Tag: <span>Feeling Cold</span>

The temperature outside is hovering at just above zero, there’s a bitterly cold wind blowing through the trees, and a light dusting of snow on the ground.

Inside it’s actually fairly warm. It’s a respectable 21 degrees in my home office (i.e. the box room), which should feel quite comfortable – but I still feel freezing cold.

I’ve felt the cold a lot since surgery, especially when I’m sitting at the desk and not moving around very much. But I can’t have the central heating on all day, because that would cost a fortune.

It’s my extremities that seem to feel the cold the most – especially my hands and feet – so I’m trying a few different things to keep warm:

  • Wearing warmer clothes – I’ve always got a pair of thick socks on – even in bed at night. Also during the day I’m pretty much always wearing one of a selection of fleece-lined hoodies.
  • Warmer slippers – to help keep my feet warm in the house during the day.
  • Hot water bottle – that sits at the foot of the bed at night and keeps my feet warm, and sometimes sits on my lap during they day when I’m working.
  • Hand warmers – I have some single-use disposable hand warmers that stay hot for about 8 hours. They are great to slip into the hoodie or coat pockets.

I also try to get outside for a brisk walk every lunchtime, to get the blood flowing and warm me up. And that certainly works – at least for a short while – until I resume my sedentary posture in the home office again.

I did contemplate keeping my woolly hat on indoors to conserve heat, but I suspect colleagues might laugh at me during video-conferencing calls!


Do you feel the cold as well after you weight loss surgery? Do you have any good tips to share for keeping warm? I’d love to hear them!

My Story Surgery

It’s now five weeks since I had my gastric bypass surgery, and I’m back for another update.

My progress so far is that I’ve lost a total of 12.2 kg in the last 5 weeks – which is 1 st 13 lbs or 27 lbs in imperial measurements. I pretty-much use metric all the time to record my weight now, because that’s the scale that all the medical staff in my hospital use.

I’m pleased with my results so far. The weight loss of 12 kg is equivalent to the weight of six 2-litre water bottles – which would feel pretty heavy if you were carrying them all home from the supermarket! But I guess it’s more the non-scale victories (NSV) that I’m more pleased with.

I can now fit into shirts that I had to abandon about 9 months ago because they were too small. My wife also says she can tell I’m shrinking when we hug. But as well as that, I feel a lot better. Simple things like putting shoes and socks on, or getting up off the sofa are so much easier now. The pain that I used to get in my legs and feet when walking has also diminished a lot.

But it’s not all good news. I find now that I feel cold a lot more often, especially in my extremities like my hands and nose. I guess that’s just to do with eating a lot less than normal. And it just means that I have to put on an extra layer to keep warm.

In a week I’ll have my first follow-up with my surgeon, and hopefully she’ll confirm that I’m doing well.

My Story Surgery