xgirlmama
GLP-1 Novice 🚫No Source Discussion🚫
I'm tempted to stay on them for life, just maintenance doses. Because my brain is no longer so obsessed with ALL THE THINGS (food, alcohol, shopping) and my head is a much more calm place now

We can definitely go back to our old habits, but I never thought about it from the perspective that Grogu and others mentioned. I guess it depends on how bad of a position you are in!drzoid614 said:Thats definitely the goal! And what i am aiming to do! Im just curious about others experiences. As old habits can creep back in especially if appetite significantly increases again

Thanks for sharing. When she started the video with: "Do you need to stay on GLPs for life? The answer is...it depends." I was in for the whole thing.Zelmar702 said:This Doc addresses this topic -
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7sTZ70Gggs


Can you say more about why you went to 0? I don't understand the urge to drop or stop (unless you're truly buying into the gross shame attempts of some folks) the medications that work so well to solve what (for me) was an otherwise impossible problem. Is it purely financial? I see that you're "looking at Grey" so perhaps it was an affordability problem, which would be something I'd struggle with too if I was name-branding it.Pablito said:I have bounced back. I've put 75% of the weight back on in about 8 weeks. I dropped down to 7.5mg and then went to 0 though.
Have recently started on 2.5 again and now am looking at Grey. Haven't felt much on 2.5 yet though...

This is a great resource! Thanks for sharingMr.Tired said:Thanks for sharing. When she started the video with: "Do you need to stay on GLPs for life? The answer is...it depends." I was in for the whole thing.
It's refreshing to see it acknowledged that we all are starting from a different place and might have varying requirements for health maintenance. Not many of the YouTube peptide bros seem to do that.

This is a really good video but it also makes me sad in a way. I’ve spent the last year learning how to count calories and understand my relationship to food to better it through Noom. I’ve also taken this time to become comfortable with the gym to strengthen my body and increase my cardiovascular health. Through this I lost a considerable amount of weight but still needed Reta to continue to lose. I meet several of her “conditions” for being someone who will need long term GLP-1 use. And I also think it goes further than that. I feel if I truly want to stay healthy I will always have to pursue the gym, always have to count calories and probably always have to use some dose of a GLP-1. To be healthy is to become one with the food scaleZelmar702 said:This Doc addresses this topic -
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7sTZ70Gggs
RefinedRabbit41 said:This is a really good video but it also makes me sad in a way. I’ve spent the last year learning how to count calories and understand my relationship to food to better it through Noom. I’ve also taken this time to become comfortable with the gym to strengthen my body and increase my cardiovascular health. Through this I lost a considerable amount of weight but still needed Reta to continue to lose. I meet several of her “conditions” for being someone who will need long term GLP-1 use. And I also think it goes further than that. I feel if I truly want to stay healthy I will always have to pursue the gym, always have to count calories and probably always have to use some dose of a GLP-1. To be healthy is to become one with the food scale![]()

Peptidesearch said:I went on when I wasn't that much over weight to begin but for creeping up A1C but when I stopped I had no idea I would end up heavier than when I started.
I started when mounjaro was first released, I knew nothing like this could happen at the time. I've accepted that there's no going off but I only need a low dose to maintain.
Yeah no kidding on this one! I feel like the new hobby I picked up was doing everything possible to not gain weight. GLP's have made it so much easier to focus on the other stuff that isn't food.RefinedRabbit41 said:This is a really good video but it also makes me sad in a way. I’ve spent the last year learning how to count calories and understand my relationship to food to better it through Noom. I’ve also taken this time to become comfortable with the gym to strengthen my body and increase my cardiovascular health. Through this I lost a considerable amount of weight but still needed Reta to continue to lose. I meet several of her “conditions” for being someone who will need long term GLP-1 use. And I also think it goes further than that. I feel if I truly want to stay healthy I will always have to pursue the gym, always have to count calories and probably always have to use some dose of a GLP-1. To be healthy is to become one with the food scale![]()
It's helpful to reread this type of stuff sometimes. I've lost about 30 pounds in 3 months but still have the thought in the back of my mind that I feel like I'm cheating this time around with how easy it's been. Yay for science!Grogu said:Don't be sad! Please, be happy that modern science has found a pharmalogical solution to a metabolic condition that society had made you believe is a character flaw. Glp-1s correct an imbalance in the mind/gut signaling system that you've been suffering. No different then any other medicine people take for a chronic condition.
I had gastric bypass in 2003, so 23 years ago. At the time, even though it was great, I knew it wasn't the solution. I knew at the time that eventually there would be a pharma solution that would actually address the underlying disease.
And there it is in a nutshell. Is obesity a disease? For some, yes. Society is slow to recognize. Just like alcohol use disorder. Don't be sad! Be happy that you live in a beautiful world where scientists would find this for us and relish in the treatment and never look back.
Estarossa19 said:It's helpful to reread this type of stuff sometimes. I've lost about 30 pounds in 3 months but still have the thought in the back of my mind that I feel like I'm cheating this time around with how easy it's been. Yay for science!

I am not opposed to higher doses, but I'm in no rush. The only side effect for now is increased HR. This is the 1st week on 3mg.lessthanhalf said:While obviously how you do things is up to you, I disagree with a lot of the underlying logic involved.
I do not know anything about JFinHK but for the sake of interpreting the situation say started at 100kg , lost 16 wants to lose 10 more. I cannot work out BMI without height, but it is going to be low 30's to mid to high 30's.
So on a low dose of reta at 2.5mg you have lost 16% body weight which is better than average, but you want to lose 26%, and are stalled at that low dose, there is no sensible alternative to increasing the dose so it can do its job.
It almost sounds like some sort of self torture for no good reason to try to do it without the drug helping you as well as it can. You have said nothing about side effects limiting the doses, so I assume you are limiting the dose from advice I would regard as bad advice from the naturopath , and trying to do it by self control with just a little help from reta.
There is no doubt that people can lose weight short term by self control, but hardly anyone ever succeeds in keeping weight off long term that way.
On the other hand drugs like retatrutide can solve the problem long term by simply taking them and staying on them once the weight is lost. Given your response so far you are likely to do well on a higher dose and have a very good chance of getting to your target. Now is basically the first and only time ever there has been a treatment option for obesity that actually works and works well, and while it is at it improves blood sugar , blood pressure, lipids and most likely reduces the risks of many serious long term health issues caused by overweight and obesity.
While you do not suffer from severe obesity ( I am guessing without the right numbers ) the degree of overweight is definitely enough to increase long term health risks of both serious illness and in some ways more importantly reduced quality of life either from health consequences or the social disadvantages of being overweight or obese.
I think a lot of societies' uninformed opinions, biases and bigotry about obesity gets internalised, so a lot of people with obesity feel it is their fault and they should be able to control it as that is what they have been told most of their life.
My way of thinking is choose the options that work, even better if there is solid scientific evidence to support what treatment options work.
Trying to achieve long term weight loss and maintenance from diet exercise and willpower is unlikely to succeed, maybe 5%.
Doing it with retatrutide is going to have vastly higher success rates, not 100% as some people will not tolerate the side effects and some will respond less well than average . But going on the studies with an average weight loss of 29% in a year or so, the odds of losing 26% of your weight and keeping it off long term are better than 50/50, and given your response to low doses probably a lot better than that.
It is not bad for you , addictive or immoral, and it is hard to see many downsides , it cannot be cost as the legit version is not even out yet. It makes a lot more sense to increase the dose to the dose that causes the weight loss you want to achieve .