Olivia
was a middle-aged woman, trapped in her parents' basement by her obesity. There
she remained house-bound, as relatives brought her food.
"I
secluded myself from the world," she told ABCNews.com. "I didn't want
to be seen by society any more. All I did was either be on the computer, watch
TV or eat."
The
47-year-old former computer specialist weighed in at 440 pounds and had been
teased most of her life for her weight. At the age of 12, she weighed 180
pounds.
A
2010 flood forced her out of the house and she lost everything she owned.
Olivia, who did not want to reveal her last name, said she was so depressed she
tried to kill herself by swallowing a handful of painkillers.
She
credits her twin sister with saving her life by calling paramedics, and vowed
after that catastrophic event to transform her life by losing weight.
Her
inspiring and transformational story is part of an eight-part television
series, "My 600-Pound Life," which continues its second season on TLC
on Jan. 7.
In
the series opener, women like Olivia tell stories of how they became morbidly
obese, why they decided to make the change, their traumatic surgery and
recovery and how all those who love them, including their enablers, have coped.
Today,
after moving to Texas to live with her brother and have gastric surgery, Olivia
weights 256 pounds. But her weight is still disabling: She has lympedema in her
legs, which makes walking painful. Still, she is leading a healthier lifestyle
and hopes to reach the goal of 180 pounds.
Olivia
grew up in Cicero, Ill., in a dysfunctional family and was sexually abused by a
cousin at the age of 7. "I grew up in an abusive house," she said.
"My stepfather was not sexually abusive, but he did hit us."
One
of only a handful of Hispanics at her high school, Olivia dropped out because
of bullying and continued on a path of eating to morbid obesity.
She
confined herself to her parents' Illinois basement where they enabled her
obesity, bringing her cookies, cakes -- anything she wanted. Only her twin
sister refused and brought healthy food.
Then
one day three years ago the basement flooded.
"I
was half-way up to my waist in water," said Olivia. "I had been
depressed and my parents were separated, and I was alone and trapped. I knew I
would have to pull myself high up. … I fell asleep and the next thing you know,
I had collapsed in black, dirty water. I didn't think twice about putting my
feet in the water with the electricity running through the house."
Knowing
she had to get out, Olivia called her twin sister, who rescued her. But the
event triggered a suicide attempt, and she said she took "a cocktail of
pills -- Vidocin, 50 of them."
By
the time the paramedics got there, Olivia was unconscious.
After
hitting rock bottom, she saw a TV program about an obese woman named
"Myra," who lost weight. Between that and her desperate effort to
kill herself, Olivia said she saw the light: "It was being in the hospital
and seeing my twin's face."
"Myra
posted something on Facebook about looking for [TLC] castmembers with obesity
problems and I emailed her," said Olivia. "She said my life would be
exposed -- they would film everything I did. But I was willing to do whatever
it takes. I had tried suicide and I wasn't going to do that again."
She
left Illinois and flew to Houston where she sought the help of a gastro surgeon
and began filming for TLC's, "My 600-Pound Life."
ABC
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