Reddit mentions: The best leg & thigh lifters

We found 2 Reddit comment discussing the best leg & thigh lifters. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 1 product and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

🎓 Reddit experts on leg & thigh lifters

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where leg & thigh lifters are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Leg & Thigh Lifters:

u/Margaret_Dreaming · 1 pointr/xxfitness

Really, he got to the point where it was compromising his quality of life so much that he had no good alternative. He couldn't do any of the activities he enjoyed without pain, and then enduring many days of a swollen, sore knee afterwards. (And, like you, sometimes there'd just be a freak tweak that would set things off.)

We also have no one nearby to help, so he was pretty dependent on me. Luckily, we work pretty near each other, so I could usually get to the office by 10 and leave by quarter of five, then I'd drop him off at PT and run errands, then pick him up and go home. We used a meal kit service for a few weeks to make life simpler-- the fewer errands I had to run, the better.

My husband's surgeon was the head of Sports Medicine at Emory University, the head physician for like all of the colleges here in ATL as well as the Dream, the city's WNBA team, and a physician for the Braves too. If your doc is quoting you twelve weeks, it might be work seeking other opinions. Because that sounds like a REALLY long time. I'd be curious if that'll actually be the case. DH was in a brace/unable to drive for only six, and went from no weight bearing to using a walker to using crutches to fully weight bearing remarkably quickly. (Pro tip: get a walker with a basket. It was a game changer because it let him carry stuff around and function at home once I went back to work-- he was out of work for a week. Also one of these things: https://www.amazon.com/Rehabilitation-Advantage-Rigid-Lifter-Foot/dp/B0788BR86V Those are my two absolute best tips for getting through the post-op period. Whenever you end up having the surgery, a walker and a foot lifter! Don't forget!)

I don't know what your job situation looks like, but if you'd be able to work remotely even a few days a week, that'd reduce the logistical burden on your husband. Or if you're close enough and the finances can tolerate it, a Lyft/Uber commute?

I completely understand your hesitance. My husband put it off for years, and in the end waited probably two years or so past when it really should have happened. The length and severity of the recovery was totally daunting, and the process wasn't fun. If the timing isn't right, all things considered, right now, I get that. But seriously consider going forward with the surgery when life allows. Unfortunately, this is a degenerative condition. The recovery period felt interminable back then, for him and even for me. But it's been so worth it.

If/when you do ever decide to go forward with the surgery, be that now or well into the future, feel free to reach out! I'd be happy to talk more in-depth (as if this weren't, ha!) and put you in touch with my husband if you'd like.