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Oregon woman thankful after losing 800 pounds
TRI CITY HERALD ^ | 4/15/02 | Karen Zacharias

Posted on 04/18/2002 11:17:36 AM PDT by Tumbleweed_Connection

Most people use a footstool to prop up their feet. Jeannette Standard used one to prop up her drooping belly.

But no longer.

Two years ago, surgeons at Oregon Health Sciences University removed the 110 pounds of lap that hung down to Standard's shins.

"I had to lift it to clean under it. And I would have to lay on the bed and have my daughter dry me off. But the skin was breaking down anyway. It had cracks that were open and bleeding. And the smell was atrocious," Standard said.

The surgery cost somewhere between $50,000 to $100,000, Standard said. Because weight-related health problems landed her on the state's disability roster, the state paid for the surgery. But getting state support took lobbying by Standard's doctor, Kent Walker of Pendleton.

"I wrote letters for a year on her behalf," Walker said. "Jeannette was bedridden because of that apron. Imagine trying to get around with a 110-pound belly pack. That's an amazing amount of weight."

Fat aprons are common in people who have lost extensive amounts of weight, he said.

"A person has to lose 200 to 300 pounds to get that kind of excess formation," Walker said.

It took a decade to do it, but Jeannette lost between 800 and 850 pounds through healthy eating combined with a liquid diet. At her heaviest, Standard said she weighed nearly 1,200 pounds.

Walker said he charted her weight in 1997 at 600 pounds. Today, she's 5 feet, 2 inches tall and weighs 435 pounds.

"I have more mobility," she said. "I can go to Wal-Mart and buy clothes off the rack. And I can go out with pride without worrying about people saying, 'Look at that fat person.' And I don't have to wear those tent dresses anymore!"

Wearing pants is a newfound delight.

"The first day I put on a pair of pants after surgery I called my daughter and said, 'You want to see something you've never seen in your entire life?' "

Her daughter, Merri Beth Standard, 35, lives in Centralia. But at that time she was living in the same apartment complex as her mother in Pendleton. And this past week she visited her mom.

"She was striking a pose like she was on the cover of Vogue or something," Merri Beth said of her mom's new look. "All my life all I'd ever seen her in were those big dresses. It was incredible."

Living with a mother who was so obese was difficult, Merri Beth said. Classmates made cruel comments.

"In middle school while preparing for a choir concert, two boys said to me, 'I hope your mom doesn't come tonight because she'll break the bleachers if she sits on them,' " Merri Beth recalled.

She'd try to ignore other kids when they'd ask, "Why is your mom so fat?" But when she had her own children, Merri Beth said she pleaded with her mother to lose weight.

"I worried my mom wouldn't be around to see her grandkids grow up, because of her obesity and her heart," she said.

Guilt proved a poor motivator for Jeannette, a self-described food addict.

She hadn't always been overweight.

"I was a skinny kid until about age 8," she said.

But by the time she entered high school, Jeannette weighed 180 pounds. When she graduated she was up to 250 pounds. A sour marriage coupled with a bout of alcoholism, and 23 years later, Jeannette was so heavy she couldn't walk to the mailbox at the end of her street.

"When I wasn't drinking, I was eating. I was constantly shoving something in my face," Jeannette said.

So what does a 1,200-pound person eat?

"Anything and everything I could get my hands on," Jeannette said. "I would eat until I was so full I was sick. Then an hour later, I would be stuffing my face again."

Bread was a particular weakness.

"I would eat a loaf a day," Jeannette said.

And, "She would eat two whole chickens a meal," Walker said.

Now Jeannette limits her daily diet to two slices of bread, lean meats and vegetables. And she sees a counselor to help deal with her addictive behaviors.

"It isn't just about what you're eating, it's about what's eating you," Jeannette said. "I stuffed all my issues inside."

Depression is common among the morbidly obese, Walker said.

"Food makes them feel good," he said.

Momentarily, at least.

Jeannette said her most humiliating moment occurred when a neighbor refused to give her a ride to the store.

"She told me, 'I'm afraid you'll break my car down.' After that I never asked another person to take me any place again."

Jeannette said she became homebound and refused to answer the door or telephone. Her only social contact was with her two daughters.

And it is her example that bothers Jeannette the most. Merri Beth isn't obese, but Jeannette's other daughter Mandy, 32, weighs more than 500 pounds, she said. And she fears her grandson who is 9 and already weighs 105 pounds may share the same struggle.

So Jeannette supports the decision of school districts in other states to send out letters urging parents to address their children's weight problems. She wishes she'd had such help as a child.

"Mothers, if you have a child who is starting to gain weight or has already done so, get someone to help them," she said. "Feed them healthy snacks. And if you're an overweight mother with school-age kids, get some help."

Don't reward kids with warm cookies and milk.

"Give them a night out just with just you," Jeannette suggested.

"Take them roller skating or for a family bike ride," Merri Beth interjected.

Or take them to the nearest karaoke club. That's where Jeannette goes when she needs a treat.

Of course, just getting out of bed every morning and slipping into one of the eight pairs of pants she owns is reason enough to be happy. But Jeannette also has a part-time job with Domestic Violence Services and hopes to move into a new home soon.

"I look at life every day as a gift from God," she said. "For all intense purposes, I should've died 14 years ago as heavy as I was. I'm lucky to be alive."


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: governmentspending
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To: SoDak
How many of us Weight Lifters are here amongst Free Republic, it's nice to know I'm not the only one.
61 posted on 04/18/2002 1:14:11 PM PDT by HELLRAISER II
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To: HELLRAISER II
I think there's a few of us. I sit at a desk all day, weightlifting is the only way I can stay in shape. I'm certainly not a runner, I like my knees too much. At my size, running would destroy them.
62 posted on 04/18/2002 1:29:29 PM PDT by SoDak
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To: MotleyGirl70
1** = 199 lbs?
63 posted on 04/18/2002 2:15:35 PM PDT by Gun142
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To: geaux
Funny, my question would be "How did your MOMMA get so fat?" That's something I never understood. How is it physically possible for a human to weigh 1200 lbs?

Lots of cheese.

BTW, many bricks of cheese does one have to eat to weigh 1,200 lbs?

And the smell was atrocious,"

This is so nasty.

64 posted on 04/18/2002 2:16:27 PM PDT by MotleyGirl70
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To: one_particular_harbour
She ate N'Sync AND The Backstreet Boys!
65 posted on 04/18/2002 2:28:24 PM PDT by MotleyGirl70
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To: Gun142
1** = 199 lbs?

Ooops I made a typo it should be 1,*** lbs!

66 posted on 04/18/2002 2:32:03 PM PDT by MotleyGirl70
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To: geege
Oh brother...and I battle the love of food/wine and beer everyday to stay in a size 7/8.....

I hear ya sister! Everything in moderation. Something this woman know nothing about!

67 posted on 04/18/2002 2:34:19 PM PDT by MotleyGirl70
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To: MotleyGirl70
And the smell was atrocious,"

That's b/c she was eating all that cheese.

68 posted on 04/18/2002 2:45:28 PM PDT by geaux
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To: general_re
And you're still a freaking idiot.
69 posted on 04/18/2002 3:06:21 PM PDT by MEGoody
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To: SoDak
She's not necessarily lying. After having been so heavy and obviously sedentary, then trying to lose weight, her metabolism probably decreased significantly. She'll continue to lose weight, but the pace will be slow.
70 posted on 04/18/2002 3:08:59 PM PDT by MEGoody
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To: sixtycyclehum
Who decides who is fat enough to have to pay the tax? Would there also be a skinny tax for those who eat so little that they experience health problems because of it (aka anorexics, bulemics)?
71 posted on 04/18/2002 3:10:33 PM PDT by MEGoody
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To: HELLRAISER II
I used to be an active one. Once my shoulder(supluxed...goes in and out of socket..been that way for 5 years and getting worse pain wise) is back in place for good, I'll be back into it more.
72 posted on 04/18/2002 3:17:54 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
It took a decade to do it, but Jeannette lost between 800 and 850 pounds through healthy eating combined with a liquid diet. At her heaviest, Standard said she weighed nearly 1,200 pounds. Walker said he charted her weight in 1997 at 600 pounds.

So, it's just her word that she once weighed double what the doctor has recorded? I don't believe it. She has a 110 pound "apron" of excess skin removed surgically, bringing her to 435 pounds? That means she was 545 pounds before the operation - just 55 pounds less than she was 5 years ago when she was weighed, and she claims she lost 600 other pounds in the previous 5 years. Unfreakingbelieveable. Reporters will believe anything.

73 posted on 04/18/2002 3:19:07 PM PDT by ValerieUSA
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
To Tumbleweed and all:

I cannot believe the mean-spiritedness of some of the people on this thread. Would you say the same things about a drug addict who was proud of him/herself for kicking the habit? How about an alcoholic who was working at staying on the wagon? At least this woman is trying to improve herself and her life. I would imagine that every one of you making these snide comments as if you were so perfect are battling something within yourself. If you aren't, then it's because you are like this woman was when she weighed 1,200 lbs. - just giving in to your weakness. Maybe some day you will do what she is doing, pulling herself up by her bootstraps. (Yes, with some help, but so what? The only people who don't need help from others from time to time are those who are in denial about needing help from others. LOL)

74 posted on 04/18/2002 3:19:17 PM PDT by MEGoody
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To: ValerieUSA
Doctors do not have weight scales that go up to 1,200 lbs. Besides, at that weight, she couldn't get herself out of the house to go to a doctor (and they sure don't make housecalls).
75 posted on 04/18/2002 3:20:45 PM PDT by MEGoody
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To: MEGoody
Then how did she know she weighed 1,200 pounds? Who hauled her to the truck scale? She's craving attention and exaggerating. She craved alcohol, she craved food, now she craves attention.
76 posted on 04/18/2002 3:27:01 PM PDT by ValerieUSA
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To: MEGoody
And you're still a freaking idiot.

Bad day?

My intent was quite simple. As I said, quoting someone else, I'm glad that she was able to do what she has so far done. But as Appy pointed out, 400+ pounds at that height is still extremely unhealthy, so she still has a long way to go. Taking your drug analogy for my own, I'm happy that she's quit smoking crack, in effect, but she still needs to lay off the booze. And I see absolutely nothing wrong with pointing that out.

And I really think that I can speak to this personally. My father-in-law was killed by his weight problems - he died at the age of 47 from a stroke, a stroke brought on by his own morbid obesity. He collapsed and died right there on my living room floor, in front of my wife and his own grandchildren. At 5'2" and 400+ pounds, this lady is still morbidly obese also, and I really don't like to think of her family having to go through what we all went through over here.

So why don't you...no, I'm not going to give you an excuse to have this post pulled. But you can keep your sanctimony to yourself in the future.

77 posted on 04/18/2002 7:53:47 PM PDT by general_re
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To: Dan from Michigan
I have the same problem & i've had it since the 9th grade, but there are excercises that strengthen the Scapula muscles that will damn near cure your problem. At age 36 I had gotten back in pretty good shape, I was benching 425 & my head had swelled considerably so I thought I would go for 450. Then I felt something rip in my shoulder & my bicep & that sent me to the doctor for Cortizone & Cortisol shot's & kept me from lifting for about 6 months. But I'm back after it & I bought a bowflex for working out at the house. It's not the same as free weights but you can do excercises that you can't with free weights such as the shoulder excercises I mentioned that will help strengthen your shoulder muscles & that will help you back to hitting the free weights.
78 posted on 04/19/2002 5:47:44 AM PDT by HELLRAISER II
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To: SoDak
I agree, I also work in an office behind a desk all day long. If I don't work out when I get home I would be 350lb before you know it, like you I would also be considered obese by the govt. as well but they don't look at your frame size along with height. When you wear a size 54-56 jacket just to get it around your shoulders & your chest I don't consider that fat, if I was at 230-240 lbs I'd be damn near anorexic.
79 posted on 04/19/2002 6:05:03 AM PDT by HELLRAISER II
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