Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You find more productive ways to be social that don’t involve eating or drinking. Take up hiking. Get a kayak. Get a bike. Go running. Go to the spa on vacation.
Enjoy the sunshine (with skin protection). There will be a time when you are older that the only thing to enjoy will be sitting somewhere and eating.
Is this what people taking Ozempic, etc., have done? I am just curious about real/on the ground experience.
People on Ozempic are typically making major lifestyle changes. They're given the prescription not because of their weight but because they are diabetic or pre-diabetic. So, the drug comes with instructions to change eating habits (namely, to eat few carbohydrates) and increase cardiovascular exercise -- 150 minutes a week, minimum.
Typically, no good doctor will prescribe it to help a non-diabetic achieve 10 pounds of weight loss. And typically, a good doctor will want to see some evidence of weight loss BEFORE prescribing the drug as evidence you're doing the other things you need to do while on the medication to manage diabetes.
Because it is a diabetes drug. It's not a weight loss drug.
Sorry what? This is just factually wrong. The compound is indicated for obesity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one takes Ozempic for a month or two to lose a pesky 10 pounds.
+1 Waste of time, will just come back when you stop the drug.
So then I can do it again a few months down the road if/when the 10lbs come back. There is no doubt in my mind that the drug will be widely used this way by many many people, very soon. It already is being used this way by celebrities (and Elon!) and rich white women. But I am interested into how you fill the time/mental space when you are no longer focused on planning next (tasty) meal. E.g., on vacation, when you are already talking about dinner plans when you are at lunch. But maybe that is just me (and explains the extra ten).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one takes Ozempic for a month or two to lose a pesky 10 pounds.
+1 Waste of time, will just come back when you stop the drug.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You find more productive ways to be social that don’t involve eating or drinking. Take up hiking. Get a kayak. Get a bike. Go running. Go to the spa on vacation.
Enjoy the sunshine (with skin protection). There will be a time when you are older that the only thing to enjoy will be sitting somewhere and eating.
Is this what people taking Ozempic, etc., have done? I am just curious about real/on the ground experience.
People on Ozempic are typically making major lifestyle changes. They're given the prescription not because of their weight but because they are diabetic or pre-diabetic. So, the drug comes with instructions to change eating habits (namely, to eat few carbohydrates) and increase cardiovascular exercise -- 150 minutes a week, minimum.
Typically, no good doctor will prescribe it to help a non-diabetic achieve 10 pounds of weight loss. And typically, a good doctor will want to see some evidence of weight loss BEFORE prescribing the drug as evidence you're doing the other things you need to do while on the medication to manage diabetes.
Because it is a diabetes drug. It's not a weight loss drug.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You find more productive ways to be social that don’t involve eating or drinking. Take up hiking. Get a kayak. Get a bike. Go running. Go to the spa on vacation.
Enjoy the sunshine (with skin protection). There will be a time when you are older that the only thing to enjoy will be sitting somewhere and eating.
Is this what people taking Ozempic, etc., have done? I am just curious about real/on the ground experience.
People on Ozempic are typically making major lifestyle changes. They're given the prescription not because of their weight but because they are diabetic or pre-diabetic. So, the drug comes with instructions to change eating habits (namely, to eat few carbohydrates) and increase cardiovascular exercise -- 150 minutes a week, minimum.
Typically, no good doctor will prescribe it to help a non-diabetic achieve 10 pounds of weight loss. And typically, a good doctor will want to see some evidence of weight loss BEFORE prescribing the drug as evidence you're doing the other things you need to do while on the medication to manage diabetes.
Because it is a diabetes drug. It's not a weight loss drug.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You find more productive ways to be social that don’t involve eating or drinking. Take up hiking. Get a kayak. Get a bike. Go running. Go to the spa on vacation.
Enjoy the sunshine (with skin protection). There will be a time when you are older that the only thing to enjoy will be sitting somewhere and eating.
Is this what people taking Ozempic, etc., have done? I am just curious about real/on the ground experience.
Anonymous wrote:You find more productive ways to be social that don’t involve eating or drinking. Take up hiking. Get a kayak. Get a bike. Go running. Go to the spa on vacation.
Enjoy the sunshine (with skin protection). There will be a time when you are older that the only thing to enjoy will be sitting somewhere and eating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one takes Ozempic for a month or two to lose a pesky 10 pounds.
+1 Waste of time, will just come back when you stop the drug.
Anonymous wrote:No one takes Ozempic for a month or two to lose a pesky 10 pounds.