You don’t need a cheer squad—but one person in your corner can change everything.
Whether you’ve chosen surgery, nutrition, movement, or a mix of all three—trying to change your body without support can feel like screaming into a void. Sure, you are doing the work. But having someone beside you, especially on the days when you’re questioning everything? That’s where the shift happens.
Let’s talk about what it means to have support—and what it looks like when you don’t.
What Support Actually Looks Like
It’s not just someone clapping when you lose weight.
Support is:
- The friend who doesn’t roll their eyes when you bring your shake to brunch
- The partner who holds space for your mental spiral without trying to “fix it”
- The co-worker who says “you good?” when you’re quiet—not “you’re back on a diet again?”
- The person who says, “Let’s go for a walk,” instead of “Let’s get tacos again”
Support doesn’t mean someone walks the path for you—it means they don’t let you walk it alone.
What Happens When You Don’t Have That
Without support, the wins feel quieter and the setbacks feel louder.
You might start thinking:
- “I should be further along by now.”
- “Nobody understands how hard this is.”
- “Maybe I wasn’t ready for this.”
That isolation can lead to self-sabotage, shame, or simply… giving up.
You don’t need permission to keep going—but you do need reminders that you’re not crazy, not broken, and not the only one navigating these mental and physical shifts.
What to Do If You Don’t Have a Partner (Yet)
Not everyone starts their journey with a built-in support system. But you can build one.
Here’s how:
- Tell one trusted person what you're doing and what you need
- Join a space where people get it (support groups, online communities, podcasts like this one)
- Set boundaries with people who drain you—your journey isn’t up for debate
- Be your own first partner until others catch up
You might be surprised who steps up when you stop hiding your path.
Your Support Doesn’t Have to Look Traditional
Some people have a ride-or-die spouse. Others find that support in a friend, a sibling, a therapist, or even a podcast host who says what you’re thinking out loud.
There’s no right way to be supported. But there is a right to feel supported.
You deserve that.
Remember: You’re not weak for needing someone. You’re strong enough to ask.
If you haven’t found your person yet, we’re here. The Bariatric Paths community was built for this very reason—to help you feel seen, heard, and surrounded by people who get it.
Because your path is YOURS—but you don’t have to walk it alone.
📥 Want more support like this?
Join our newsletter, listen to our latest episodes, and connect with others who get it.
[Join the community → www.BariatricPaths.com]