As most of you know, the east coast was hit by hurricane Sandy,
some areas were hit harder than others. I live in an area that was hit hard but
not as severely as Staten Island or the Jersey
Shore. I had no power, heat, hot
water or fresh food for a week. I had to throw out my Greek yogurt, soy milk,
purees just about everything I have been living off of in my post-op world. I
had to revert back to a liquid diet to get the protein I needed. Protein powder
being the only thing that didn’t need to be trashed. When FEMA and the National
Guard came with military rations for us, everything was crackers or had rice in
it, nothing I can currently digest. All my local hospitals and clinics were
shut down. Bellevue Hospital,
where I received my surgery took a lot of damage and is not set to reopen until
February 2013, hopefully sooner.
Surrounded by all this disaster made me start to feel
immense regret for having the surgery. It made me realize how little prepared I
was for a disaster and had I lived on Staten Island, the forgotten island that
was left trapped for days in the storm how would I have survived? This surgery
doesn’t give you much option in terms of nutritional survival in a disaster,
especially when you are recently post op. I was on the borderline end of mushy
on to solid stage when Sandy hit
and I didn’t have many options. The first day of the storm all the supermarkets
were selling premade bags of bread and water and nothing else. That didn’t help
me. The next day they were all closed and dumped everything in a dumpster, old
and young alike were starving and digging through the supermarket’s trashed
stock for anything they could eat. I was too afraid to do that fearing the risk
of becoming ill with no bariatric doctors available. The regret I felt was more
about the inability to survive if things became worse. I kept asking myself,
how could I have done this? If another disaster hits how will I survive? Then I
would tell myself not to worry, by the time another disaster hits I should be
further down the post op line… I hope.
Things are slowly recovering in my area but it made me
wonder what are the ways someone post op can prepare for small and large
disasters? Winter is upon us and if this current weather is any indication of
what is to come, we are all going to need a plan.
Thanks for posting on ObesityHelp's Facebook page. Because of you, we wrote an article on WLS Emergency Essentials. You can check it out here: www.obesityhelp.com. Thanks!!
ReplyDeleteCathy, thank you so much for taking the time to read my blog and write this article! I'm glad I could inspire you to write such an important article for the WLS community.
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Miss Fatty