I always get the most pushback when I tell people "changing your lifestyle" is also the main goal. No one wants to put in the hard work of diet and exercise. With those, you will get the real benefits!

For good reason? GLPs help with the biological signals (crazy hunger or food noise) that can even make it hard to think. Hard to make permanent lifestyle changes when your body is in an alarmed/altered state. And everyone on GLPs has dieted and exercised before. I don't see GLPs as just a tool. But rather as a necessary, lifelong medication.igottapee said:I always get the most pushback when I tell people "changing your lifestyle" is also the main goal.
Gemini said:Factor Benefit Note Zone 2 Cardio Mitochondrial biogenesis & fat oxidation 45–60 mins at "conversational" pace to trigger PGC-1α and maximize fuel efficiency. Resistance Training Preserves Lean Body Mass (LBM) Prevents "skinny fat" outcome during rapid weight loss; aim for 2–3 sessions per week. Plant-Based Diet Cardiovascular & Gut Health High fiber and low saturated fat; essential for managing LDL and endothelial function. GLP-1s Appetite control & BP regulation Acts as the "metabolic bridge" to make intensive lifestyle changes sustainable. Maintenance Sustainability & Safety Titrating to the lowest effective dose reduces side effects like gastric slowing.
Calm Logic said:I don't see GLPs as just a tool. But rather as a necessary, lifelong medication.


Calm Logic said:For good reason? GLPs help with the biological signals (crazy hunger or food noise) that can even make it hard to think. Hard to make permanent lifestyle changes when your body is in an alarmed/altered state. And everyone on GLPs has dieted and exercised before. I don't see GLPs as just a tool. But rather as a necessary, lifelong medication.



tubby said:Every single one of these required giving something up, but many avoided the problem of continual hunger.
Gemini said:Diet Pattern AHA Score / Tier Why it Earned This Rating Mediterranean 89 / Tier 1 The Middle Path: High alignment with AHA goals. It lost a few points only because it doesn't explicitly limit salt and allows for moderate alcohol. Plant-Based (Vegan) 78 / Tier 2 Restricts the Meat: Excellent for fiber and low saturated fat, but Tier 2 because its restrictiveness can make it hard to follow long-term and may lead to B12 deficiency. Very Low-Fat (McDougall/Pritikin) 72 / Tier 3 Restricts the Meat & Fats: While it lowers LDL, the AHA docked points because it excludes healthy fats (nuts/olive oil) and can be too restrictive for the general public. Paleo 53 / Tier 4 Restricts the Potatoes: Failed because it excludes legumes and whole grains (fiber/nutrients) and does not limit saturated fats from meat. Keto (Very Low Carb) 31 / Tier 4 Total War on Potatoes: The lowest rating. The AHA cites the extreme restriction of fruits and grains, which leads to low fiber and high saturated fat intake.
I love that you took the time to write that out and so much of that is really good and insightful information. Most of that I completely agree with or only disagree with in minor ways (like I might have a different cut-off on good "fruits" and we'd both be just as correct, since it's more of an opinion thing). I especially liked that you properly contextualized fruits and vegetables in-tact cellular matrix rather than just saying "fiber," which too many fail to properly appreciate.lessthanhalf said:I do not disagree at all with the concept of trying to find a way of eating that controls hunger and allows you to eat enough food that you are not constantly restricting how much food you eat, mainly as that is just hard and usually fails eventually.
Ketogenic or low carb or even the ancient Atkins diet I remember trying a long time ago, has the advantage that the ketones suppress appetite and the lack of fluctuations in blood sugar, insulin and several dozen other appetite regulating hormones and neurotransmitters make it easier to stick to and prevent severe spikes in hunger that make loss of self control much more likely. I think in some respects Atkins got some of his thinking right even if it is nowhere near as simple as he thought. It is interesting that recently continuous glucose monitors often show spikes in sugar from high calorie foods followed by dips that then cause increased hunger, pretty much what Atkins thought was happening 40 years ago.
The hard part is that a high fat diet is a more likely to be high caloric density diet , which means small amounts of food, which does not help the hunger issue. Also the science on ketogenic diets seems to have changed many times over the past few decades as to whether they are healthy or not. But usually lack enough fiber and plant based foods.
The diet with by far the best science behind it in terms of preventing disease is the mediterranean diet, or variations on that theme.
My personal theory for obesity is sort of simple , low calorific density, less than 1.5 kcal/g is the main thing so you can eat as much as you want or need to eat to not be hungry, and if you can include a good percentage of protein in it then even better. Nearly all processed foods are too high in calorific density and it excludes nearly all high carb foods like bread and grain products, but does allow pretty much unlimited fruit and vegetables, even if they are mostly carbs or sugar it is bound up in cellular structures and fiber so is absorbed much more slowly than from foods like bread or biscuits. And it allows you to snack all day long on fruit, maybe not bananas, but a kilo of fruit is only 500 kcal or less usually and quite a lot to eat over a day. Very lean meat works and is the most effective suppressant of appetite per calorie.
It is hard to fit fat into this, even fairly small amounts automatically drastically increase the calories per gram. And the number of extra calories from small amounts of added fats can be large, 55 grams of oil having similar calories to a kilo of fruit. If that was all I could eat for a day I would be picking the fruit over the oil. A super low fat diet is not necessarily unhealthy but should ideally have some fish and olive oil in it. Given that I seem to have to maintain an intake that is less than an average 66kg 58yo male to maintain weight of 1600-1800 kcal/day, due to metabolic adaptation to long term calorie restriction, I don't have a lot of room to move to add calories in. There are quite a lot of studies supporting ideas in this way of eating, but it is nowhere near the standard viewpoint.
One of the problems is that I have found is that I need to be very careful about eating anything that might upset this system. Eating small amounts of rich food is going to mess up your preferences, so that lower calorie foods no longer taste as good, and risks those spikes in hunger that are difficult to control.
Agree. I think the pushback I was getting is that some think it's the "magic" pill, and won't get off the couch, death scrollingCalm Logic said:For good reason? GLPs help with the biological signals (crazy hunger or food noise) that can even make it hard to think. Hard to make permanent lifestyle changes when your body is in an alarmed/altered state. And everyone on GLPs has dieted and exercised before. I don't see GLPs as just a tool. But rather as a necessary, lifelong medication.
Yes, a healthier diet will help, as will exercise, and those things can help with bloodwork (as do GLPs), blood pressure (as do GLPs), and having a lower maintenance dose. And, of course, resistance training will help prevent losing muscle:
People vastly underestimate the mental effort it takes to maintain large weight loss. Your post reminds of something a fitness bro type influencer said on a random live I caught on TikTok a few months ago that has stuck with me. His audience was trying to get him to hate on people on GLP1's, and he said honestly IDGAF and good for them. He went on to say, yes people can white knuckle and use every ounce of mental effort they have to loose weight, but then they can't live the rest of their life. Using a GLP1 allows these people to live their lives and fix their bodies. It suck with me for being correct and because he was not someone who I thought would understand that.lessthanhalf said:Almost everyone on this forum has lost weight at some point in the past without GLP's. It is not super hard, you just have to decide to stick to a diet and stick to it and nearly everyone can do that for a while.
The problem with the "change you lifestyle" solution is not that it cannot work, but that it takes constant mental effort. Realistically if you were able to maintain that lifestyle/diet without a lot of constant mental work, you would not be obese. And eventually almost everyones' ability to put that effort in slowly wears away . If you succeed in establishing new habits that don't require that constant effort then you have solved the problem, but the reality of the research and most people's experiences says this is so hard that very few succeed. If your appetite regulation system cannot cope with constant cheap available high calorie highly rewarding food that it never evolved to deal with, then the only way not to eat too much is with constant effort and eventually that runs out.
Thankfully GLP's do not require constant effort for them to work, just injecting a medication once a week or so. Which bypasses that whole problem, and actually makes making and keeping to real meaningful long term lifestyle changes much easier and more likely. Simple example it is so much easier to exercise when not morbidly obese. So stopping them once at a goal weight actually puts those beneficial lifestyle changes as well as the weight loss at risk. I am not saying no one should ever try stopping them, but in severe longstanding obesity, I think it is a bad idea.

Right here with you! Me too! Not a single late night chocolate binge.randompersonrandom said:It's me! Hi! I'm the person with a long history of BED that often was better but never was well who Tirzepatide stopped cold and who has not had a binging episode or even had to struggle against a binging episode since, it's me.
Therapy didn't help. OA helped a very little. Nothing that didn't take every bit of concentration I had every day helped. Except the magic skinny shots, THEY fixed it and I'm all better now.
Exactly. Read it the same way. Seems genuinely concerned for his patients.MeedzMoar said:I understand your argument and your perspective. Interestingly, I do not read the article as paternalistic. Rather, it reads to me like a physician mindful of the Hippocratic Oath to which physicians are ethically bound. I read a struggle between supporting or even encouraging this class of medications and the array of outcomes for incredible success rates. Body dysmorphia is real. Disordered eating is real.
People for whom a life free of obesity was complete fantasy are now undergoing physical metamorphoses in previously unimaginable ways. It isn't a far reach from discovering a good thing to overusing that good thing.
I don't know this physician so I don't know his agenda, his bedside manner, or his philosophy. I do know it is very possible for them to be genuinely concerned about what their patients may be facing and to want to figure out how to continue supporting their good health as an ethical medical professional.
There is a LOT more I want to say but it quickly becomes too revealing in a place I prefer to be unknown rather than discoverable. No, I am not a physician.