--Overeating physically hurts.
--No hunger feeling, physically, for many weeks after surgery.
--Significant pain and nausea post-surgery.
--Faster buzz from drinking alcohol
--Food preferences change.
--Certain sweets will cause "dumping" and others won't.
--The foods she thought she'd never eat again, she has started to eat: sweets, soda,
--People who don't now about your surgery, make you feel uncomfortable when you do not finish your food.
--Daily heartburn and acid reflux become part of your life
--Soda, eventually, doesn't hurt
--Loosening the strictness of your consumption will speed of the process of your stomach capacity increasing.
--Any food addiction that you had, will remain. Any emotional and psycological dependence on eating remains. Gastric sleeve does not get rid of the food issues.
This made me think that it might be better for people to have their "jaw wired" so that they could work on their relationship with food and the psycology and the emotional issues while at the same time adopting a liquid diet from necesity and learning how to prepare/consume nutrient dense liquid "meals. They would probably lose weight and make headway in cracking their issues with food.
The human body is adaptive so if you continue to use food for psycological and/or emotional reasons, if you continue or start eating "fake food", probably a person who has had this surgical procedure will succeed in increasing his or her stomach's capacity resulting in preventing the permanent and or near sudden loss of weight that was desired in the first place.
So what do you think? Please comment below.
Video Source: July 6, 2017 https:/ /youtu.be/ OwyvGqTBlp4