Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After trying everything else I resorted to ozempic even though I’m not technically overweight. The midsection weight did melt right off, it was by far the most noticeable effect, I didn’t lose much if any weight elsewhere. You gotta be careful with the dosing though if you aren’t actually trying to lose very much weight
I have type 2 diabetes and taking ozempic for almost a year but weight is not coming down. My midsection is bigger than my boobs or hips and doesn't look good. Not sure what to do. I am 5'3" and 205 lbs.
Anonymous wrote:After trying everything else I resorted to ozempic even though I’m not technically overweight. The midsection weight did melt right off, it was by far the most noticeable effect, I didn’t lose much if any weight elsewhere. You gotta be careful with the dosing though if you aren’t actually trying to lose very much weight
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and still in peri. I work out regularly and I’ve noticed its getting harder maintain a flat stomach.
What do you do to reduce weight gain or keep it from getting worse?
I am 51 and have experienced the same. I have always had a small frame and I now eat very little. The stomach fat/bloating is so bad that i feel it bending over. It reminds me of being pregnant. I almost looked into a tummy tuck but I really don't want to have to resort to that. My question is does this go away after menopause?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After trying everything else I resorted to ozempic even though I’m not technically overweight. The midsection weight did melt right off, it was by far the most noticeable effect, I didn’t lose much if any weight elsewhere. You gotta be careful with the dosing though if you aren’t actually trying to lose very much weight
This is really, really dumb.
Only do this if you don't care about your long-term health, OP.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and still in peri. I work out regularly and I’ve noticed its getting harder maintain a flat stomach.
What do you do to reduce weight gain or keep it from getting worse?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s frustrating. Same weight but things don’t fit. Ugh.
So is the weight shifting from muscle mass to mid section body fat?
No, it's hormones: the reduction in estrogen in the body causes fat to be redistributed to abdominal visceral fat.
Anonymous wrote:It’s frustrating. Same weight but things don’t fit. Ugh.