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Dear Belleruth,
I am 120 lbs. overweight. I have been accepted for the lap band procedure to help me lose weight. I got right up to the date and canceled. Why? Fear! Since I am 65 yrs. old (or young!) and happily married for 46 years, I have a lot of baggage and probably my fears stem from low self-esteem. This started when I was a child of a 43 yr-old mom -- who was stoic and stern and did not believe in "spoiling" a child.
However, she was always supportive about keeping me at a "normal" weight. After marriage, however, I just started to plump up to 180 after my first two pregnancies and then up to 240 before my 3rd child. Because of my weight, I have disabling arthritis and fibromyalgia and sleep apnea. I know that weight loss could greatly reduce these affirmities and yet, I always manage to sabbatoge every opportunity to succeed. Of course, my career followed the same course. Why can't I get past these goblins? I hate myself for my weaknesses.
Mary
Answer:
OK, Mary. It sounds like the weight you're carrying is dangerous to your health and welfare, and you know it. Yet you keep perversely sabotaging your own best interests and canceling your surgery. You even have some ideas as to why you may be doing this and where your low self esteem may be coming from. It doesn't sound like you're afraid of the surgery per se, so much as afraid of being successful with this.
The question, "Why can’t I get past these goblins?", is the wrong question. The right question is "How do I get this done?". Enough with the insight-mulling already! Certainly for some people, insight into their motivation can really help change their behavior. But it's not working for you, so either delving into the why's are just a cerebral stall and a complete, self-lacerating waste of time; or else your insights are off-track and there are other factors driving your behavior that you don't want to look at (some possibilities, for instance, might be that perhaps your happily married husband of 46 years wants you to stay heavy and off-track work-wise, because he's threatened by the idea of an independent, attractive, capable wife??... or maybe he's irrationally worried that something could go wrong in surgery and he's terrified of losing you??... ).
The fact that you've been feeling somewhat dysfunctional, self-hating, self-sabotaging, health-challenged and dangerously overweight, yet state you are happily married, is what makes me throw out those family-systems guesses. Seems to me if you're in this kind of trouble, there ought to be some strain on your marriage. If there isn't, either your husband is extremely passive or else he could be playing a part in this.
But no matter, because, as I suggested earlier, the right question for you is "How do I get this done?"
My suggestion would be this: Get into some short-term family counseling with a skilled, experienced family therapist. (Keep in mind that a good individual therapist can be a really lousy family therapist - and vice versa - they are different skills).
The goal should be very behavioral: to help you set a date and follow through on your surgery. Your husband has to be on board with this, as do your kids, if they're still around or living at home. That's your cheering section and you need to structure them into this endeavor. Talk out your fears and worries together. And, even though we know you have a history of letting yourself down, I'm betting it's not so easy for you to let them down. And being as how they need you to be healthy and breathing, they can remind you of their wishes in this matter.
You can help handle your (and possibly your husband's) anxiety with guided imagery. The Self-Confidence and Weight Loss imagery would be great, and for the two weeks before your surgery, the Successful Surgery imagery.
Get cracking, Miss Mary!! No more time to lose!! You might have a good 20 years left of being healthy, mobile and energized, if you get this done now.
All best,

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