Spiky Bugger
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2014
- Messages
- 6,305
But sometime this past week, I had my FIFTEENTH. Wow!
The Good News:
I have, in fact, maintained a 75% excess weight loss over all this time. There have been short periods where I packed on an extra 15-20#, but I switched to lots of bacon, eggs and steaks and it went back to the 75% excess weight loss number.
The Bad News:
BMI chart type info says I’m still “obese.“ I’d need to lose 20# more to be “overweight.” (That’s not as accurate as it should be. Bone structure and muscle mass are not factored in. Per those charts, when I got out of Army Basic Training and was built like the proverbial brick shit house, I was ”overweight.” I don’t think so.)
For any lurkers who wonder what I’m muttering about...the DS has the best long term excess weight loss, at about 75%.
Example, not my numbers:
A post-op weight of 187.5# is the “average,” for a 300# person whose ideal weight is 150#. [300 - (150 x .75) = 187.5]. This is where DianaCox usually corrects my math.
That 112.5 pounds (150 x .75 = 112.5) is a HUGE amount of weight. But because it isn’t the ideal, healthiest weight, we sometimes get depressed about that. Don’t do that. And besides, I could get there, but I’d have to behave like a responsible adult and that is unlikely.
The Good News:
I have, in fact, maintained a 75% excess weight loss over all this time. There have been short periods where I packed on an extra 15-20#, but I switched to lots of bacon, eggs and steaks and it went back to the 75% excess weight loss number.
The Bad News:
BMI chart type info says I’m still “obese.“ I’d need to lose 20# more to be “overweight.” (That’s not as accurate as it should be. Bone structure and muscle mass are not factored in. Per those charts, when I got out of Army Basic Training and was built like the proverbial brick shit house, I was ”overweight.” I don’t think so.)
For any lurkers who wonder what I’m muttering about...the DS has the best long term excess weight loss, at about 75%.
Example, not my numbers:
A post-op weight of 187.5# is the “average,” for a 300# person whose ideal weight is 150#. [300 - (150 x .75) = 187.5]. This is where DianaCox usually corrects my math.
That 112.5 pounds (150 x .75 = 112.5) is a HUGE amount of weight. But because it isn’t the ideal, healthiest weight, we sometimes get depressed about that. Don’t do that. And besides, I could get there, but I’d have to behave like a responsible adult and that is unlikely.