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Wow Francisco,

That is beautiful!!! Wow Thank you...And Best Wishes....

Big Hugs

Caryl

Hey beautiful people!I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through, but now things seem to be calming down a bit.And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group (thanks, Shell).Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey. You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42 on July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3, 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries: abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket ($14,000.00).Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I once lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my own body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth, but the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still needs to be done.As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before, and my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of talking to myself, of caring for myself.I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize that all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had to be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't suddenly go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had to believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still be OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration. I needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty that I could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every ounce of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some old friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut them out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could no longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco I knew and loved is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The split, while amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far. I will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not share my dreams.Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who I was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I began to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have let myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body feels wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we start each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of flight. My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of San Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling in my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild flowers dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God finally hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light that has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's why people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I smile all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor made of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my pain. The radiance they see is freedom.The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else. When I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear represented searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so much guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties died. Then Zach lost his job.There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over to God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking care of YOU."Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told us that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that a "gastric bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian square dance group. I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended support groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment of time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the dividends that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the mind games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for rest and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a nature walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church, asked if he could join me. I said, "Sure." and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached my goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised us both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity, him from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may be different, the basics of our programs remain the same.By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first kiss. By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided it was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom, and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and they got along great.And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to believe that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of such courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from myself.Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was my soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for way too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but it wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given myself that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God made me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless, deserving of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long last, I finally love me.Thanks for reading.FranciscoAt goalwww.aidsmarathon.comrunner 0024

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Wow Francisco,

That is beautiful!!! Wow Thank you...And Best Wishes....

Big Hugs

Caryl

Hey beautiful people!I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through, but now things seem to be calming down a bit.And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group (thanks, Shell).Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey. You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42 on July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3, 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries: abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket ($14,000.00).Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I once lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my own body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth, but the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still needs to be done.As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before, and my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of talking to myself, of caring for myself.I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize that all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had to be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't suddenly go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had to believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still be OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration. I needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty that I could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every ounce of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some old friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut them out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could no longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco I knew and loved is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The split, while amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far. I will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not share my dreams.Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who I was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I began to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have let myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body feels wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we start each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of flight. My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of San Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling in my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild flowers dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God finally hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light that has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's why people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I smile all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor made of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my pain. The radiance they see is freedom.The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else. When I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear represented searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so much guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties died. Then Zach lost his job.There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over to God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking care of YOU."Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told us that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that a "gastric bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian square dance group. I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended support groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment of time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the dividends that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the mind games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for rest and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a nature walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church, asked if he could join me. I said, "Sure." and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached my goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised us both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity, him from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may be different, the basics of our programs remain the same.By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first kiss. By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided it was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom, and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and they got along great.And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to believe that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of such courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from myself.Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was my soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for way too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but it wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given myself that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God made me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless, deserving of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long last, I finally love me.Thanks for reading.FranciscoAt goalwww.aidsmarathon.comrunner 0024

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Wow Francisco,

That is beautiful!!! Wow Thank you...And Best Wishes....

Big Hugs

Caryl

Hey beautiful people!I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through, but now things seem to be calming down a bit.And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group (thanks, Shell).Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey. You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42 on July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3, 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries: abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket ($14,000.00).Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I once lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my own body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth, but the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still needs to be done.As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before, and my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of talking to myself, of caring for myself.I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize that all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had to be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't suddenly go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had to believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still be OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration. I needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty that I could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every ounce of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some old friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut them out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could no longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco I knew and loved is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The split, while amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far. I will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not share my dreams.Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who I was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I began to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have let myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body feels wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we start each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of flight. My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of San Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling in my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild flowers dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God finally hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light that has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's why people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I smile all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor made of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my pain. The radiance they see is freedom.The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else. When I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear represented searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so much guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties died. Then Zach lost his job.There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over to God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking care of YOU."Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told us that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that a "gastric bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian square dance group. I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended support groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment of time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the dividends that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the mind games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for rest and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a nature walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church, asked if he could join me. I said, "Sure." and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached my goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised us both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity, him from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may be different, the basics of our programs remain the same.By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first kiss. By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided it was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom, and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and they got along great.And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to believe that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of such courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from myself.Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was my soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for way too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but it wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given myself that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God made me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless, deserving of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long last, I finally love me.Thanks for reading.FranciscoAt goalwww.aidsmarathon.comrunner 0024

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Guest guest

Hey beautiful people!

I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through, but

now things seem to be calming down a bit.

And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

(thanks, Shell).

Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42 on

July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

($14,000.00).

Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I once

lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my own

body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth, but

the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

needs to be done.

As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before, and

my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

talking to myself, of caring for myself.

I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize that

all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had to

be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't suddenly

go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had to

believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still be

OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration. I

needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty that I

could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every ounce

of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some old

friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut them

out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could no

longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and loved

is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far. I

will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

share my dreams.

Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who I

was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I began

to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have let

myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body feels

wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we start

each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of flight.

My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of San

Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling in

my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild flowers

dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God finally

hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light that

has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's why

people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I smile

all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor made

of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my pain.

The radiance they see is freedom.

The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else. When

I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear represented

searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so much

guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties died.

Then Zach lost his job.

There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over to

God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking care

of YOU. "

Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told us

that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that a " gastric

bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance group.

I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended support

groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment of

time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the dividends

that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the mind

games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for rest

and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a nature

walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church, asked

if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached my

goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised us

both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity, him

from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may be

different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first kiss.

By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided it

was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

they got along great.

And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to believe

that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of such

courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from myself.

Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was my

soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for way

too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but it

wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given myself

that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God made

me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless, deserving

of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

last, I finally love me.

Thanks for reading.

Francisco

At goal

www.aidsmarathon.com

runner 0024

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

Welcome back Francisco... Great to see ya back

RoseFrancisco wrote:

Hey beautiful people!I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through, but now things seem to be calming down a bit.And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group (thanks, Shell).Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey. You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42 on July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3, 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries: abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid

for out of pocket ($14,000.00).Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I once lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my own body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth, but the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still needs to be done.As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before, and my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of talking to myself, of caring for myself.I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize that all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had to be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had to believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still be OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration. I needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty that I could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every ounce of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some old friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut them out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could no longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then came the hardest

part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco I knew and loved is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The split, while amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far. I will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not share my dreams.Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who I was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I began to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have let myself become bitter with

the resentment that these people would never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body feels wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we start each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of flight. My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of San Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling in my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild flowers dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God finally hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light that has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's why people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I smile all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor made of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my pain. The radiance they see is freedom.The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else. When I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear represented searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so much guilt about leaving the

relationship. Then one of our kitties died. Then Zach lost his job.There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over to God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking care of YOU."Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told us that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that a "gastric bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian square dance group. I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended support groups (online and in-person). And in my time of

need, people stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment of time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the dividends that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the mind games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for rest and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a nature walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church, asked if he could join me. I said, "Sure." and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached my goal weight on October

16, 2004, one day before.On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised us both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity, him from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may be different, the basics of our programs remain the same.By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first kiss. By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided it was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom, and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and they got along great.And so here I am, two years after

my gastric bypass with a life I never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to believe that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of such courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from myself.Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was my soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for way too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but it wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given myself that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way

God made me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless, deserving of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long last, I finally love me.Thanks for reading.FranciscoAt goalwww.aidsmarathon.comrunner 0024

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Guest guest

Welcome back Francisco... Great to see ya back

RoseFrancisco wrote:

Hey beautiful people!I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through, but now things seem to be calming down a bit.And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group (thanks, Shell).Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey. You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42 on July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3, 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries: abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid

for out of pocket ($14,000.00).Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I once lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my own body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth, but the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still needs to be done.As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before, and my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of talking to myself, of caring for myself.I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize that all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had to be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had to believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still be OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration. I needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty that I could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every ounce of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some old friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut them out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could no longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then came the hardest

part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco I knew and loved is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The split, while amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far. I will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not share my dreams.Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who I was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I began to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have let myself become bitter with

the resentment that these people would never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body feels wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we start each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of flight. My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of San Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling in my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild flowers dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God finally hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light that has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's why people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I smile all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor made of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my pain. The radiance they see is freedom.The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else. When I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear represented searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so much guilt about leaving the

relationship. Then one of our kitties died. Then Zach lost his job.There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over to God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking care of YOU."Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told us that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that a "gastric bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian square dance group. I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended support groups (online and in-person). And in my time of

need, people stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment of time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the dividends that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the mind games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for rest and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a nature walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church, asked if he could join me. I said, "Sure." and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached my goal weight on October

16, 2004, one day before.On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised us both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity, him from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may be different, the basics of our programs remain the same.By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first kiss. By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided it was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom, and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and they got along great.And so here I am, two years after

my gastric bypass with a life I never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to believe that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of such courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from myself.Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was my soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for way too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but it wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given myself that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way

God made me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless, deserving of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long last, I finally love me.Thanks for reading.FranciscoAt goalwww.aidsmarathon.comrunner 0024

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Guest guest

Welcome back Francisco... Great to see ya back

RoseFrancisco wrote:

Hey beautiful people!I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through, but now things seem to be calming down a bit.And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group (thanks, Shell).Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey. You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42 on July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3, 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries: abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid

for out of pocket ($14,000.00).Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I once lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my own body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth, but the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still needs to be done.As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before, and my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of talking to myself, of caring for myself.I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize that all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had to be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had to believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still be OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration. I needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty that I could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every ounce of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some old friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut them out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could no longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then came the hardest

part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco I knew and loved is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The split, while amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far. I will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not share my dreams.Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who I was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I began to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have let myself become bitter with

the resentment that these people would never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body feels wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we start each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of flight. My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of San Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling in my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild flowers dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God finally hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light that has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's why people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I smile all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor made of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my pain. The radiance they see is freedom.The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else. When I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear represented searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so much guilt about leaving the

relationship. Then one of our kitties died. Then Zach lost his job.There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over to God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking care of YOU."Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told us that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that a "gastric bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian square dance group. I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended support groups (online and in-person). And in my time of

need, people stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment of time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the dividends that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the mind games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for rest and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a nature walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church, asked if he could join me. I said, "Sure." and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached my goal weight on October

16, 2004, one day before.On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised us both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity, him from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may be different, the basics of our programs remain the same.By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first kiss. By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided it was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom, and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and they got along great.And so here I am, two years after

my gastric bypass with a life I never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to believe that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of such courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from myself.Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was my soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for way too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but it wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given myself that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way

God made me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless, deserving of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long last, I finally love me.Thanks for reading.FranciscoAt goalwww.aidsmarathon.comrunner 0024

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Guest guest

Welcome Back Francisco! It's nice to hear you again. You write so

eloquently and your writing from deep within your soul always brings

tears to my eyes.

Tina

Dr. Baggs/Richmond

Surgery: 5/24/05

Orientation: 330

Surgery day; 294

6/21/05: 266

64 pounds gone!

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through,

but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42

on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I

once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my

own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth,

but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before,

and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize

that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had

to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had

to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still

be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration.

I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty

that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every

ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some

old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut

them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could

no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and

loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far.

I

> will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who

I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I

began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have

let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body

feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we

start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of

flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of

San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling

in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild

flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God

finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light

that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's

why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I

smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor

made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my

pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else.

When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear

represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so

much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties

died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over

to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking

care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told

us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that

a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance

group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended

support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment

of

> time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the

dividends

> that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

>

> Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

> period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the

mind

> games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for

rest

> and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a

nature

> walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church,

asked

> if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

>

> and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

> little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

> church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

> while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached

my

> goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

>

> On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised

us

> both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity,

him

> from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

> understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may

be

> different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

>

> By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

> were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first

kiss.

> By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided

it

> was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

> shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

> and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

> four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

> they got along great.

>

> And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

> never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

> possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to

believe

> that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of

such

> courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

> would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

> that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from

myself.

>

> Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

> satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was

my

> soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for

way

> too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but

it

> wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

> unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given

myself

> that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God

made

> me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless,

deserving

> of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

> deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

> self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

> last, I finally love me.

>

> Thanks for reading.

>

> Francisco

> At goal

> www.aidsmarathon.com

> runner 0024

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Welcome Back Francisco! It's nice to hear you again. You write so

eloquently and your writing from deep within your soul always brings

tears to my eyes.

Tina

Dr. Baggs/Richmond

Surgery: 5/24/05

Orientation: 330

Surgery day; 294

6/21/05: 266

64 pounds gone!

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through,

but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42

on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I

once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my

own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth,

but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before,

and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize

that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had

to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had

to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still

be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration.

I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty

that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every

ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some

old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut

them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could

no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and

loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far.

I

> will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who

I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I

began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have

let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body

feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we

start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of

flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of

San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling

in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild

flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God

finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light

that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's

why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I

smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor

made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my

pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else.

When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear

represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so

much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties

died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over

to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking

care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told

us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that

a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance

group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended

support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment

of

> time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the

dividends

> that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

>

> Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

> period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the

mind

> games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for

rest

> and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a

nature

> walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church,

asked

> if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

>

> and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

> little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

> church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

> while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached

my

> goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

>

> On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised

us

> both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity,

him

> from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

> understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may

be

> different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

>

> By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

> were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first

kiss.

> By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided

it

> was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

> shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

> and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

> four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

> they got along great.

>

> And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

> never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

> possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to

believe

> that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of

such

> courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

> would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

> that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from

myself.

>

> Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

> satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was

my

> soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for

way

> too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but

it

> wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

> unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given

myself

> that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God

made

> me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless,

deserving

> of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

> deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

> self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

> last, I finally love me.

>

> Thanks for reading.

>

> Francisco

> At goal

> www.aidsmarathon.com

> runner 0024

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Welcome Back Francisco! It's nice to hear you again. You write so

eloquently and your writing from deep within your soul always brings

tears to my eyes.

Tina

Dr. Baggs/Richmond

Surgery: 5/24/05

Orientation: 330

Surgery day; 294

6/21/05: 266

64 pounds gone!

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through,

but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42

on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I

once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my

own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth,

but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before,

and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize

that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had

to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had

to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still

be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration.

I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty

that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every

ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some

old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut

them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could

no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and

loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far.

I

> will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who

I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I

began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have

let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body

feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we

start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of

flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of

San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling

in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild

flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God

finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light

that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's

why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I

smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor

made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my

pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else.

When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear

represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so

much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties

died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over

to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking

care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told

us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that

a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance

group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended

support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment

of

> time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the

dividends

> that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

>

> Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

> period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the

mind

> games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for

rest

> and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a

nature

> walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church,

asked

> if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

>

> and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

> little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

> church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

> while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached

my

> goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

>

> On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised

us

> both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity,

him

> from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

> understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may

be

> different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

>

> By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

> were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first

kiss.

> By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided

it

> was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

> shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

> and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

> four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

> they got along great.

>

> And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

> never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

> possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to

believe

> that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of

such

> courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

> would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

> that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from

myself.

>

> Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

> satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was

my

> soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for

way

> too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but

it

> wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

> unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given

myself

> that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God

made

> me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless,

deserving

> of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

> deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

> self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

> last, I finally love me.

>

> Thanks for reading.

>

> Francisco

> At goal

> www.aidsmarathon.com

> runner 0024

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

I too am thrilled your are back. The honesty that you share about

how you felt and now feel is what hits me the most. As I read I have

tears because I have'nt gotten to that point on acceptance and it

seems so foreign for it to happen to me. To feel that at peace with

ones self must be truly amazing. To be who you are........actually

finding out who you are must be awesome and exciting. I cannot wait

to get even a small piece of that peace you talk about. To learn to

love me even a smidge the way I love others including my dogs would

be a huge step. Thanks for coming back cause you touch so many and

we need our buttons pushed in so many ways.

Cecilia

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through,

but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42

on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I

once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my

own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth,

but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before,

and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize

that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had

to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had

to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still

be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration.

I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty

that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every

ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some

old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut

them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could

no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and

loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far.

I

> will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who

I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I

began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have

let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body

feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we

start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of

flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of

San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling

in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild

flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God

finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light

that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's

why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I

smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor

made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my

pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else.

When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear

represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so

much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties

died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over

to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking

care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told

us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that

a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance

group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended

support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment

of

> time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the

dividends

> that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

>

> Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

> period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the

mind

> games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for

rest

> and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a

nature

> walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church,

asked

> if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

>

> and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

> little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

> church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

> while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached

my

> goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

>

> On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised

us

> both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity,

him

> from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

> understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may

be

> different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

>

> By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

> were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first

kiss.

> By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided

it

> was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

> shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

> and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

> four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

> they got along great.

>

> And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

> never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

> possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to

believe

> that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of

such

> courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

> would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

> that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from

myself.

>

> Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

> satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was

my

> soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for

way

> too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but

it

> wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

> unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given

myself

> that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God

made

> me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless,

deserving

> of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

> deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

> self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

> last, I finally love me.

>

> Thanks for reading.

>

> Francisco

> At goal

> www.aidsmarathon.com

> runner 0024

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

I too am thrilled your are back. The honesty that you share about

how you felt and now feel is what hits me the most. As I read I have

tears because I have'nt gotten to that point on acceptance and it

seems so foreign for it to happen to me. To feel that at peace with

ones self must be truly amazing. To be who you are........actually

finding out who you are must be awesome and exciting. I cannot wait

to get even a small piece of that peace you talk about. To learn to

love me even a smidge the way I love others including my dogs would

be a huge step. Thanks for coming back cause you touch so many and

we need our buttons pushed in so many ways.

Cecilia

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through,

but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42

on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I

once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my

own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth,

but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before,

and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize

that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had

to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had

to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still

be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration.

I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty

that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every

ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some

old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut

them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could

no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and

loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far.

I

> will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who

I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I

began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have

let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body

feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we

start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of

flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of

San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling

in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild

flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God

finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light

that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's

why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I

smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor

made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my

pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else.

When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear

represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so

much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties

died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over

to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking

care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told

us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that

a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance

group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended

support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment

of

> time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the

dividends

> that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

>

> Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

> period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the

mind

> games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for

rest

> and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a

nature

> walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church,

asked

> if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

>

> and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

> little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

> church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

> while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached

my

> goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

>

> On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised

us

> both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity,

him

> from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

> understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may

be

> different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

>

> By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

> were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first

kiss.

> By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided

it

> was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

> shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

> and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

> four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

> they got along great.

>

> And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

> never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

> possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to

believe

> that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of

such

> courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

> would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

> that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from

myself.

>

> Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

> satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was

my

> soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for

way

> too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but

it

> wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

> unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given

myself

> that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God

made

> me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless,

deserving

> of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

> deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

> self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

> last, I finally love me.

>

> Thanks for reading.

>

> Francisco

> At goal

> www.aidsmarathon.com

> runner 0024

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Dang it Francisco...you made me cry again. Tears of pain for your

pain, tears of joy for your joy....tears for you my dearest friend!!

You made it!!! Im struggling but I will get there with you some

day. Im almost there...just a few things I still need to work on.

Glad you are back my friend, Ive missed you so much!!!

Cant wait to jump in the ocean with you on the 9th

Love you

Huggles

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through,

but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42

on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I

once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my

own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth,

but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before,

and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize

that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had

to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had

to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still

be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration.

I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty

that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every

ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some

old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut

them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could

no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and

loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far.

I

> will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who

I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I

began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have

let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body

feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we

start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of

flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of

San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling

in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild

flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God

finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light

that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's

why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I

smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor

made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my

pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else.

When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear

represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so

much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties

died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over

to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking

care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told

us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that

a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance

group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended

support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment

of

> time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the

dividends

> that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

>

> Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

> period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the

mind

> games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for

rest

> and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a

nature

> walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church,

asked

> if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

>

> and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

> little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

> church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

> while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached

my

> goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

>

> On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised

us

> both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity,

him

> from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

> understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may

be

> different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

>

> By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

> were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first

kiss.

> By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided

it

> was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

> shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

> and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

> four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

> they got along great.

>

> And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

> never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

> possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to

believe

> that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of

such

> courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

> would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

> that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from

myself.

>

> Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

> satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was

my

> soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for

way

> too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but

it

> wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

> unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given

myself

> that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God

made

> me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless,

deserving

> of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

> deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

> self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

> last, I finally love me.

>

> Thanks for reading.

>

> Francisco

> At goal

> www.aidsmarathon.com

> runner 0024

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Dang it Francisco...you made me cry again. Tears of pain for your

pain, tears of joy for your joy....tears for you my dearest friend!!

You made it!!! Im struggling but I will get there with you some

day. Im almost there...just a few things I still need to work on.

Glad you are back my friend, Ive missed you so much!!!

Cant wait to jump in the ocean with you on the 9th

Love you

Huggles

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been going through,

but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41 (soon to be 42

on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and spirit. I

once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a prisoner in my

own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was relatively smooth,

but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as never before,

and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had to realize

that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid obesity had

to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain didn't

suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal tract. I had

to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and that I'd still

be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of inspiration.

I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness and beauty

that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take in every

ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal loss: some

old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in turn, cut

them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal, but I could

no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco I knew and

loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this process so far.

I

> will always care for him because of the good person he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not recognize who

I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my true self. I

began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. I could have

let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside. My body

feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and 30-somethings. As we

start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel the joy of

flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most beautiful areas of

San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the wind whistling

in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors of wild

flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why did God

finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a beam of light

that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I think that's

why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm healthy, I

smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a suit of armor

made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no longer eat my

pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like everyone else.

When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each tear

represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to pieces. I felt so

much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of our kitties

died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and turn it over

to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth, whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness; you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible for taking

care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted person. She told

us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much more that

a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian square dance

group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I attended

support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. The investment

of

> time and emotion into new, healthy friendships rendered the

dividends

> that I had hoped for—support, community, acceptance and love.

>

> Then came the icing on the cake (pardon that metaphor). After a

> period of dating like a mad man, I had gone on a break from the

mind

> games of men and dating. I went on a church retreat looking for

rest

> and spiritual renewal. The first evening, I decided to take a

nature

> walk by myself. , a tall and handsome man of my church,

asked

> if he could join me. I said, " Sure. "

>

> and I had known each other since October of 2004, maybe a

> little before. Interestingly, and I became members of the

> church on the same Sunday. We actually stood next to each other

> while we took our vows. It was October 17, 2004. I had reached

my

> goal weight on October 16, 2004, one day before.

>

> On the nature walk, and I made a connection that surprised

us

> both. We began talking about recovery, me from morbid obesity,

him

> from alcoholism. We both spoke the language of recovery. He

> understood me in ways that others do not. While the substance may

be

> different, the basics of our programs remain the same.

>

> By the end of the nature walk, we had hugged. Soon thereafter we

> were holding hands. Later in the evening we shared our first

kiss.

> By Sunday night, we had talked and shared so much that we decided

it

> was right for us to date exclusively—we became boyfriends. We've

> shared so much since then. I had dinner with and his Mom,

> and we really hit it off. She now refers to me a son #5 (she has

> four sons). made dinner for my Mom, Dad and brother, and

> they got along great.

>

> And so here I am, two years after my gastric bypass with a life I

> never imagined. I have been blessed beyond measure, but not by

> possessions, but with love. And it started when I began to

believe

> that this miracle would happen. I had no idea I was capable of

such

> courage, such strength, such fortitude. I had no idea that there

> would be so much pain, so much loss. And I couldn't have imagined

> that there would be so much love—no only from others, but from

myself.

>

> Finally, the deep, gnawing hunger in my heart has begun to be

> satisfied. I now know that food can never feed my soul. It was

my

> soul that was hungry for love, and I denied myself that love for

way

> too many years. Sure, I had the love of friends and family, but

it

> wasn't enough to take away the self-hatred that kept me fat and

> unhealthy in mind, body and spirit. At long last I have given

myself

> that gift, the gift of loving myself for who I am, the way God

made

> me, just as I am, perfectly flawed, imperfectly flawless,

deserving

> of love for no other reason than this: I exist, and as such, I

> deserve to be loved by others, but most importantly, I deserve the

> self-love and self-esteem that can only come from within. At long

> last, I finally love me.

>

> Thanks for reading.

>

> Francisco

> At goal

> www.aidsmarathon.com

> runner 0024

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Guest guest

Francisco, welcome back. I am glad that you are

blessed and I know that God is going to continue to

bless and keep you no matter what it is you have to

endure. He always makes a means of escape.

Second, you and my oldest son share the same birthday

(July 4th). He will be 14 and I am so proud of him.

Like you, I see so many changes in him. Truly he is

turning into a man and I love him dearly.

Sorry to hear about Zach's situation and I am praying

that he is gainfully employed real soon. Yes, you are

correct, you can't be responsible for anything that

takes place in anyone elses life. That is the one

thing I have had to learn. I can't save the world but

I can make a change and that change has to start with

me. Until I am happy and love myself, I can't share

my happiness with anyone else and neither am I capable

of truly loving someone else.

To you I say..continue loving you and enjoying life.

There is so much out there for you to experience and

enjoy. My prayers my friend are always with you and

may the peace and of love of God surround you.

Welcome back!

Pam Marsh

--- Francisco gemellodigiovanni@...> wrote:

> Hey beautiful people!

>

> I'm back! There has been so much that I've been

> going through, but

> now things seem to be calming down a bit.

>

> And it's time to get back into the swing of things

> as an active

> member of this group. After all, I am a moderator

> of the group

> (thanks, Shell).

>

> Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on

> your journey.

> You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group

> of caring souls.

>

> Please allow me to introduce myself and update you

> long-timers on

> where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41

> (soon to be 42 on

> July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery

> on June 3,

> 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have

> been at my goal

> weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive

> surgeries:

> abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for

> out of pocket

> ($14,000.00).

>

> Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and

> spirit. I once

> lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a

> prisoner in my own

> body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank

> God I learned

> that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My

> transformation has

> not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was

> relatively smooth, but

> the emotional arena has been where the real work

> needed and still

> needs to be done.

>

> As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as

> never before, and

> my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no

> longer there to

> comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in

> myself, of

> talking to myself, of caring for myself.

>

> I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had

> to realize that

> all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid

> obesity had to

> be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain

> didn't suddenly

> go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal

> tract. I had to

> believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and

> that I'd still be

> OK. I also had to find new non-food-related

> interests that would

> bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of

> inspiration. I

> needed to find and take in every spark of happiness

> and beauty that I

> could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take

> in every ounce

> of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

>

> The physical transformation was rather quick, and I

> made sure that

> the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag

> behind. With the

> weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal

> loss: some old

> friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in

> turn, cut them

> out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal,

> but I could no

> longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery

> process. Then

> came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year

> long-term

> relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an

> end. Zach, my

> former partner, was just not on the same page with

> me anymore. He

> didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco

> I knew and loved

> is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The

> split, while

> amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this

> process so far. I

> will always care for him because of the good person

> he is, but I

> cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know

> me and does not

> share my dreams.

>

> Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not

> recognize who I

> was, I was growing to feel more and more like my

> true self. I began

> to feel hope and joy like never before. People

> treated me

> differently. Men (and some women) expressed

> interest in me

> sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once.

> I could have let

> myself become bitter with the resentment that these

> people would

> never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but

> the truth is, I

> didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but

> emotional ones.

>

> People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And

> it's true, not

> because of what's outside, but what's on the inside.

> My body feels

> wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish

> it like it has

> deserved for so many years. I joined the National

> AIDS Marathon

> training program, and I run with 20- and

> 30-somethings. As we start

> each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel

> the joy of flight.

> My spirit is soaring as I run through the most

> beautiful areas of San

> Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the

> wind whistling in

> my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors

> of wild flowers

> dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group

> warming my heart.

>

> There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I

> find it

> overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why

> did God finally

> hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has

> the isolation

> and imprisonment been turned into a mind that

> expresses love to

> itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a

> spirit that

> soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a

> beam of light that

> has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I

> think that's why

> people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm

> healthy, I smile

> all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a

> suit of armor made

> of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no

> longer eat my pain.

> The radiance they see is freedom.

>

> The pain is still there. I experience pain like

> everyone else. When

> I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each

> tear represented

> searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to

> pieces. I felt so much

> guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of

> our kitties died.

> Then Zach lost his job.

>

> There is nothing I can do about that except pray and

> turn it over to

> God. I can only control what goes into my mouth,

> whether or not I

> will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a

> friend said to

> me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness;

> you are

> responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible

> for taking care

> of YOU. "

>

> Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a

> new circle of

> friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted

> person. She told us

> that we need to be part of a group in which you are

> not a WLS

> patient; you are just who you are. I am so much

> more that a " gastric

> bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian

> square dance group.

> I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I

> attended support

> groups (online and in-person). And in my time of

> need, people

> stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on.

> The investment of

>

=== message truncated ===

__________________________________________________

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Guest guest

Pam...WOW. I wish you could step back and look at yourself from a distance. It's amazing how much this post shows how you have grown in confidence and self-awareness just from a couple of months ago. It's staggering!!!!

Love,

RobynnPamela A Marsh wrote:

Francisco, welcome back. I am glad that you areblessed and I know that God is going to continue tobless and keep you no matter what it is you have toendure. He always makes a means of escape. Second, you and my oldest son share the same birthday(July 4th). He will be 14 and I am so proud of him. Like you, I see so many changes in him. Truly he isturning into a man and I love him dearly.Sorry to hear about Zach's situation and I am prayingthat he is gainfully employed real soon. Yes, you arecorrect, you can't be responsible for anything thattakes place in anyone elses life. That is the onething I have had to learn. I can't save the world butI can make a change and that change has to start withme. Until I am happy and love myself, I can't sharemy happiness with anyone

else and neither am I capableof truly loving someone else.To you I say..continue loving you and enjoying life. There is so much out there for you to experience andenjoy. My prayers my friend are always with you andmay the peace and of love of God surround you.Welcome back!Pam Marsh--- Francisco wrote:> Hey beautiful people!> > I'm back! There has been so much that I've been> going through, but > now things seem to be calming down a bit.> > And it's time to get back into the swing of things> as an active > member of this group. After all, I am a moderator> of the group > (thanks, Shell).> > Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on> your journey. > You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group> of caring souls.> > Please allow me to

introduce myself and update you> long-timers on > where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41> (soon to be 42 on > July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery> on June 3, > 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have> been at my goal > weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive> surgeries: > abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for> out of pocket > ($14,000.00).> > Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and> spirit. I once > lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a> prisoner in my own > body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank> God I learned > that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My> transformation has > not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was> relatively smooth, but > the emotional

arena has been where the real work> needed and still > needs to be done.> > As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as> never before, and > my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no> longer there to > comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in> myself, of > talking to myself, of caring for myself.> > I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had> to realize that > all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid> obesity had to > be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain> didn't suddenly > go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal> tract. I had to > believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and> that I'd still be > OK. I also had to find new non-food-related> interests that would > bring me joy. I had to begin to look for

sources of> inspiration. I > needed to find and take in every spark of happiness> and beauty that I > could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take> in every ounce > of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. > > The physical transformation was rather quick, and I> made sure that > the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag> behind. With the > weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal> loss: some old > friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in> turn, cut them > out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal,> but I could no > longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery> process. Then > came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year> long-term > relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an> end. Zach, my > former partner,

was just not on the same page with> me anymore. He > didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco> I knew and loved > is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The> split, while > amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this> process so far. I > will always care for him because of the good person> he is, but I > cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know> me and does not > share my dreams.> > Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not> recognize who I > was, I was growing to feel more and more like my> true self. I began > to feel hope and joy like never before. People> treated me > differently. Men (and some women) expressed> interest in me > sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. > I could have let > myself become

bitter with the resentment that these> people would > never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but> the truth is, I > didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but> emotional ones.> > People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And> it's true, not > because of what's outside, but what's on the inside.> My body feels > wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish> it like it has > deserved for so many years. I joined the National> AIDS Marathon > training program, and I run with 20- and> 30-somethings. As we start > each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel> the joy of flight. > My spirit is soaring as I run through the most> beautiful areas of San > Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the> wind whistling in > my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face,

the colors> of wild flowers > dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group> warming my heart.> > There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I> find it > overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why> did God finally > hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has> the isolation > and imprisonment been turned into a mind that> expresses love to > itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a> spirit that > soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a> beam of light that > has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I> think that's why > people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm> healthy, I smile > all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a> suit of armor made > of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no> longer eat my

pain. > The radiance they see is freedom.> > The pain is still there. I experience pain like> everyone else. When > I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each> tear represented > searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to> pieces. I felt so much > guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of> our kitties died. > Then Zach lost his job.> > There is nothing I can do about that except pray and> turn it over to > God. I can only control what goes into my mouth,> whether or not I > will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a> friend said to > me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness;> you are > responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible> for taking care > of YOU."> > Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build

a> new circle of > friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted> person. She told us > that we need to be part of a group in which you are> not a WLS > patient; you are just who you are. I am so much> more that a "gastric > bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian> square dance group. > I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I> attended support > groups (online and in-person). And in my time of> need, people > stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. > The investment of > === message truncated ===__________________________________________________

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Guest guest

Pam...WOW. I wish you could step back and look at yourself from a distance. It's amazing how much this post shows how you have grown in confidence and self-awareness just from a couple of months ago. It's staggering!!!!

Love,

RobynnPamela A Marsh wrote:

Francisco, welcome back. I am glad that you areblessed and I know that God is going to continue tobless and keep you no matter what it is you have toendure. He always makes a means of escape. Second, you and my oldest son share the same birthday(July 4th). He will be 14 and I am so proud of him. Like you, I see so many changes in him. Truly he isturning into a man and I love him dearly.Sorry to hear about Zach's situation and I am prayingthat he is gainfully employed real soon. Yes, you arecorrect, you can't be responsible for anything thattakes place in anyone elses life. That is the onething I have had to learn. I can't save the world butI can make a change and that change has to start withme. Until I am happy and love myself, I can't sharemy happiness with anyone

else and neither am I capableof truly loving someone else.To you I say..continue loving you and enjoying life. There is so much out there for you to experience andenjoy. My prayers my friend are always with you andmay the peace and of love of God surround you.Welcome back!Pam Marsh--- Francisco wrote:> Hey beautiful people!> > I'm back! There has been so much that I've been> going through, but > now things seem to be calming down a bit.> > And it's time to get back into the swing of things> as an active > member of this group. After all, I am a moderator> of the group > (thanks, Shell).> > Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on> your journey. > You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group> of caring souls.> > Please allow me to

introduce myself and update you> long-timers on > where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41> (soon to be 42 on > July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery> on June 3, > 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have> been at my goal > weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive> surgeries: > abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for> out of pocket > ($14,000.00).> > Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and> spirit. I once > lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a> prisoner in my own > body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank> God I learned > that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My> transformation has > not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was> relatively smooth, but > the emotional

arena has been where the real work> needed and still > needs to be done.> > As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as> never before, and > my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no> longer there to > comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in> myself, of > talking to myself, of caring for myself.> > I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had> to realize that > all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid> obesity had to > be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain> didn't suddenly > go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal> tract. I had to > believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and> that I'd still be > OK. I also had to find new non-food-related> interests that would > bring me joy. I had to begin to look for

sources of> inspiration. I > needed to find and take in every spark of happiness> and beauty that I > could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take> in every ounce > of sorrow or make others' troubles my own. > > The physical transformation was rather quick, and I> made sure that > the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag> behind. With the > weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal> loss: some old > friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in> turn, cut them > out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal,> but I could no > longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery> process. Then > came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year> long-term > relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an> end. Zach, my > former partner,

was just not on the same page with> me anymore. He > didn't know me anymore. He said, "The old Francisco> I knew and loved > is gone. It's like he died. I miss him." The> split, while > amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this> process so far. I > will always care for him because of the good person> he is, but I > cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know> me and does not > share my dreams.> > Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not> recognize who I > was, I was growing to feel more and more like my> true self. I began > to feel hope and joy like never before. People> treated me > differently. Men (and some women) expressed> interest in me > sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once. > I could have let > myself become

bitter with the resentment that these> people would > never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but> the truth is, I > didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but> emotional ones.> > People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And> it's true, not > because of what's outside, but what's on the inside.> My body feels > wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish> it like it has > deserved for so many years. I joined the National> AIDS Marathon > training program, and I run with 20- and> 30-somethings. As we start > each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel> the joy of flight. > My spirit is soaring as I run through the most> beautiful areas of San > Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the> wind whistling in > my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face,

the colors> of wild flowers > dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group> warming my heart.> > There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I> find it > overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why> did God finally > hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has> the isolation > and imprisonment been turned into a mind that> expresses love to > itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a> spirit that > soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a> beam of light that > has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I> think that's why > people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm> healthy, I smile > all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a> suit of armor made > of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no> longer eat my

pain. > The radiance they see is freedom.> > The pain is still there. I experience pain like> everyone else. When > I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each> tear represented > searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to> pieces. I felt so much > guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of> our kitties died. > Then Zach lost his job.> > There is nothing I can do about that except pray and> turn it over to > God. I can only control what goes into my mouth,> whether or not I > will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a> friend said to > me, "You are not responsible for Zach's happiness;> you are > responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible> for taking care > of YOU."> > Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build

a> new circle of > friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted> person. She told us > that we need to be part of a group in which you are> not a WLS > patient; you are just who you are. I am so much> more that a "gastric > bypass poster child." I joined a gay/lesbian> square dance group. > I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I> attended support > groups (online and in-person). And in my time of> need, people > stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on. > The investment of > === message truncated ===__________________________________________________

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Guest guest

Pam (and everyone else, if I've unintentionally forgotten to thank

you for the welcome back):

Thanks for your kind words. I so appreciate your support. I've

really missed it while I was attending to my break-up and move.

Francisco

>

> > Hey beautiful people!

> >

> > I'm back! There has been so much that I've been

> > going through, but

> > now things seem to be calming down a bit.

> >

> > And it's time to get back into the swing of things

> > as an active

> > member of this group. After all, I am a moderator

> > of the group

> > (thanks, Shell).

> >

> > Hello to all new members. I wish you the best on

> > your journey.

> > You're so lucky to have found this wonderful group

> > of caring souls.

> >

> > Please allow me to introduce myself and update you

> > long-timers on

> > where I am on my journey. I'm Francisco. I am 41

> > (soon to be 42 on

> > July 4th), and I had open RNY gastric bypass surgery

> > on June 3,

> > 2003. I have lost a total of 153 lbs, and I have

> > been at my goal

> > weight for 8 months. I have had two reconstructive

> > surgeries:

> > abdominoplasty and gynecomastia, which I paid for

> > out of pocket

> > ($14,000.00).

> >

> > Everything in my life has changed—my mind, body and

> > spirit. I once

> > lived a half-life of unrealized dreams. I was a

> > prisoner in my own

> > body, and I was desperate to find a way out. Thank

> > God I learned

> > that Kaiser covered gastric bypass surgery. My

> > transformation has

> > not been easy. Yes, my physical recovery was

> > relatively smooth, but

> > the emotional arena has been where the real work

> > needed and still

> > needs to be done.

> >

> > As the layers of fat melted off, I felt exposed as

> > never before, and

> > my old buddy, lover, friend, soul mate—food—was no

> > longer there to

> > comfort me. I had to find new ways of believing in

> > myself, of

> > talking to myself, of caring for myself.

> >

> > I had to find new ways to experience joy, and I had

> > to realize that

> > all the sorrow and regret of so many years of morbid

> > obesity had to

> > be dealt with, without food. And the emotional pain

> > didn't suddenly

> > go away because my surgeon rearranged my intestinal

> > tract. I had to

> > believe that I could cry it out, feel the pain, and

> > that I'd still be

> > OK. I also had to find new non-food-related

> > interests that would

> > bring me joy. I had to begin to look for sources of

> > inspiration. I

> > needed to find and take in every spark of happiness

> > and beauty that I

> > could. I needed to learn that I didn't have to take

> > in every ounce

> > of sorrow or make others' troubles my own.

> >

> > The physical transformation was rather quick, and I

> > made sure that

> > the emotional and spiritual changes didn't lag

> > behind. With the

> > weight loss, I experienced a great deal of personal

> > loss: some old

> > friends (all morbidly obese) abandoned me, and I, in

> > turn, cut them

> > out of my life. I was so wounded by their betrayal,

> > but I could no

> > longer tolerate that kind of poison in my recovery

> > process. Then

> > came the hardest part of my journey: my eleven-year

> > long-term

> > relationship—my whole world of safety—came to an

> > end. Zach, my

> > former partner, was just not on the same page with

> > me anymore. He

> > didn't know me anymore. He said, " The old Francisco

> > I knew and loved

> > is gone. It's like he died. I miss him. " The

> > split, while

> > amicable, has caused me the greatest pain in this

> > process so far. I

> > will always care for him because of the good person

> > he is, but I

> > cannot share my life with someone who doesn't know

> > me and does not

> > share my dreams.

> >

> > Ironically, as my transformation caused Zach to not

> > recognize who I

> > was, I was growing to feel more and more like my

> > true self. I began

> > to feel hope and joy like never before. People

> > treated me

> > differently. Men (and some women) expressed

> > interest in me

> > sexually. That was scary and exciting all at once.

> > I could have let

> > myself become bitter with the resentment that these

> > people would

> > never have found me attractive 153 pounds ago, but

> > the truth is, I

> > didn't either, but not for physical reasons, but

> > emotional ones.

> >

> > People have commented to me that I'm radiant. And

> > it's true, not

> > because of what's outside, but what's on the inside.

> > My body feels

> > wonderful like never before. I feed it and nourish

> > it like it has

> > deserved for so many years. I joined the National

> > AIDS Marathon

> > training program, and I run with 20- and

> > 30-somethings. As we start

> > each run, a smile comes naturally to me as I feel

> > the joy of flight.

> > My spirit is soaring as I run through the most

> > beautiful areas of San

> > Francisco. As we run along the beach, I hear the

> > wind whistling in

> > my ears, the ocean mist kissing my face, the colors

> > of wild flowers

> > dazzling my eyes, the laughter of my pace group

> > warming my heart.

> >

> > There is so much beauty and joy that sometimes I

> > find it

> > overwhelming. How can this be happening to me? Why

> > did God finally

> > hear my secret cries and take away my pain? Why has

> > the isolation

> > and imprisonment been turned into a mind that

> > expresses love to

> > itself, a heart that sings, a body that dances and a

> > spirit that

> > soars? Sometimes it feels like there has been a

> > beam of light that

> > has come down from heaven, and it illuminates me. I

> > think that's why

> > people have said that I'm radiant. It's because I'm

> > healthy, I smile

> > all the time, I feel good and I no longer wear a

> > suit of armor made

> > of fat. I no longer wear my pain because I no

> > longer eat my pain.

> > The radiance they see is freedom.

> >

> > The pain is still there. I experience pain like

> > everyone else. When

> > I finally cried about the break up with Zach, each

> > tear represented

> > searing pain like a knife tearing my heart to

> > pieces. I felt so much

> > guilt about leaving the relationship. Then one of

> > our kitties died.

> > Then Zach lost his job.

> >

> > There is nothing I can do about that except pray and

> > turn it over to

> > God. I can only control what goes into my mouth,

> > whether or not I

> > will exercise, and how I will talk to myself. As a

> > friend said to

> > me, " You are not responsible for Zach's happiness;

> > you are

> > responsible for YOUR happiness. You are responsible

> > for taking care

> > of YOU. "

> >

> > Upon Dr. Gity's advice, I had reached out to build a

> > new circle of

> > friends, to experience life as a normal-weighted

> > person. She told us

> > that we need to be part of a group in which you are

> > not a WLS

> > patient; you are just who you are. I am so much

> > more that a " gastric

> > bypass poster child. " I joined a gay/lesbian

> > square dance group.

> > I became a member of a church in San Francisco. I

> > attended support

> > groups (online and in-person). And in my time of

> > need, people

> > stepped forward to offer me a shoulder to cry on.

> > The investment of

> >

> === message truncated ===

>

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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