Anonymous wrote:Not Zepbound but I took another rGLP1 and yes, you will regain the weight when you stop. If you were unable to control your hunger and cravings before taking the medication you will also struggle after. Everyone thinks losing weight is the hard part, but maintaining weight loss is more difficult.
Now are there some people who are successful in maintaining, sure, but they are the exception, not the norm and research backs this up. I think the ones who maintain are people who never really struggled with their weight, but rather gained a few extra pounds due to things like pregnancy or an injury so had ok eating habits to begin with.
Anonymous wrote:I thought eating less became an ingrained good habit if you do it enough. (as in, stay on the drug long enough for a good habit to root in place)
Anonymous wrote:Yes, you must change your eating habits and be in a calorie deficit forever. The only weight loss regiment is gastric bypass that is long term.
Anonymous wrote:I thought eating less became an ingrained good habit if you do it enough. (as in, stay on the drug long enough for a good habit to root in place)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If all you did was take a shot and sit on the couch, then yes the weight is going to come back. If you used to shot as a tool and made lifestyle changes while you were on it, you may be ok
If the “lifestyle changes” are eating less — which is what most women in their 40s and 50s need to do to lose weight — that becomes a lot harder to do when you’re hungry again.
I am a person who does a ton of strength training and eats healthy food already. But I’m eating too much of it to lose weight. If a GLP1 makes me less hungry, I will eat less and lose weight. But if I go off and the hunger comes back, I likely won’t be able to maintain.
When I say lifestyle change I mean the women who still eat crap (like a small piece of their homemade lasagna with mozzarella, ricotta, and béchamel instead of two pieces.
Anonymous wrote:I thought eating less became an ingrained good habit if you do it enough. (as in, stay on the drug long enough for a good habit to root in place)
Anonymous wrote:I thought eating less became an ingrained good habit if you do it enough. (as in, stay on the drug long enough for a good habit to root in place)
Anonymous wrote:Yes, you must change your eating habits and be in a calorie deficit forever. The only weight loss regiment is gastric bypass that is long term.
Anonymous wrote:I thought eating less became an ingrained good habit if you do it enough. (as in, stay on the drug long enough for a good habit to root in place)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If all you did was take a shot and sit on the couch, then yes the weight is going to come back. If you used to shot as a tool and made lifestyle changes while you were on it, you may be ok
If the “lifestyle changes” are eating less — which is what most women in their 40s and 50s need to do to lose weight — that becomes a lot harder to do when you’re hungry again.
I am a person who does a ton of strength training and eats healthy food already. But I’m eating too much of it to lose weight. If a GLP1 makes me less hungry, I will eat less and lose weight. But if I go off and the hunger comes back, I likely won’t be able to maintain.
This has been exactly my experience - I strength train and eat healthily, but start to gain weight from quantity. I have been able to stretch the doses though to maintain my weight loss. I start to get ravenously hungry around week 3-4 after an injection, and that’s around when I take it again for a single dose. If I have to inject myself once a month for the rest of my life I’m ok with that. The benefits to my health are worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If all you did was take a shot and sit on the couch, then yes the weight is going to come back. If you used to shot as a tool and made lifestyle changes while you were on it, you may be ok
If the “lifestyle changes” are eating less — which is what most women in their 40s and 50s need to do to lose weight — that becomes a lot harder to do when you’re hungry again.
I am a person who does a ton of strength training and eats healthy food already. But I’m eating too much of it to lose weight. If a GLP1 makes me less hungry, I will eat less and lose weight. But if I go off and the hunger comes back, I likely won’t be able to maintain.