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'I can't give up'
Star-Telegram ^ | Aug. 24, 2003 | David Casstevens

Posted on 08/24/2003 11:42:05 AM PDT by Dubya

GRANBURY - The nurse wasn't the first person to ask his weight. The question crossed the mind of perhaps every patient in the medical clinic's waiting room the moment he filled the doorway, a huge man dressed for the sweltering heat in a catalog-ordered cotton T-shirt, size XXXXXXXXL, and a pair of XXXXXXXXXL shorts.

Pushed along in a wheelchair by his 79-year-old stepfather, Mike Laird felt the sidelong glances.

On public display, he ignored the outright stares.

How heavy is he?

Laird told the nurse that he weighs "probably 650."

That's just a guess.

"I may be 700 pounds."

Morbidly obese, Laird can't walk unassisted.

Braced against an aluminum walker, he can take only a few steps and stand for less than one minute before his legs, swollen and discolored, give way.

After the nurse left the examining room and closed the door behind her, Laird repositioned his upper body as he regularly does, rocking forward and leaning back in his oversized seat. Eyes shut, he uttered a low groan.

Some days, he said of his discomfort, are better than others.

This day wasn't one of the good ones.

Leaving home poses many challenges and is a painful ordeal.

Almost two-thirds of adults in the United States are overweight, and 30.5 percent are obese, according to a 1999-2000 study by the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. But in a society that glorifies trim, toned bodies and markets diet books and weight-reduction products of all kinds, few have empathy for Laird and millions of others like him.

This 48-year-old man has spent more than two years contacting medical facilities that perform what is known as bariatric surgery, which results in radical weight loss. Laird believes an operation is the only permanent solution to his obesity, and his last resort.

One option, gastric bypass, is a risky and expensive procedure that involves stapling off a section of stomach to form a pouch that can hold only a small amount of food.

Laird's efforts have left him frustrated and disheartened.

Some hospitals told him that they won't accept a patient his size. Some said they don't have equipment that can accommodate his weight. Some, he was told, won't accept Medicare.

Laird can't afford the surgery.

"I don't have $35,000 to $50,000."

His only income is a monthly Social Security disability check.

Laird lives alone in a 16-foot-by-60-foot mobile home in Thorp Spring.

During his longest, loneliest days he feels like a prisoner segregated from a shaming world.

Laird knows his quality of life diminishes each month, each week, each day. He recently lost his balance at home and collapsed onto the floor. At first, he tried to pull himself to his knees in the determined, desperate manner of a fallen prizefighter attempting to beat the referee's count.

He couldn't summon the strength.

A telephone was on a table near the sofa, eight feet away. Willing himself to stay calm, he began inching across the living-room carpet, squirming and resting by turns.

Breathless, he reached the receiver 45 minutes later.

After phoning neighbors, who weren't at home, he dialed 911.

Firefighters and paramedics -- four strong men, working together -- hoisted Laird into his chair. He was shaken, embarrassed, exhausted.

"Being dependent on others now is one thing that bothers me most," Laird said.

He thought of his aging mother and stepfather. "It's still hard for me to ask for help."

Jean Akins, 68, underwent breast cancer surgery and a kidney operation this year. But she worries less about herself than she does about her oldest son's safety and life-threatening condition.

Her Sunday school class remembers him in their prayers.

Laird's obesity is associated with a very high risk of disease and death. Studies show that the mortality rate among the morbidly obese (those at least 100 pounds above their ideal body weight) is two to 12 times higher than among individuals of normal weight.

Laird's mother can still hear the warning of the solemn-faced doctor who took her aside in a hospital corridor and flatly predicted that if her son didn't lose weight, he wouldn't live another 10 years.

The timeline is etched in her mind.

"That was 10 years ago, in September," she said.

Last year, she wrote a desperate plea for help to celebrity weight-loss guru Richard Simmons. He surprised Laird with a phone call and mailed him a diet program and a video demonstrating exercises he could perform from his wheelchair. But Laird didn't adhere to the regimen for long.

"I guess my heart wasn't in it," he acknowledged. "I already had tried so many other things -- everything."

Fasting. Weight Watchers. Liquid diets. Pills. "Over-the-counter stuff," he said.

One doctor put him on a 500-calorie-a-day diet. He lost weight.

"But when I went back to eating a more normal amount, I gained the weight back, and more," he said. "It's my metabolism, I guess. The way my body works."

He takes prescription medication day and night to help control high blood pressure and other conditions caused or exacerbated by his size and sedentary lifestyle. His lymph glands swell. His back aches. He needs knee replacement surgery, but he won't become a candidate for the operation unless he loses at least 400 pounds.

His nose bleeds. He experiences night sweats and chills. Most days, he hurts all over.

A handwritten sign taped to the front door of Laird's mobile home speaks of his trusting nature and offers this instruction to his few visitors:

"If you don't see me in the living room or kitchen, please come in and announce yourself. I am probably in the back of the house."

In the bedroom.

After he visited the doctor, a worn-out Laird returned to bed.

He spends about 19 hours a day on his back, atop a king-size mattress on a frame his stepfather, Max Akins, built from heavy lumber.

A telephone within reach, he rests.

At times he dozes, sedated by pain pills.

He watches television.

Reads his Bible.

His dog, Missy, keeps him company, the small pet often curled up in sleep on a pillow near his nightstand.

How does he cope with the solitude and his fears?

"Mike has the biggest heart of anyone I know. He just can't get out and show it," said Dennis Rocheleau, a longtime friend and prayer partner who lives in Metamora, Mich. "His spirit amazes me. Others in his situation would have given up a long time ago."

What keeps him going?

As Laird tried to frame an answer, he swallowed hard and gazed at the ceiling fan, its blades lazily slicing the air above his bed.

The silence in the room grew.

"I have a strong faith," he said finally, as the tears came. "I know surgery won't cure all my health problems. But I keep hoping that if I could get some of this weight off, I'll be able to have a little better life. If my time comes, I'm ready. But I keep a positive outlook. Maybe somehow, some way, some day, a door will open."

Forced isolation

A 1973 graduate of Haltom High School, Laird missed his 30-year reunion. He would have enjoyed visiting with some of his former classmates, but he felt too self-conscious and embarrassed to attend.

"People," he said, "don't know the shame you sometimes feel."

Seated at his kitchen table, Laird produced a color photo.

A high school senior smiled out from the graduation picture, a pleasant-looking 6-foot-2 youth dressed in a tuxedo, bow tie and ruffled blue shirt.

"I wasn't always like I am now," Laird said.

As a teen-ager, he weighed about 265 pounds.

Laird grew in size during the 12 years he worked for a grocery store chain. He dieted periodically, but soft drinks topped his list of weaknesses. For years, Laird drank as many as 20 Coca-Colas a day. His thirst unquenchable, he gulped them, he said, one after another, habitually, "the way people smoke cigarettes."

After degenerative arthritis in his knees and feet forced him to quit work, Laird's weight steadily rose like the needle on a pressure gauge -- 400, 450, 500 pounds.

Five years ago this Christmas, while still able to get around, he slipped on a patch of ice outside his home and broke his kneecap and left leg in three places.

The injury left him in a wheelchair despite two months of rehabilitation. He hasn't walked unaided since.

Last year, while on a hospital bed equipped with a scale, Laird learned, to his dismay, that he was pushing 600 pounds.

Unkind cuts

Inez Roach asked, "Mike, you eaten today?"

It was 1 p.m.

Laird's caregiver spends two hours each weekday afternoon at his home cleaning, washing clothes, changing the bedsheets. She shops for him and runs other errands.

Once a week, they play board games and watch a rented movie.

Laird doesn't eat breakfast.

"I've seen these people on TV who eat a pound of bacon and a dozen eggs," he said. "Even if I could eat that much, I couldn't afford it."

This day, he had skipped lunch.

Laird handed Roach a to-do list that included a trip to the supermarket to buy dinner items -- frozen vegetables and skinless chicken breasts on sale for $1.28 a pound.

When he could still shop, Laird once stacked a large supply of groceries into his cart, a mound of food, enough to last him a month. A woman shopper, assuming Laird gorges or eats constantly, poked her nose into his basket and made it her business to ask how long the groceries would last him.

A week, she asked? Two or three days?

Laird knows how many people perceive him and others his size. The obese are often viewed as lazy or lacking willpower or having some other character flaw. But morbid obesity is a chronic disease. Genetic, environmental, psychological and metabolic factors play a part, with weight gain promoting more weight gain, setting in motion a vicious cycle.

One day this summer, Laird complained of numbness in his face and arm. He couldn't fit on an ambulance gurney, so Roach rushed him to the hospital in Laird's 1986 Suburban. As she sat with her friend, who feared he was having a stroke, a woman in the waiting room whispered into the ear of her companion and pointed at Laird, as if he were a spectacle, a carnival sideshow attraction.

"It's as if people think he can't see or hear," Roach said.

The stranger's rudeness irked her.

As Laird sat silent, Roach turned to the gawker and said, "He can see your finger."

A ray of hope

Laird's phone rang one morning early this month.

About eight weeks after he sent in a lengthy medical questionnaire and a copy of his Medicare card, the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas called to ask if he wanted to schedule an appointment.

The first available date was Aug. 26.

"I'll take it," he said immediately.

When they meet, a surgeon will discuss the details and risks of surgery and the benefits Laird can expect. Eventually, a decision will be made whether to proceed and schedule a gastric bypass -- people heavier than Laird have successfully undergone the surgery -- or perhaps a less-invasive banding procedure that restricts food intake without stapling the stomach or permanently rerouting the intestines.

His spirits buoyed, Laird called his mother. He called an aunt. He shared the news with Rocheleau and several other close friends.

"I'm pretty hopeful," he said, "although in the back of my mind I know there's a possibility they'll tell me no."

And if he is rejected?

"I can't give up."

The next step

For as long as he can remember, Laird has loved pirate movies and other seafaring adventures set in the Age of Sail. By his count, he has watched Mutiny on the Bounty, the original version and remakes, at least 20 times. His kitchen curtains are printed with images of lighthouses. Seascapes and miniature sailing ships decorate the living room walls.

An explorer at heart, Laird once thought the ultimate adventure would be to take a cruise around the world.

Now his hope is that the plywood ramp outside his front door will become his gangplank.

His passageway to a grander voyage.

If his prayers are answered, and his patience rewarded, this gentle, soft-spoken man's trip of a lifetime will begin the moment he stands again on his own, a shadow of himself, and takes a walk around the block in a world he rarely sees except through his bedroom window.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: obesity
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Mike Laird gazes out the bedroom window in his Thorp Spring home. He spends about 19 hours a day on his back.

1 posted on 08/24/2003 11:42:05 AM PDT by Dubya
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To: All

Mike Laird moves from his motorized chair to his wheelchair. Since a stumble nearly five years ago, he can't walk unassisted.

2 posted on 08/24/2003 11:43:26 AM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All

Mike Laird's dog, Missy, keeps him company. "Mike has the biggest heart of anyone I know. He just can't get out and show it," said Dennis Rocheleau, a longtime friend.

3 posted on 08/24/2003 11:44:32 AM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: Dubya
Wow. With that, I think I will head on over to the gym. Thanks for the motivation.
4 posted on 08/24/2003 11:46:29 AM PDT by bluefish
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To: bluefish
Me too.
5 posted on 08/24/2003 11:47:17 AM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All


6 posted on 08/24/2003 11:48:25 AM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All
The Drs want put him on the Adkins diet. It might kill him.
7 posted on 08/24/2003 11:50:38 AM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: Dubya
One day at a time for this lad. Hope & prayer for him.
8 posted on 08/24/2003 11:51:42 AM PDT by Khurkris (Ranger On...)
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To: Khurkris
One day at a time for this lad. Hope & prayer for him.

Amen with you.

9 posted on 08/24/2003 11:54:13 AM PDT by xJones
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To: Gunslingr3
He dieted periodically, but soft drinks topped his list of weaknesses. For years, Laird drank as many as 20 Coca-Colas a day. His thirst unquenchable, he gulped them, he said, one after another, habitually, "the way people smoke cigarettes."

Like cigarettes, eh? Wonder where that sort of comparison is headed...

20 sodas a day is roughly FIVE THOUSAND EXTRA CALORIES above and beyond any food eaten that day. From what I understand, roughly three thousand calories make up an extra pound of body weight. That means that every single day sheerly from sodas this... man... was gaining over a pound and a half EVERY SINGLE DAY. Diet drinks exist, you know. But then, perhaps they're not just like cigarettes.

I'm so sympathetic.

10 posted on 08/24/2003 11:56:59 AM PDT by Jonathon Spectre (Nazis believed they were doing good.)
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To: bluefish
Someone is going to have to explain to me how a unemployed person can gain weight when someone else has to supply the food.
11 posted on 08/24/2003 11:59:44 AM PDT by Shooter 2.5 (Don't punch holes in the lifeboat.)
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To: Dubya
It starts early. Every week I take care of kids who are on their way to this.

Last week I took care of a 7 year old who weighed 140 lbs.
12 posted on 08/24/2003 12:02:36 PM PDT by not_apathetic_anymore
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To: bluefish
*I'm* going to walk to the library!
13 posted on 08/24/2003 12:06:39 PM PDT by Threepwood
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To: Shooter 2.5
This man's inability to control his own behavior must be costing us enormous amounts of money. At least it's too much trouble for him to get to the voting booth to pull the lever for his enablers, the Democratic Party.
14 posted on 08/24/2003 12:10:22 PM PDT by thoughtomator (Are we conservatives, or are we Republicans?)
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To: Dubya
Laird grew in size during the 12 years he worked for a grocery store chain. He dieted periodically, but soft drinks topped his list of weaknesses. For years, Laird drank as many as 20 Coca-Colas a day. His thirst unquenchable, he gulped them, he said, one after another, habitually, "the way people smoke cigarettes."

Sounds like sugar addiction to me. What drs want to put him on Atkins? And why do you think it might kill him?

15 posted on 08/24/2003 12:13:00 PM PDT by agrace
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To: agrace
Nothing can save him until he himself decides to change the habits that have put him in that condition.
16 posted on 08/24/2003 12:14:17 PM PDT by thoughtomator (Are we conservatives, or are we Republicans?)
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To: Shooter 2.5
Someone is going to have to explain to me how a unemployed person can gain weight when someone else has to supply the food.

If you can find someone who can, maybe they'll have the answer to my question:

What is the real difference between:

1) eating less because the stomach surgery forces you to

and

2) eating less because you have to in order to save your health?

17 posted on 08/24/2003 12:19:44 PM PDT by Bob (http://www.TomMcClintock.com)
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To: thoughtomator
I am not sure what habits he has to change. According to the article I read, he does not eat an enourmous amount of food. Even the mention of soft drinks was past tense- "Laird grew in size during the 12 years he worked for a grocery store chain. He dieted periodically, but soft drinks topped his list of weaknesses. For years, Laird drank as many as 20 Coca-Colas a day. His thirst unquenchable, he gulped them, he said, one after another, habitually, "the way people smoke cigarettes."
18 posted on 08/24/2003 12:19:49 PM PDT by admiralsn (If you want to make God laugh, tell him your future plans.)
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To: Dubya
Poor guy! I hope they do a follow-up. I would love to know if he got the surgery and lost weight.
19 posted on 08/24/2003 12:19:54 PM PDT by BlueAngel
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To: Bob
According to people who have the surgery...
(1) You literally get physically ill and you re-adjust your eating habits to accomodate that.
(2) As you well know, that is all in the mind. Some people have far less will power than others. i am sure that is your point, however it isn't the same with #1. Will power or not, you physically cannot eat as much, and train yourself to lose the weight.
20 posted on 08/24/2003 12:22:51 PM PDT by admiralsn (If you want to make God laugh, tell him your future plans.)
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