not see anyone dumping on his/hers. If we have bad attitudes about something like cellulite or loose skin, how would we feel if we suddenly came down with cancer?

    Most of us live in societies where we have to wear CLOTHES, so take advantage.

    By the way, I had a cat who had the baggiest skin in the world-we could never figure out why she had a permanant suit 2 sizes too large. But I loved her to death and she was the joy of my life. Baggy skin is not so bad.

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  • sushimonger's Avatar
    Posted by sushimonger Sun May 25, 2008 10:14am PDT

    One way to see what people think about your body honestly (and without words) is by posing nude for artists. I have always had serious weight/body image issues, and have fluctuated from a size 16 to a size 4 more than once, so I empathize with you. I was asked a few years ago, when I was somewhere in the middle of a mad fluctuation, to pose for a sketch class at the local arts' council and found it to be enormously empowering.

    There were only maybe 10 artists there, consisting of bored, middle aged ladies and a few non-descript men. I was nervous as hell, but they plied me with some wine, let me use a sheet to drape over myself as I wanted, and, little by little, I became completely nude. The sketches were wonderful- some showed what I saw when I looked into the mirror- my stretchmarked and saggy middle, my boobs made useless and depleted after breastfeeding two in a row- but others presented a smoother rendition, pictures of a sexy, if Rembrandt-esque, content woman, my alter ego who I sometimes found in the mirror if I squinted just right and the light was good.

    My point, I guess, is that posing for artists will show you we don't always see ourselves as others see us, and that beauty really is in the eye of the beholder, and that beholder probably isn't ourselves. If you can scrounge up the courage, it really is a wonderful experience, and don't forget- artists love 'interesting' bodies. At least, that's what they told me as I went for my second glass of wine . . .

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