Anonymous wrote:Absolutely yes. 50 year old woman who started Wegovy at just over 300 pounds, 7 months ago, after a hip replacement. Got used to the diet first, then added meds. And about 2 months in, started having a personal trainer coming to my house for 60 minutes, twice a week for serious strength training. So, I’ve been at it since mid June or so.
It’s wonderful, because he tailors workout to my goals and my body and works around things like SI joint arthritis and the serious balance and one sided strength deficits I had after my hip replacement. It’s also kept me injury free.
If took a while to see progress, but after 7 months of Wegovy and 5 months of 120 minutes of strength trading a week (and 1200 calories a day, 100+ GS of protein and so much water), I’ve lost 60 pounds. And my body scans show that all but 3-4 pounds are fat instead of muscle— which I keep being told is very important for menopausal women.
Balance, flexibility, core strength, muscle strength, energy levels all up. So much more able to do little things like carry a full basket of laundry up the stairs. I can balance on one leg in a tree pose for a minute, am just starting full sit-up on the ground (after hitting 30 chair sit-ups), have just progressed from couch to I chair to girl push-ups on the ground (on my knees, ankles crossed) and have built up to holding a plank for a minute. And am still building. Goal is 2 minutes. I can also see muscle in my arms and legs, instead of just fat.
I’m obviously ridiculously proud of my progress (since I’m listing exercise I can finally do on DCUM while everyone else rolls their eyes thinks: you are seriously bragging about being able to do sit-ups?). But for me, the difference in how I look and feel is huge and exciting. The nice thing about weight training is you see progress. 10 pounds used to be hard, now I’m doing 30. Getting into a plank in good form used to be hard. Now, I’m holding it for a minute. Meeting goals, adding weights, letting go of the back of the sofa and balancing on my own— they make me feel great about my progress.
And it has been just 2 hard one hour sessions a week. I do sometimes do 45 minutes of cardio on the bike as well— but not nearly as often or regularly as I should. IMO, committing to what you can realistically do regularly and then adding in extras during the week when you can I’d better than starting off on an everyday plan, but dropping off after a few weeks.
NP but YAY!!!! This was inspiring to read - go you, and thank you so much for sharing!!!