Anonymous wrote:Change your thought process so you only ever think of the word diet as a noun meaning "the kinds of food that a person, animal, or community habitually eats." Never think of it as a verb or as a noun meaning "a special course of food to which one restricts oneself, either to lose weight or for medical reasons."
You cannot go "on" a diet and succeed long term. You can change your diet to healthy food that will fuel your body and provide sustenance.
Eat real, minimally processed food, ideally fruits, vegetables, legumes, seeds and nuts, and grains. That immediately eliminates almost all of the foods that lead to being obesity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Change your thought process so you only ever think of the word diet as a noun meaning "the kinds of food that a person, animal, or community habitually eats." Never think of it as a verb or as a noun meaning "a special course of food to which one restricts oneself, either to lose weight or for medical reasons."
You cannot go "on" a diet and succeed long term. You can change your diet to healthy food that will fuel your body and provide sustenance.
Eat real, minimally processed food, ideally fruits, vegetables, legumes, seeds and nuts, and grains. That immediately eliminates almost all of the foods that lead to being obesity.
Tell me you've never been obese without telling me you've never been obese. I eat like this now 95% of the time, barely eat over 1500 calories. I'm 150 lbs overweight. It's not that easy for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read up on semaglutides such as Wegovy & Ozempic. They have made a real difference.
I have but my insurance won’t cover them and they are stupid expensive out of pocket.
Get a diabetes diagnosis or get them from Canada
I don’t have diabetes, so no luck there. How do you get them from Canada?
Get a paper prescription for a 4 mg pen, buy from Mark’s marine pharmacy or buycanadianinsulin.com. Will be around $300 with shipping.
You have to step with doses. Getting a 4mg pen will get you 8 weeks worth to start:
4 weeks at 0.25mg = 1mg
2 weeks at 0.5mg = 1mg
2 weeks at 1.0 mg = 2mg
After that you can stay at 1.0mg for a while and then step up to 2mg if you plateau.
No reputable doctor will let you do this.
They won't let you increase dosage without closely monitoring and other is a reason for that.
My BP plummeted after going up to 1 mg. I now also have to test by blood sugar because they suspect that also might be falling too low.
Please go to a reputable doctor, OP. This medication is not a joke. It's serious. If your doctor doesn't put you on it, explore other options because in their medical opinion you are not a good candidate for it.
I have how DCUM is prescribing it like it's end all, be all to for weight loss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I'm going to start Mounjaro. Fingers crossed.
any updates?
I've been on Mounjaro 3 months (just finished the 7.5mg does, moving to the 10mg dose next week). I've lost 13 pounds. A little disappointing, considering some of the other stories I've heard of dramatic weight loss. But about a lb per week, which is decent. I'll be curious to see what the next dose does. The appetite suppression is real and I do forget to eat some times. I never was a big eater to begin with though (I know, I know ... I'm fat, so I must gorge myself ... hardly). One surprising side effect that does appear to be fairly common is I don't want alcohol hardly at all. I have not had any of the nausea that some do. Worst side effects are tiredness and I'm a little achy.
Not a miracle drug for me (yet!) but I'm excited to see the scale go down at least! But this medicine is a major PITA to get every month. I question every month if it's worth it for slower weight loss.
Anonymous wrote:Change your thought process so you only ever think of the word diet as a noun meaning "the kinds of food that a person, animal, or community habitually eats." Never think of it as a verb or as a noun meaning "a special course of food to which one restricts oneself, either to lose weight or for medical reasons."
You cannot go "on" a diet and succeed long term. You can change your diet to healthy food that will fuel your body and provide sustenance.
Eat real, minimally processed food, ideally fruits, vegetables, legumes, seeds and nuts, and grains. That immediately eliminates almost all of the foods that lead to being obesity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I'm going to start Mounjaro. Fingers crossed.
any updates?
I've been on Mounjaro 3 months (just finished the 7.5mg does, moving to the 10mg dose next week). I've lost 13 pounds. A little disappointing, considering some of the other stories I've heard of dramatic weight loss. But about a lb per week, which is decent. I'll be curious to see what the next dose does. The appetite suppression is real and I do forget to eat some times. I never was a big eater to begin with though (I know, I know ... I'm fat, so I must gorge myself ... hardly). One surprising side effect that does appear to be fairly common is I don't want alcohol hardly at all. I have not had any of the nausea that some do. Worst side effects are tiredness and I'm a little achy.
Not a miracle drug for me (yet!) but I'm excited to see the scale go down at least! But this medicine is a major PITA to get every month. I question every month if it's worth it for slower weight loss.
A pound a week is excellent! No one ever said this a fast track to weight loss. Keep up the great work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I'm going to start Mounjaro. Fingers crossed.
any updates?
I've been on Mounjaro 3 months (just finished the 7.5mg does, moving to the 10mg dose next week). I've lost 13 pounds. A little disappointing, considering some of the other stories I've heard of dramatic weight loss. But about a lb per week, which is decent. I'll be curious to see what the next dose does. The appetite suppression is real and I do forget to eat some times. I never was a big eater to begin with though (I know, I know ... I'm fat, so I must gorge myself ... hardly). One surprising side effect that does appear to be fairly common is I don't want alcohol hardly at all. I have not had any of the nausea that some do. Worst side effects are tiredness and I'm a little achy.
Not a miracle drug for me (yet!) but I'm excited to see the scale go down at least! But this medicine is a major PITA to get every month. I question every month if it's worth it for slower weight loss.
Anonymous wrote:I am also 100 pounds overweight. I can't believe I'm writing that. But I am. And I have never thought about surgery or pills. I have to face the fact that I have to eat healthy and move more. I eat healthy 75% of the time, but its that 25% of treats and night eating and being lazy and watching one more episode instead of going for a walk. I'm not super motivated to stick with it. But I can't believe what the one poster wrote that my body will want to hold onto it unless I do srugs or surgery. That's simply not true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read up on semaglutides such as Wegovy & Ozempic. They have made a real difference.
I have but my insurance won’t cover them and they are stupid expensive out of pocket.
Get a diabetes diagnosis or get them from Canada
I don’t have diabetes, so no luck there. How do you get them from Canada?
Get a paper prescription for a 4 mg pen, buy from Mark’s marine pharmacy or buycanadianinsulin.com. Will be around $300 with shipping.
You have to step with doses. Getting a 4mg pen will get you 8 weeks worth to start:
4 weeks at 0.25mg = 1mg
2 weeks at 0.5mg = 1mg
2 weeks at 1.0 mg = 2mg
After that you can stay at 1.0mg for a while and then step up to 2mg if you plateau.