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Fearless Living after Weight Loss Surgery
Katie Jay

Business writer Robert Kiyosaki hated school. Not only did he
hate it, he didn't do very well there. He recalls in his book for
entrepreneurs, "Before You Quit Your Job," that he was angry when
he received his first "F."

Do you like to fail?

Kiyosaki hated to fail, too.

And his failures were numerous. He also failed in his first
business. But, he explains, he went on to succeed later, as a
direct result of having failed previously.

What's that got to do with WLS?

Failure. I haven't met an obese person yet, who hasn't felt like
a failure in the weight loss arena. Sometimes we carry this
feeling of failure into our lives after weight loss surgery.

We are so afraid of failing yet again. And we compare ourselves
to an extreme ideal of perfection. We should be able to manage
our weight -- especially now that we've had the surgery.

Failure is inevitable, even with weight loss surgery.

I don't mean absolute, hopeless failure. I mean getting an "F"
in exercise, or in eating at a buffet at a holiday party.

I mean the frequent failures that can add up to a weight gain
over time, but individually they mean very little in terms of
your weight.

Embrace failure.

Kiyosaki says the key to his success as an entrepreneur is that
he has learned to use his failures as learning opportunities.

He doesn't like failure any more than the next person, but he
knows it's useful and that it will help him be more successful.
His failures are the fuel for his triumph.

Can you use failure as a strategy?

Considering most people who struggle with their weight tend to
want to be perfect, putting failure in a desirable light may
be hard at first.

You may not want to admit failure.

Admitting failure is hard. That is why we've worked so hard not
to fail, and why we get so devastated when we do.

In some ways, we have been programmed to avoid failure. In
school, we don't get rewarded for failure. One bad grade will
bring down your grade average for the whole year.

But in life, failing and admitting we have failed are actually
good things.

Kiyosaki took the time to stop, admit failure, and analyze what
went wrong. Then, he tried again, using the information he had
learned from his failure to do better.

WLS success is dependent on studying your failures and learning
from them.

It used to be that we'd fail, give up, and go on a cookie binge.
That paradigm doesn't work for overeaters, and especially not
for WLS patients.

The better model for WLS success is much more like Kiyosaki's:
 
1. Fail. (Remember, this is inevitable. We are not perfect. This
type of failure includes things like skipping your vitamins,
eating a donut, or exercising only the fingers that work the
remote).

2. Admit it. Tell someone. Post it on the NAWLS forum, call
someone in your support group, go to an OA meeting, tell your
coach, call a friend, tell your minister. Just do it.

3. Analyze your failure and learn from it.

A few months ago, I realized that I am much more likely to eat
something if it is sitting out on my kitchen counter. When my
husband leaves food out, I taste it -- almost every time.

So, instead of denying my behavior and pretending it wasn't
anything to worry about, I admitted my grazing to myself and
to my support group. Then, I analyzed the situation and figured
out it was happening because I was on the "see-food" diet --
I see food, I eat it.

Then, I asked my family to put their food out of sight. That
simple. And it worked.

4. Fail again.

It's all in your perspective.

By reframing your view of failure, you can create a powerful
tool for success.

Says Kiyosaki, "Thomas Edison was asked to leave school because
teachers complained that he was addled or scatterbrained. Later
in life, he was criticized for having failed over a thousand
times before inventing his version of the electric light bulb
....[then he] founded General Electric, one of the most powerful
companies in the world."

WLS patients who fail and learn are winners, too.

When you turn your mistakes into lessons, you take control of
your life. You move forward to places you never thought you
could go.

So, be fearless about failure. It will serve you well.



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