Lord have mercy, it's been 7 weeks since my lap RNY. The time has gone by really fast. I started at 296, and now I'm at 256 - a good forty pounds! (I *thought* it was fifty pounds, but apparently my home scale is ten pounds off from my surgeon's.) The weight is coming off in clumps - for a week I'll lose a pound or two a day, then I'll go two weeks and barely lose anything. It's a bit frustrating, but during both of the two plateau periods I could feel my clothes getting looser, so it wasn't like nothing was happening at all.
As far as eating goes, I have to count myself among the lucky ones in that I have never vomited once and I haven't had a dumping episode. I'm not craving unhealthy food - as long as I keep a little variety in my diet, I stay satisfied. Most things agree with me fine as long as I eat slowly and chew carefully.
The one thing that did plague me more than usual is fatigue. I see posts on here about people who had the lap RNY going back to work like a week later, and I am absolutely amazed. I could barely make it through a part-time workday three weeks afterward, and I work at a desk job! Even the smallest tasks completely exhausted me: and aside from just being tired, I'd start getting headaches and my sides would ache. Every afternoon I took a good 3-hour nap. But thankfully the fatigue magically subsided at 5 weeks post, and I'm in my second week of full-time work.
Because of the fatigue, I wasn't able to exercise much that first month, but now I'm taking a yoga class once a week and walking a mile and a quarter almost every day - and actually enjoying it. The things that made walking a misery for me pre-op - my swollen feet and general lack of energy overall - are completely gone.
My feet haven't been swollen at all since the surgery, period, and my knees no longer hurt! I don't know whether it's due to the change in diet or whatever, but I sure am thankful, because the problems with my legs and feet were among the defining reasons I decided to have this surgery.
Just an update! And I hope posts like these will give hope to newer post-ops who are starting to feel like they'll never be normal again. You will - sooner than you think! :)