Anonymous wrote:Meds for 15lbs? That seems ridiculous, honestly. 50lbs, yes. 15?! No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For 15 pounds? No.
Put that money into a personal trainer.
This. For $300 you can get a personal trainer 2-3 times a month. Lift Heavy.
Did you miss that part? I’m doing that 3x a week w a personal trainer.
But what is your walking pace. Big difference between ambling and power walking.
And between light weights and heavy weights. I'm skeptical OP is actually challenging herself in terms of fitness.
Agreed. She is doing a lot, but perhaps not exerting herself. I do 1/3 of what she does and easily maintain my weight, despite age and questionable food choices. I walk briskly for 3 miles every day and that is the extent of my exercise.
And that’s exactly why I need this and you don’t. That’s the point.
For legs I do 50 lbs and arms I do 30 lbs (15lb dumbbells and 25 pound dumbells)
The only reason weight lifting helps with weight loss is because it builds muscle and hence your resting metabolic rate. You’re probably not getting enough muscle growth, despite your heavy weightlifting, to cut back on cardio the way you have with just walking. You probably need more intense cardio to burn more calories, too. Everyone keeps saying that, but you refuse to hear it. You want the drugs that may or may not help you lose those 15 pounds, but that will surely put the nail in the coffin of your metabolism once you inevitably stop taking them. Proceed as you wish. There is no stopping you because you’ve made up your mind anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's between you and your doctor. Anti-Ozempic people are very opinionated on here.
Her doctor is a quack, not an MD. She’s not a proper candidate for Ozempic because she is in a perfectly healthy BMI range. Ozempic is for diabetics and the morbidly obese, not middle aged ladies with no patience. You’re not 20, OP, have some patience. It takes more than six month to lose weight at 45.
I thought that a holistic doctor would be a licensed doctor, but no, it's a fake title. I didn't know that was legal!
And worse, Cleveland Clinic endorses this GOOP fraud?!
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/24103-holistic-doctor
Anonymous wrote:It's between you and your doctor. Anti-Ozempic people are very opinionated on here.
Anonymous wrote:I question the competency of any doctor who wpuld recommended compounded SG in uour situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's between you and your doctor. Anti-Ozempic people are very opinionated on here.
Her doctor is a quack, not an MD. She’s not a proper candidate for Ozempic because she is in a perfectly healthy BMI range. Ozempic is for diabetics and the morbidly obese, not middle aged ladies with no patience. You’re not 20, OP, have some patience. It takes more than six month to lose weight at 45.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For 15 pounds? No.
Put that money into a personal trainer.
This. For $300 you can get a personal trainer 2-3 times a month. Lift Heavy.
Did you miss that part? I’m doing that 3x a week w a personal trainer.
But what is your walking pace. Big difference between ambling and power walking.
And between light weights and heavy weights. I'm skeptical OP is actually challenging herself in terms of fitness.
Agreed. She is doing a lot, but perhaps not exerting herself. I do 1/3 of what she does and easily maintain my weight, despite age and questionable food choices. I walk briskly for 3 miles every day and that is the extent of my exercise.
And that’s exactly why I need this and you don’t. That’s the point.
For legs I do 50 lbs and arms I do 30 lbs (15lb dumbbells and 25 pound dumbells)
The only reason weight lifting helps with weight loss is because it builds muscle and hence your resting metabolic rate. You’re probably not getting enough muscle growth, despite your heavy weightlifting, to cut back on cardio the way you have with just walking. You probably need more intense cardio to burn more calories, too. Everyone keeps saying that, but you refuse to hear it. You want the drugs that may or may not help you lose those 15 pounds, but that will surely put the nail in the coffin of your metabolism once you inevitably stop taking them. Proceed as you wish. There is no stopping you because you’ve made up your mind anyway.
I did 4 advanced peloton spin classes a week with no results (did not drop one pounds) and switched to doing strength with a trained because everyone said cardio doesn’t work for weight loss. Maybe I’m actually just insulting resistant and nothing I do is going to make any difference? that’s the point why it’s being reccommended I take this.
Anonymous wrote:It's between you and your doctor. Anti-Ozempic people are very opinionated on here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP your A1C sounds like you may have some insulin resistance, which comes from SSRIs. Are you still on the SSRI? if so, maybe try metformin first (I’m not a doctor btw). If off the SSRI, keep up your routine but it will take time to reverse insulin resistance. Eventually it will work. No reason to take SG and it might set you back.
Thank you! Yes I went off a few months ago! What is ideal A1C?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For 15 pounds? No.
Put that money into a personal trainer.
This. For $300 you can get a personal trainer 2-3 times a month. Lift Heavy.
Did you miss that part? I’m doing that 3x a week w a personal trainer.
But what is your walking pace. Big difference between ambling and power walking.
And between light weights and heavy weights. I'm skeptical OP is actually challenging herself in terms of fitness.
Agreed. She is doing a lot, but perhaps not exerting herself. I do 1/3 of what she does and easily maintain my weight, despite age and questionable food choices. I walk briskly for 3 miles every day and that is the extent of my exercise.
And that’s exactly why I need this and you don’t. That’s the point.
For legs I do 50 lbs and arms I do 30 lbs (15lb dumbbells and 25 pound dumbells)
The only reason weight lifting helps with weight loss is because it builds muscle and hence your resting metabolic rate. You’re probably not getting enough muscle growth, despite your heavy weightlifting, to cut back on cardio the way you have with just walking. You probably need more intense cardio to burn more calories, too. Everyone keeps saying that, but you refuse to hear it. You want the drugs that may or may not help you lose those 15 pounds, but that will surely put the nail in the coffin of your metabolism once you inevitably stop taking them. Proceed as you wish. There is no stopping you because you’ve made up your mind anyway.
Anonymous wrote:I wish you could just enjoy your healthy life.
It sounds like you are a healthy weight, eat healthy, exercise healthy and I bet you also look healthy and great.
You are very fortunate. Try to just be happy.