Tortoise and Hare

In other news which flies in the face of things I have been trying to think and do recently, my doctor told me this week that he thinks I am losing weight too slowly.

Excuse?

I had scheduled the appointment after reading about Hilly’s diagnosis of Pseudotumor Cerebri, because I experience many matching symptoms and I wanted my doctor to consider the possibility that my near-daily headaches, whooshing tinnitus, vision abnormalities, and vertigo/balance issues may all be related. Plus, it had been a while since he tried to sell me something or push a prescription which neither of us thinks I need so, you know, I was missing him.

First, he dismissed my complaint of “4-6 headaches per week” with a wave of his hand. “That’s not so uncommon,” he mumbled, and then made a mark on my chart. I imagined it to say, Lame fat girl imagines symptoms. Annoying. Without looking up, he said, “It’s probably just your high blood pressure.”

I sighed a little. “I don’t have high blood pressure,” I countered. That’s when he looked up at me, scanned my bulky, obese frame from tip to toe, and said, “You don’t?”

He didn’t say it with surprise or shock. He wasn’t asking a sincere question. He didn’t sound as though I had given him new information — information which, incidentally, he could have obtained through a quick review of the chart in his lap. He said sarcastically, as though he were dealing with a “slow learner” or trying to make a sardonic point.

I kept my cool, though. I didn’t take it personally, start crying, or grow indignant as I have with doctors in the past. Instead, I just held out my right arm as an invitation.

Generally people are surprised at how “good” my blood pressure readings are, given the fact that I am routinely 150 pounds overweight and exercise in spurts. Usually it hovers around 127/88. This week, as the doctor put down his stethoscope and rrrrrrrrripped open the velcro cuff, he hmmphed. “Actually, it’s quite low.” 110/65.

So, I got a referral to a neurologist and an opthamologist and the other thing I anticipated — a lecture about my weight.

He is pleased that my weight is trending down. That it continues to trend down. That it has done nothing but trend down since I first began seeing him last year. In the year before I met him, apparently he lost around 60 pounds. He did this in a very quick and manly way, by exercising 6 days a week and monitoring his ketosis.

“At your weight, you should easily be able to drop 2 pounds a week, if you just hit ketosis and stay there.”

Uh huh.

He continued, “If you do a lot of on-again/off-again dieting, one day on and the other day off, that could also lead to headaches.”

“But,” I countered calmly, “I’m not really doing that. I’m just trying to lose weight in a way that I think I can maintain.”

At this, he looked me up and down again, slowly, with a tiny little smack of disdain.

“Even if it takes you forever?”

Yes. Even if it takes me forever.

9 Comments

  1. Roz said,

    March 18, 2007 at 2:12 am

    You go girl! That has got to be one of the most inspirational and funniest posts I’ve read in a while. Good on you for showing that doctor up! You are doing a fabulous job.

  2. shinypenny said,

    March 18, 2007 at 7:16 am

    !@#$@!. How you refrained from punching this bastard is beyond me. You are a far better person than me.

  3. PastaQueen said,

    March 18, 2007 at 8:38 am

    Man, I’m grateful I was one of the few fat girls never to have a bad doctor experience. My current doctor never nagged me about my weight and has only had positive things to say through my loss. She even keeps telling me my skin is going to tighten up even though I don’t believe her.

  4. Kriss said,

    March 18, 2007 at 12:19 pm

    Oh, dear God. Your doctor comes across as a condescending, self-righteous prick. How on earth did you manage to keep your cool? Where does hes get off badgering you about the best methods for you to get healthier?????

    I hope kis toned ketosis ass gains back all of the weight he lost, plus 60 more pounds, just for spite.

  5. BethK said,

    March 19, 2007 at 10:45 am

    Beautifully played! What scares me the most about docs like him (other than the fact that docs like him are the main reason that people of size avoid wellness visits) is that he proabably assumes that his thin patients are automatically healthy.

    I hope all goes well with the neurologist.

  6. Annie said,

    March 19, 2007 at 12:28 pm

    Good grief…I would have to find another doctor. However you might find something of value with this guy. If you don’t though, there is probably someone out there that could do a much better job and would actually tell you that you are doing a great job in making changes for yourself for the better.

  7. metamorphose said,

    March 19, 2007 at 3:13 pm

    I’d want to give him a swift kick in the crotch, personally.

    Ugh. What a dickweed.

  8. Ali said,

    March 19, 2007 at 5:17 pm

    oh my…. what an asshole.

    You have incredible self control.

  9. lisa jane said,

    March 21, 2007 at 2:40 pm

    oh yes,a knee in the balls would do the trick just fine,just what the doctor ordered.

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