Absolutely! They know that people like me read and compare labels before buying, the more nutritional they can make their product appear the better (for them). Until this diet I paid little to no attention to the labels.Label writers are sneaky bastards (m/f), aren't they?
I am still not sure about the nutritionist, only one visit so far, but I go back tomorrow. Yeah I guess it's good that I discovered the hernia and there is something that can be done about it. And in talking with folks it sounds like relatively minor surgery. But surgery none the less. I will not get the tummy tuck, it was too complicated, in Utah the only way to get them combined is to go to a plastic surgeon and those I looked at did not seem like real hernia experts. In contrast my doctor does lots of hernia surgery and seems to understand it quite well. One thing at a time, I guess, and I may never get the tummy tuck. Not really a necessity. Yes, I hope you do join us in the calorie counting thing. It has worked well for me.Rob, so happy you saw a nutritionist and that it's helping. That's wonderful. Glad you caught the hernia, too.
Yes, it will be laproscopic, not only will recovery be quicker and easier it allows them to put the mesh on the inside which the surgeon said was better. He explained both options in detail and let me choose. Have you done, or are you committed to a tunny tuck?If they can do the hernia laproscopically you probably won't have 1+ month of downtime like with the tummy tuck
I think so, the plastic surgeons near here who could do it are plastic surgeons first. They have websites with a hard sell and lots of before and after pictures, mostly of women who I thought looked pretty good before... Somehow a surgeon who seems to do more boob jobs than anything just did not seem like the right choice.Getting an expert to do the job sounds sensible.
I haven't. More than the cost I fear what 1-6 months of limited/no exercise would mean for me and whether I'd fall out of good habits. There is also the ~1 in 1000 chance of death for what (for me) would be mostly vanity, plus the risk of common complications (phantom itches - that itch you literally cannot scratch, numb sections, etc). I'd be more tempted if the end result made me look "normal" rather than someone who traded loose skin for jack-o-lantern scars to go with my stretch marks.Have you done, or are you committed to a tunny tuck?
Maybe, or maybe she was guessing. Suggesting you know something about a patient's health makes you seem more knowledgeable and hinting at a general infection is a safe one because it can refer to anything from an in-grown toe nail to a head cold so everyone feels seen personally. Digestive enzymes seem to have a lot of possible side effects and no real benefits unless you have very specific health issues. Your liver and gallbladder don´t need support unless your doctor says they do. 700$ worth of tests scream scam to me, even if the lady is nice and genuinely believes in it herself. Belief isn´t proof, no matter how fervent you are.She said my blood work suggested a possible infection, and she did not know about the prostate thing, when I told her she thought that was what she saw. It is something my doctor missed...
Maybe, or maybe she was guessing. Suggesting you know something about a patient's health makes you seem more knowledgeable and hinting at a general infection is a safe one because it can refer to anything from an in-grown toe nail to a head cold so everyone feels seen personally.
Hey Pam, great to see you here!! And thanks for your nice words. I hope you are here to stay now, I think the forum helped you. I know you can do this, I've seen you do it before. I like the new picture, you look good!Sorry I’ve been gone so long. Feel like I missed so much on your journey! You look a different man.
You make some good points LaMa, I guess any good fortune teller or soothsayer knows the trick of saying something you can't disprove, but might know to be true. You are right, if I had not known about the infection I would have thought about it, you can never be sure, but maybe she just got lucky with me and I confirmed. Still trying to figure out if she is more soothsayer or real. I think the new diet is helping me, and will stick with it and her for a while, till the supplements run out anyway. After seeing your post I did do some Google searching and it seems the bottom line on the supplements is they might do some good in rare cases, but not usually. They do not however seem to do harm. Except waste $...Maybe, or maybe she was guessing. Suggesting you know something about a patient's health makes you seem more knowledgeable and hinting at a general infection is a safe one because it can refer to anything from an in-grown toe nail to a head cold so everyone feels seen personally.
That is a good idea, I will do it. If she is legit it should be easy for her to respond. And I will ask for more detail on the $700 worth of testing and maybe run it by my doctor... No commitments on that one until after my surgery. In fact I probably will not go back to the nutritionist until then either.Could you email the nutritionalist and ask her for some scientific articles on why the nutrition supplements you are taking are supposed to work?
I liked that article, downloaded it and will study it a bit. Do you read the New Yorker regularly? My mother subscribed and I often ended up with her old issues, since she passed I miss it. The cartoons were great!Reminds me of Malcolm Gladwell's article challenging criminal profiling
I'm not a subscriber, but I'll usually read it when I come across a copy. I do follow most of Malcolm Gladwell's writing though.I liked that article, downloaded it and will study it a bit. Do you read the New Yorker regularly? My mother subscribed and I often ended up with her old issues, since she passed I miss it. The cartoons were great!
Same here!I'm not a subscriber, but I'll usually read it when I come across a copy.
Surgery is scheduled for March 25, the wait was my choice, I could have done it right away. However I have the long planned trip to Louisiana March 13 to 19, and part of it will be deep sea fishing, not something I could do right after surgery. Then the first Monday I am back my 2nd covid shot is scheduled, can't miss that. The surgeon wanted to give me a few days after the shot to recover so the 25th is the soonest I can practically do it, or conveniently anyway. Now that I better understand my problem I almost regret not doing it right away and canceling my trip, but that would not have been much fun, and I plan to meet my brothers and an old friend for the fishing and other things.It will be so good to get that hernia fixed, Rob. How long will you have to wait, do you know?
I have decided to stick with the supplements until my supply is gone, following directions as strictly as I can. Then I will stop for a while, I think that will tell me if they are any real help. I have improved since going on this diet, but I suspect it is more the adding of fat, and maybe eliminating dairy that is doing it, not the supplements, but it is hard to know when everything changed at once. I will not do the tests for now, I don't think they are allergy tests, but am not clear they are supposed to look for markers in my blood that would indicate things like problems digesting protein or sugar. I would need to know more before going down that path, but want to test the supplement thing first.I honestly don't think anyone needs a supplement if they are eating right, and this is where the yogis and plant-eaters and all those other influencers reveal their true colours, because as far as I know, it is very difficult to develop scurvy or any of those other issues on a modern diet.
Sounds like my nutritionist, same list of foods to stop, except for the pork anyway. However I do feel my digestion has improved with the new diet and things, I am just not sure why, too many variables...The standard things dubious nutritionists take you off here are bread, pasta (sometimes all gluten or all carbs), cheese (or all dairy), sugar (sometimes including fruit), beer (sometimes all alcohol), and pork. Somehow their expensive tests always throw up the same suspects, which don't show in normal, paid-by-insurance tests.
Don't think I will have the tests, not unless she tells me a lot more about them and shows evidence they make sense. Yeah, I suppose ATVing is kind of like snowmobiling, but without the snow. We have the ATVs, but not snowmobiles, the ATVs have a lot more uses, for me anyway, than a snowmobile would... I like exploring with them, just got them fixed up this winter, have not done much in a while, looking forward to doing more as it warms up. And I did some research, apparently ATV riding is some exercise, about comparable to walking. Apparently holding on and controlling it works the core. No gym workout, not even yardwork, but it is something.Also you could just do an elimination diet on your own and save the $700! Glad you didn't cancel your trip. It sounds wonderful. And I really hope the pain can be kept at bay by strengthening your stomach muscles. I used to go snowmobiling with my uncle. Is ATVing like that at all? Looks really fun!
Great, enjoy them! No the 25th isn't far away and to get the trip in its well worth waiting. Or feels that way when it doesn't hurt...We're seeing ours today for the first time since Christmas. I have missed them.