I didn't mean that to be directed at you, or anyone who isn't at least a year or more post-op. But imagining you'll never be able to eat a certain food again requires research. A corn tortilla is only 50 to 60 calories and contains 1.5 grams of protein. I wouldn't put it on my "don't eat." list. I was just adding information to the thread for everyone.
it's really important, though, that people think logically about calories and protein grams when they're post-op enough to eat solid foods. I have said many times that I eat anything I want. But there are things my stomach doesn't want me to eat, and the fact that I make almost no digestive enzymes is the reason why. There are foods that just don't go down, don't pass for hours, get stuck in my esophagus, and they do this every time. So they're on my no-no list.
My doctor never told me there would be foods I'd never eat again. My nutritionist followed up with me for months, and nothing was forbidden by her, either. Now people are posting here that they're never going to be able to eat xyz again & that their doctors are telling them that.
I'm 12 years out, thin, muscular and healthy (except for the horrible broken wrist & ruptured thumb tendon I had to treat surgically). The biggest threat to your post-op diet is not on a list of forbidden foods. It's in your head. I personally think it's counterproductive to tell people to have life-saving surgery in order to defeat disease, but not to tell people to spend at least as much time getting treatment for their eating disorders, because the irresistible compulsion is what's gonna kill you eventually, unless you find a way to get it under control.
I fully confess to having an eating disorder that manifested in my teens with anorexia (though we didn't have a name for it then, and my mom would not allow me not to eat, even if she had to sit on me & shovel food into my mouth for me), then moved into bulimia in my mid-20s. I don't have any symptoms of either disease anymore. I see my body realistically, I obey my body's hunger and thirst impulses, but I haven't engaged in any divergent behavior since I had RYGB surgery. I also had spent many years prior to that trying to treat my eating disorder and have been in therapy since 1975 with PTSD and several other psych disorders and behaviors. And I still see a mental health worker every two weeks because I still need help and support.
I think RYGB surgery did alter my digestive system in the way it often does, diminishing unhealthy craving signals from the part of the stomach that is no longer connected. And I learned so much about nutrition because it was required, and it has become second nature to me to go for the protein from the minute I get out of bed.
My stomach will not allow me to eat ice cream. I get very sick for hours if I take even one bite. It used to be a binge food for me. Now I can't even stand the smell of it, let alone the taste I used to have for it. I do have a "never again" list, but it was designed by my own digestive system. People should not be told they will never eat A or B again, because it's simply not true. But you can have dumping and other bad reactions to foods you used to love. You'll figure it out on your own.
I'll be right over there, next to the taco truck, if anyone wants me.