← Return to Important information about statins that I’m going to ask my doc about

Discussion
Comment receiving replies
@raye

Thanks, Frenchie 333, for your kind affirmative responses. Congratulations for loosing 70 pounds and keeping it off. That’s so rare that the National Weight Loss Registry would like to hear how you kept it off.

Who knows, we could be related because endometriosis is a genetic disease. Medical experimentation for mine caused my weight to zoom from 120 to 170 in five months. At age 20 I had been an athlete representing America in several European countries. BMI 19.

A few years later a gynecologist prescribed triple dosage birth control pills—yes, 60 per month, non-stop for five months. That was in 1966 when each pill was 10x the strength it is now. Back then women were getting strokes from the 20 pill per month regimen. That’s when Dr. Charles Langmade said his absurd dose would cause my endometrial ovarian cyst to “slough off.” It did not work. Lesson: Question your doc! Look up the weird thing he is prescribing on ProPublica’s Dollars For Docs.
See if there may be a conflict of interest caused by a pharmaceutical company paying him to experiment on patients. Goodness that sounds frightening! It happens, though now docs must ask permission before testing on their patients. And the patients must sign a permission form. After a Doc recently handed me a 14 page permission form to sign, I walked out, never to return.

Now back to my fat story.
Instead I lost my cute figure and became a frump. At medically directed weight loss programs I met other obese women who had been through similar weight-inducing regimen for endometriosis. Same result.

Knowing how hard I had worked, I invested in an education and enrolled in an international annual Obesity Research conference as the only fat patient in the midst of a couple thousand slender physicians who made their living “off the fat of the earth.”
My UCLA clinical nutrition doc co-chaired the event. His PowerPoint was introduced by a photo of a work of art: my collage showing a neolithic Venus perched on a bathroom scales.

At the CME conference I learned that researchers were still discovering the many causes of obesity. Google Adeno-36, for example. Dr. George Bray announced that every weight-loss disaster to date which had first showed so much promise became a weight-loss disaster. He also said that fewer than 1% could keep the weight off. So Congratulations to Frenchie again!

According to Mayo Clinic’s Dr. Andre Acosta, my body is a “slow burn” phenotype. Yes? I really do have a slow metabolism. Skipping past the many things I could say, I’ll finish this before it becomes a Book and say, to confirm your experience, that because I avoid inflammatory refined carbs my bone-on-bone knees do not hurt either. And selecting foods high in anthocyanin helps as well.

Dear reader, if you have read all of this, all the way down to here, may I be the first to congratulate you. Thank you!
Wishing you courage on your own journeys!

Jump to this post


Replies to "Thanks, Frenchie 333, for your kind affirmative responses. Congratulations for loosing 70 pounds and keeping it..."

You've been on quite a journey! Some legs of your trek have been horrifying! There are some Dr. Frankenstein's out there... Sheesh! When it comes to hormones everyone knows one shouldn't play games, experiment. After all, we're well into this century now. I recall a verrrrry old lady being wheeled on a gurney into my GYN's office. She was moaning in pain. This was before HIPPA. Out of genuine concern/compassion, I asked the receptionist what was going on. After all, few women in their 80s need a GYN!!!!! Turns out the frail lady had been experimenting with estrogen for "youth." O. M. G. !!!!! In her 80s and having menstrual cramps through the roof, hemorrhaging. Felt terrible for her and her foolishness.

Yes, I want to be at my best in terms of health; but, I've embraced my senior years. Stopped dying my hair at the beginning of the Wu Flu because two dye sessions in a row, I had odd bumps on my scalp. Had my Dermatologist freeze them off after that first reaction. When it happened again, well, there was no denying that dying is bad for the scalp--just as bleaching is harmful to the hair shaft. Vanity is NOT worth the price!

There's much we don't know about "metabolic syndrome." And I'd never heard of Adeno-36! My sister is morbidly obese and it breaks my heart because I love her. I genuinely don't judge. I just want what is best for her, for everybody!

For me, it's all about health, energy, flexibility, vibrant longevity.

That book, "The Weigh Down," changed my "relationship" with food. More accurately, it got me in touch with my body, recognizing true hunger, realizing when I was satisfied, knowing I could have more later when I was truly stomach hungry again. Yep, lost it and kept it off.

For the sake of 100% transparency, I lost the last 10 pounds against my will. Had a bad reaction after the Pfizer double jab. However, as of today, I've been able to regain 3.5 pounds. Up to 118.5 with a goal of 123 - 127. Now that I've got my MCAS-GI under control, I can keep my OTC antihistamines in me long enough to do their jobs and keep my food in me! Eighteen months of chronic diarrhea are finally over! The Pfizer connection to "food hypersensitivity" was substantiated by a collection of worldwide studies that documented a spike in "food hypersensitivity" with Pfizer having the highest percentage of cases. Lucky me. My strictly cutaneous mastocytosis escalated. But the first 60 pounds of weight loss? All due to Gwen Shamblin's book.

Had no idea that a mere 1% enjoyed long-term success!