I'm losing my memory of food...

Oct 15, 2014 10:41

I noticed something really odd last night. Before surgery, I used to play a game while falling asleep: If you could pick any three foods in the world and have an unlimited amount of them to eat, what three foods would you pick? You didn't have to worry about getting tired of them, as the next night you could pick three new ones.

I couldn't sleep last night, so I tried playing the game... )

things that scare thistles, health: bariatric surgery

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Comments 24

ani_mama October 15 2014, 19:24:47 UTC
I suspect your appetite will come back slowly, once your stomach gets over the discomfort from the operation. I get that way too, when I have my stomach issues. There is nothing I want to eat. And the problems that I have are not half as traumatic as the operation you just had. Have patience with yourself!

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thistle_chaser October 15 2014, 19:30:34 UTC
It seems like so many of my issues come down to lack of patience. It's been so long already (a month as of today!), I expect things to be normal again.

It's strange that I couldn't even think of something. Even when I was sick, I could still think "pizza, yeah, I love that", but nothing at all comes to mind now...

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ani_mama October 15 2014, 19:39:26 UTC
A month is not that long. If you had the same wound on your arm or leg and could see it, you probably would not expect everything to be perfectly back to normal just after a month.
Things will get better. And 30 pounds lost already!

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thistle_chaser October 15 2014, 19:41:24 UTC
Good points!

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voidmagus October 15 2014, 20:08:38 UTC
There has been a lot of research into the stomach's effect on the brain. Most lasting, real weight-loss life changes (non-surgical) are essentially self-brainwashing. A month or so of a diet of mostly vegetables after a diet of mostly meat, and most people will find themselves craving vegetables instead of steak ( ... )

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thistle_chaser October 15 2014, 20:13:34 UTC
There's been some recent studies that suggest there are various bacteria in your digestive system that sort of vote on what you should crave.

That's both interesting and worrying!

I get what you're saying though. I guess this is just worrying because it's a new way of being out of control instead of one I'm more used to.

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voidmagus October 15 2014, 20:25:44 UTC
Honestly, I understand. I will get hungry and not crave anything in particular. Very rare that a desire for a particular food item will pop up. Drives my wife nuts - any time she leaves town for business and I'm left on my own for food for a few days, I eat the same thing every night. Mostly my cravings pop up when I'm very ill or very medicated.

My wife on the other hand...well, her cravings used to be reasonable. We're nearing the end of her 1st trimester now and they're getting a bit out of hand. Not in that they're really weird, but very demanding and not very healty. I try to eat healthy (been losing weight for about a year now), and suddenly my wife craves pasta all the goddamn time.

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thistle_chaser October 16 2014, 03:02:51 UTC
I don't envy her! Normal cravings are enough to deal with, but cravings driven by pregnancy have to be really hard to resist (for good reason).

I used to have cravings all the time. I guess I'm not sorry to be rid of them, though they did feel like part of life to me.

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wow_hazmat October 15 2014, 20:53:53 UTC
Whenever we diet (we use a WW style system), I will often get moments where I am hungry, I know I am hungry, I /definitely/ know I should eat, and yet nothing at all sounds appetizing. I usually ended up, at those times, making a protein shake because, again, I had to have /something/. And it does feel very detached and mechanical.

> open body
> insert food product

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thistle_chaser October 16 2014, 02:54:39 UTC
Yeah, that's how I get a lot, especially since my diet is so limited right now. "Chicken, chicken, chicken, cheese, chicken, HEY I CAN HAVE PEANUT BUTTER, chicken, chicken..." I can't even say I'm missing other things, it's just nothing I can have sounds good anymore.

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beauty_forashes October 15 2014, 21:20:27 UTC
I wouldn't worry about it too much! I tend to think when we need a certain food, our bodies will tell us, provided we haven't warped our tastebuds and organism with processed, sugary, fried and unhealthy foods. I used to eat quite a bit of fried foods and things like Doritos as a kid, then decided to get back to more healthy, natural food. After a while, any craving I had for the unhealthy stuff just went away (I became more repulsed by fried food than craving it in a surprisingly short amount of time). I think our bodies can be "re-programmed" that way, but it's just a theory based on anecdotal evidence.

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thistle_chaser October 16 2014, 02:56:19 UTC
I'm not repulsed by fried food, it just doesn't taste as good as it used to (or now I'm tasting it more like it is?). I think you're right though, I think our bodies and taste buds can be reprogrammed with time.

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mayanas October 15 2014, 23:04:43 UTC
That has got to be a bit unnerving. I recognise that feeling very well myself but I'd be uneasy by something new and unexpected like that too.

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thistle_chaser October 16 2014, 02:57:02 UTC
Yep very unnerving. Not being able to eat it? Fine. Not wanting to eat it? Also okay. But not being able to imagine it? That's a whole different story...

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