Anonymous wrote:How do people afford these?
Wegovy for me was $1000 a month. One coupon for $299 after my insurance stopped covering it.
Zepbound $500 a month.
Anonymous wrote:All these people at 140 weren’t even fat. SMH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have several friends on it. They swear they have no side effects, but they do. I've especially noticed the brain fog.
These people are not your friends
What? Maybe they do not notice the side effects. Sometimes someone is experiencing brain fog (is that even a GLP-1 side effect) that others notice but the person experiencing it does not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have several friends on it. They swear they have no side effects, but they do. I've especially noticed the brain fog.
These people are not your friends
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people afford these?
Wegovy for me was $1000 a month. One coupon for $299 after my insurance stopped covering it.
Zepbound $500 a month.
My insurance has covered it for the year I've been on it. $70 for 3 months of Wegovy. It's a total miracle for me. I gained 40 pounds in perimenopause and was on my way to weighing 200 pounds because I couldn't figure out how to stop gaining weight. I'm 5'4", now weigh 140, have only microdosed and have never felt better. No side effects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these people at 140 weren’t even fat. SMH.
140 is overweight for me at 5’1. 130 is the upper limit of my bmi.
You were barely overweight. If you'd lost 8 pounds you'd have been in the normal range. You couldn't lose 8 pounds through your own efforts?
NP- I am roughly this poster and it's very hard losing weight as a short, middle aged woman. GLP-1s make it finally seem fair: exercise and good nutrition actually pay off in real ways combined with the medication. I was active and ate well before, and every pound took a month and tremendous mental effort. It was discouraging to the point of being depressing.
Anonymous wrote:It's like meth or other weight loss drugs. Just because you dropped some weight doesn't mean you are healthy yet.
That's only part of it. If you are pre-diabetic at that weight, then you have to change your diet and activity levels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these people at 140 weren’t even fat. SMH.
140 is overweight for me at 5’1. 130 is the upper limit of my bmi.
You were barely overweight. If you'd lost 8 pounds you'd have been in the normal range. You couldn't lose 8 pounds through your own efforts?
NP- I am roughly this poster and it's very hard losing weight as a short, middle aged woman. GLP-1s make it finally seem fair: exercise and good nutrition actually pay off in real ways combined with the medication. I was active and ate well before, and every pound took a month and tremendous mental effort. It was discouraging to the point of being depressing.
I was thin my whole life and have gained 30 pounds in the last 5 years even though I increased my walking and decreased my carbs. I lost about 10 pounds last year through 8 months of really intense dieting but then had a month where I had a lot of work meetings and had to eat more like a normal person and gained it all back in one month of not dieting. So I haven’t really tried again. I am wondering if a small dose would help me. I am 5’4” and up to 155 now. I’m already on HRT and that doesn’t seem to help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these people at 140 weren’t even fat. SMH.
140 is overweight for me at 5’1. 130 is the upper limit of my bmi.
You were barely overweight. If you'd lost 8 pounds you'd have been in the normal range. You couldn't lose 8 pounds through your own efforts?
NP- I am roughly this poster and it's very hard losing weight as a short, middle aged woman. GLP-1s make it finally seem fair: exercise and good nutrition actually pay off in real ways combined with the medication. I was active and ate well before, and every pound took a month and tremendous mental effort. It was discouraging to the point of being depressing.
Anonymous wrote:How do people afford these?
Wegovy for me was $1000 a month. One coupon for $299 after my insurance stopped covering it.
Zepbound $500 a month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these people at 140 weren’t even fat. SMH.
140 is overweight for me at 5’1. 130 is the upper limit of my bmi.
You were barely overweight. If you'd lost 8 pounds you'd have been in the normal range. You couldn't lose 8 pounds through your own efforts?
No, and why should I? You sound jealous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these people at 140 weren’t even fat. SMH.
140 is overweight for me at 5’1. 130 is the upper limit of my bmi.
You were barely overweight. If you'd lost 8 pounds you'd have been in the normal range. You couldn't lose 8 pounds through your own efforts?
Anonymous wrote:I have several friends on it. They swear they have no side effects, but they do. I've especially noticed the brain fog.