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“Rest, receive, and let your body lead. You don’t need to push yet — you need to heal.”
You did something incredibly brave.
Now let yourself rest.
Welcome to Whole Again. You are here because you made one of the hardest, most courageous decisions of your life — and you followed through on it. Whether you had surgery days ago or started your first GLP-1 injection this week, the same truth applies: your body is doing something enormous right now.
Week 1 has one job. Not tracking. Not goals. Not results. Rest, receive, and let your body lead. This is the week to slow down completely — to sip, to breathe, to sleep, and to let the people around you help you.
The program has 12 weeks. The transformation has time. Right now, your only assignment is to heal.
“My first week post-VSG, I went back to work on Day 4. My surgery consisted of VSG, gallbladder removal and hiatal hernia repair. I was up, I was moving around, I was convinced I was fine. By day six I was exhausted and using my lunch hour to take a nap. The program starts here — not because I’m telling you what to do, but because I should have taken more time to rest: give yourself full permission to do nothing but heal this week. It is not wasted time. It is the foundation.”
Your body is rebuilding itself.
Don’t get in its way.
For bariatric patients, your digestive system has been surgically altered. Your stomach is healing, swollen, and adjusting to its new architecture. Every sip of water is doing important work. Every hour of sleep is tissue repair. Every moment of stillness is your nervous system coming down from the stress of surgery.
For GLP-1 patients, your hunger signals are being chemically recalibrated for the first time. Your body may feel confused — when do I eat? Why don’t I want to? Is this right? Yes. This is the medication working. Your job is to support it, not fight it.
Both tracks share one truth this week: push harder than your body is asking you to, and you will pay for it in Week 2 and 3. Respect the pace of healing, and you arrive at Week 2 with energy instead of debt.
Keep it simple.
These three. Nothing else.
How are you doing right now?
Check in daily. This takes 60 seconds. It gives you a running record of your first week that you’ll be glad you have at Week 12 when you look back on how far you’ve come.
Two minutes to calm
the nervous system.
Surgery and medication changes both activate the stress response. This is normal. Slow, intentional breathing is one of the fastest ways to signal safety to your nervous system. Use this whenever you feel anxious, in pain, or overwhelmed.
begin
Your intentions for this week.
Your orientation session.
- 0–5 minMelissa opens with her personal message to the group
- 5–20 minIntroductions — your name, your track, one word for how you feel right now
- 20–30 minProgram overview — what the next 12 weeks look like
- 30–35 minGroup agreements — confidentiality, showing up, no comparison
- 35–55 minOpen Q&A — your questions, answered honestly
- 55–60 minWeek 1 intention set together
Then pause. Count to five silently. Let it land. Watch for exhales and nodding. This is the emotional tone for the entire 12 weeks — you’re setting it right here in this first moment.
Don’t rush to introductions. The silence after that opening is where trust begins.
“What’s one thing you’re hoping this group gives you that you haven’t been able to find anywhere else?”
“What does ‘Whole Again’ mean to you personally, right now, in week one?”
These two questions do the work of 20 minutes of content. Let people answer them — really answer them. Don’t fill silence.
- Anyone who seems minimizing — “I feel great, I don’t need much.” Week 1 crash often follows Week 1 overconfidence.
- Anyone in the Red Zone on their Recovery Snapshot — check in privately after the call
- GLP-1 members who are confused about whether their symptoms are normal — normalize the first-week adjustment openly
- Anyone who went silent during the group — they may need a private check-in