Anonymous wrote:You sound like a perfect candidate for a GLP. Why are you against being on it forever? The dangers of your obesity and yo yo dieting are well studied.
Anonymous wrote:I get it OP. I wish I could start a glp1 to turn off all the food noise but literally no one will prescribe it to me unless I lie about my weight in a virtual appt. I am thin, a size 00/0 at 43 but it takes SO MUCH effort to stay this way at this age post kids. I eat perfectly and track everything I eat, exercise every day, deny my cravings for sugar and junk all day, and go to bed hungry at night. And of course my husband and young kids with high metabolisms can and do eat whatever they want with no impact on weight. So my house is filled with all sorts of temptations I live with everyday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound like a perfect candidate for a GLP. Why are you against being on it forever? The dangers of your obesity and yo yo dieting are well studied.
Cost. And I seriously don’t want to be injecting myself when I’m 88 years old just to be thin.
If you keep going you might have to inject yourself because you have diabetes. Most 88yos are on some med or other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GLPs cause you to lose a lot of muscle, not just fat.
Totally false. If the drug targeted muscle no one would take it. When you lose weight you lose some muscle! And so many people on the drugs are working out more than they ever did.
Anonymous wrote:GLPs cause you to lose a lot of muscle, not just fat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound like a perfect candidate for a GLP. Why are you against being on it forever? The dangers of your obesity and yo yo dieting are well studied.
Cost. And I seriously don’t want to be injecting myself when I’m 88 years old just to be thin.
Anonymous wrote:GLPs cause you to lose a lot of muscle, not just fat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine started a GLP-1 sixteen months ago. We are both early 50s. She went from a size 16/18 to a size 0. She is so tiny now, the transformation has been amazing. And frankly, a little alarming to watch as she initially had a racing heart when seated, she seems to have wasted away and always has no energy. When we go out to eat, she picks at her food and shuffles it around her plate. I don’t expect her to eat a huge meal… but it’s not exactly healthy to only eat 3 bites of a salad and then say she’s full.
She is a medical doctor. Her patients have watched the transformation, and she tells them she gave up sugar and started exercising. I feel like that is a lie by omission. And honestly, I exercise more than she does.
I am a size 12/14 and have been on the weight loss yo-yo for years. I’ll lose weight and drop down to an 6/8, and then “life” happens – I broke my ankle, our house flooded, I was bitten by a black widow… and my stress eating = gain it all back.
I am tempted by the GLP-1, but also hesitant. I do not want to inject myself (or take a pill) for the rest of my life. (60% gain the weight back when they stop the injections). I do not want to be low energy. But I am envious of her when I am struggling with my weight loss. And irritated when she tells me it’s just about cutting sugar and exercising.
Thanks for listening to me vent my jealousy.
So unlikely that I'm 100% convinced this is a fake post.
I'm 55, on a GLP1, and went from a size 18 to a size 10 over 2 years. And she's a doctor? And on a GLP1 and tells you "it's just about cutting sugar and exercising"? Lol. Ok.
Just another iteration of GLP1 rage baiting/trolling.
DP. My sibling is a doctor married to a doctor. When they showed up at Christmas and I asked how they lost weight (they've been dieting on various diets for years), my sibling said "I've been working out a lot!" in a smug way and my in law said, "I ate less."
Posted too soon. Anyway, then I found out they were on Ozempic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine started a GLP-1 sixteen months ago. We are both early 50s. She went from a size 16/18 to a size 0. She is so tiny now, the transformation has been amazing. And frankly, a little alarming to watch as she initially had a racing heart when seated, she seems to have wasted away and always has no energy. When we go out to eat, she picks at her food and shuffles it around her plate. I don’t expect her to eat a huge meal… but it’s not exactly healthy to only eat 3 bites of a salad and then say she’s full.
She is a medical doctor. Her patients have watched the transformation, and she tells them she gave up sugar and started exercising. I feel like that is a lie by omission. And honestly, I exercise more than she does.
I am a size 12/14 and have been on the weight loss yo-yo for years. I’ll lose weight and drop down to an 6/8, and then “life” happens – I broke my ankle, our house flooded, I was bitten by a black widow… and my stress eating = gain it all back.
I am tempted by the GLP-1, but also hesitant. I do not want to inject myself (or take a pill) for the rest of my life. (60% gain the weight back when they stop the injections). I do not want to be low energy. But I am envious of her when I am struggling with my weight loss. And irritated when she tells me it’s just about cutting sugar and exercising.
Thanks for listening to me vent my jealousy.
So unlikely that I'm 100% convinced this is a fake post.
I'm 55, on a GLP1, and went from a size 18 to a size 10 over 2 years. And she's a doctor? And on a GLP1 and tells you "it's just about cutting sugar and exercising"? Lol. Ok.
Just another iteration of GLP1 rage baiting/trolling.
DP. My sibling is a doctor married to a doctor. When they showed up at Christmas and I asked how they lost weight (they've been dieting on various diets for years), my sibling said "I've been working out a lot!" in a smug way and my in law said, "I ate less."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine started a GLP-1 sixteen months ago. We are both early 50s. She went from a size 16/18 to a size 0. She is so tiny now, the transformation has been amazing. And frankly, a little alarming to watch as she initially had a racing heart when seated, she seems to have wasted away and always has no energy. When we go out to eat, she picks at her food and shuffles it around her plate. I don’t expect her to eat a huge meal… but it’s not exactly healthy to only eat 3 bites of a salad and then say she’s full.
She is a medical doctor. Her patients have watched the transformation, and she tells them she gave up sugar and started exercising. I feel like that is a lie by omission. And honestly, I exercise more than she does.
I am a size 12/14 and have been on the weight loss yo-yo for years. I’ll lose weight and drop down to an 6/8, and then “life” happens – I broke my ankle, our house flooded, I was bitten by a black widow… and my stress eating = gain it all back.
I am tempted by the GLP-1, but also hesitant. I do not want to inject myself (or take a pill) for the rest of my life. (60% gain the weight back when they stop the injections). I do not want to be low energy. But I am envious of her when I am struggling with my weight loss. And irritated when she tells me it’s just about cutting sugar and exercising.
Thanks for listening to me vent my jealousy.
So unlikely that I'm 100% convinced this is a fake post.
I'm 55, on a GLP1, and went from a size 18 to a size 10 over 2 years. And she's a doctor? And on a GLP1 and tells you "it's just about cutting sugar and exercising"? Lol. Ok.
Just another iteration of GLP1 rage baiting/trolling.