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nobimbo
Thu, May-26-05, 03:52
Granite City Man Loses 300 Pounds
created: 5/25/2005 5:28:28 PM
updated: 5/25/2005 5:33:37 PM

By Leisa Zigman

KSDK- He weighed more than a baby grand piano, 647 pounds. In just 13 months, John Smith of Granite City lost nearly 300 pounds. Remarkably, he did it without surgery or pills.

Smith's weight problems ended his career as a chef 20 years ago. His obsession with food consumed him.

Smith said, "I'd go to the 'fridge and put two or three sandwiches underneath my shirt and carry it out because I didn't want anyone to see me eating."

Public ridicule tore him apart.

Smith said, "You don't even have to have good hearing. People would say look at the size of that sucker. He got no business being out in public. He's disgraceful."

Smith tried dozens of diets and failed.
But with soaring high blood pressure and other health issues, Smith didn't want to die.

"My diabetes was at a life threatening level. It was over 300 every day of my life. When I got up my skin was almost black from toxic poisoning in my body. I could hardly breathe," he said.

He's been married 30 years. Some 13 months ago, john started the Atkins diet, after one of his three kids suggested it.

Smith said, "I'm only 12 or 13 pounds from an even 300. My doctor says he doesn't' know a patient ever whose still walking around living that lost 300 pounds without plastic surgery."

Dr. Samuel Klein is the Director of Washington Universities Center for Human Nutrition. Dr. Klein said, "Losing 300 pounds is remarkable no matter what diet is responsible for the loss. This tremendous weight loss resulted in a loosening of excess skin that has ended up in two layers of skin and fat overlapping each other."

Smith needs to get down to 300 pounds before surgeons can attempt the high-risk surgery and remove the excess skin.

He said, "You have people saying I don't want to go through all the surgery or have all the fat. Well, get me to that point! That's what I'm trying to say. Get me to a point if you can cut it off, do that. And I might die. Well, I'm for sure going to die sitting here on my fat butt watching TV eating a pound and a half of mashed potatoes and gravy."

Atkins executives never heard of John Smith until we called.

Colette Heimowitz is Atkins Vice President of Education and Research.

She said, "This is the first that I've heard that somebody lost that much using the Atkins program."

Heimowitz said she would like to meet Smith because, "he's a great example for those who have such monumental tasks in front of them. He's an inspiration."

There have been other benefits to Smith's weight loss. He is now completely off his diabetes and high blood pressure medication. He says anyone can do what he did. The first step is to stop making excuses.

Smith said, "Stop looking in another direction and look in the mirror. See yourself and have respect for yourself."

Smith can now touch his toes. That is something he hasn't been able to do for about twenty years. And he now walks one to two miles every day.

He doesn't have a target weight but plans to stay on Atkins the rest of his life. John hasn't gained any weight back and continues to drop between three to five pounds each week.

He said, "I really relish the thought of tomorrow. I've met wonderful people and in the past nobody was wonderful to me."

One day Smith would like to go to a Cardinals' game.

He never could because he couldn't fit into the seats.

If you want to send him a note or ask him more questions, you can contact him at zajo_inc~yahoo.com

He cannot have his surgery until he gets down to 300 pounds. Money is an issue. Smith said he believes unless Medicaid approves he won't be able to afford the hospital bills. He'll need several operations to remove excess skin. Plastic Surgeon David Caplin has offered his services free.

We'll continue to follow Smith and show you his progress.
If you would like more information about Washington University's Center for Human Nutrition or on the Atkins diet, click on the related links section to the right.

http://www.ksdk.com/news/cover_article.aspx?storyid=79904

littlejohn
Thu, May-26-05, 07:02
Wow!

I guess the same thing sugar was doing to me it was doing to him. Only with even greater weight gain. 647! Misery.

kathleen24
Thu, May-26-05, 07:59
[QUOTE=nobimbo]
Public ridicule tore him apart.
. . .
Smith said, "You don't even have to have good hearing. People would say look at the size of that sucker. He got no business being out in public. He's disgraceful."
. . .

He's been married 30 years. Some 13 months ago, john started the Atkins diet, after one of his three kids suggested it.
. . .
Smith said, "Stop looking in another direction and look in the mirror. See yourself and have respect for yourself."
. . .
He said, "I really relish the thought of tomorrow. I've met wonderful people and in the past nobody was wonderful to me."
QUOTE]

What a story. A lot of strength here--especially the determination to live in spite of the ridicule, the health problems, and the sheer physical impediments he must have struggled with daily. Kudos.

Kristine
Thu, May-26-05, 08:31
Great story. :thup:

There have been other benefits to Smith's weight loss. He is now completely off his diabetes and high blood pressure medication.

I'm really glad the author of the article refrained from resorting to the usual Atkins-bashing. :thup:

Nancy LC
Thu, May-26-05, 08:34
I sent him email with a link to this site, and my congratulations.

liz175
Thu, May-26-05, 08:46
What an inspiring story! He really regained his life.

MoNoCarb
Thu, May-26-05, 09:41
WOW. And he's from my hometown! Yea St Louis!

dawninHI
Thu, May-26-05, 17:17
Thats what I call taking the wieght off.. both body and soul

kmct10
Fri, May-27-05, 00:43
Great, but he's not the only one who lost that much. Check out all the "success stories" on other sites like Atkins.com and E-diets. There's a guy on the Atkins site who lost like 800 lbs - with pictures. This story is far more common than the press will admit - it's all being very intentionally repressed.

There are now hundreds or thousands of these "miracle" stories on the web, not to mention in Atkins' files. Why everyone is pretending they don't exist I don't know. E-diets has a disclaimer on it's dramatic success stories that says "results not typical" - but Yes they are typical for LC!!!

kmct10
Fri, May-27-05, 14:15
I hope people like him will be willing to start speaking out and testifying publicly about their results. We need more people to make a clear public stand as living evidence of the damage of sugar, and the willful blindness of the research establishment.

potatofree
Fri, May-27-05, 14:51
Why everyone is pretending they don't exist I don't know. E-diets has a disclaimer on it's dramatic success stories that says "results not typical" - but Yes they are typical for LC!!!

It's not pretending they don't exist, it's covering their butts from legal action. If losses like that were presented as the norm on a given program (I'm not saying LC isn't the better plan, just that not everyone who goes on it HAS such impressive results) that would open them up to lawsuits for false advertising from the thousands of people who pay for the service and DON'T lose that kind of weight.

mio1996
Fri, May-27-05, 19:30
Great story. :thup:



I'm really glad the author of the article refrained from resorting to the usual Atkins-bashing. :thup:Yes, I kept expecting the "But doctors say the Atkins diet is only a temporary measure and shouldn't be followed for extended periods due to danger of heart disease" or something like that :)

kwikdriver
Fri, May-27-05, 19:57
There have been other benefits to Smith's weight loss. He is now completely off his diabetes and high blood pressure medication. He says anyone can do what he did. The first step is to stop making excuses.


Look! Over there!

A little misdirection at work. How do they know it was his weightloss? Let's say someone started at 300 pounds and had high blood pressure and diabetes. What would people say? "That fat f~#$ needs to lose weight!" Here we have a guy who drops down to 300 pounds and got rid of medication (and who knows at what weight he was able to get rid of it? The reporter doesn't say and probably didn't think to ask). But the reporter ignorantly jumped to the conclusion that it was the weight loss, and not his diet, that improved his health. And that's how misinformation is spread. It's an understandable mistake on the reporter's part; most of them aren't IQ contest winners to begin with; they are generalists, not experts; and the salient thing here is the weight loss, which would fool a lot of people. But the scientists and doctors who keep up the drone about nutrition (and that's who the reporter, and this guy as well, probably, were parroting) should know better.

Here's a little trick I used to pull that I'll admit to. Several years ago I busted up my back pretty bad, and had to go to doctors (over and over and over and over). Because I knew my BP was pretty high, and because I wanted the doctors to sign off on me returning to work, I low carbed for several days prior to each doctor's visit to drop my blood pressure. And it worked -- I always came in on the high end of normal, and no one ever said a thing, except to express surprise that someone so obese could have good BP numbers. "I was lucky" one nurse told me. I was still wildly morbidly obese, and I doubt I lost much more than water weight low carbing, but I had good BP numbers. Imagine that.