Sunday, October 1, 2023

Being on phentermine+topiramate has been...strange.

5'11" male, 214 pounds at the start of my most recent weight loss journey.

My yearly physical said my triglycerides were high, so I decided it was time to take my weight loss more seriously. My prescription deductible was still a little rough on my pocketbook for Wegovy, so we decided on phentermine+topiramate to get me started until I could switch over to a lower-deductible plan.

Half an hour after I took my first combined dose on September 6th, I got laid off. I'm afraid I wasn't very concerned with proper nutrition or building good habits that first month. I got up, took my pills on an empty stomach, and went out in the evening to get a wrap because I was vaguely aware I had to eat something even though I had no desire to. I did go to the gym, but mainly just 20-30 minutes on the elliptical, not going too hard, reading something or scrolling Reddit on my phone.

First checkup, about a week ago: doctor told me I shouldn't be continuing to lose 14 pounds every month, because I was unlikely to be able to keep that level of restriction up once I was off phentermine, and it wouldn't be good for me in the long run anyway. I decided to try eating a bowl of cornflakes with skim milk the following morning, and discovered by accident that breakfast blunts the meds enough that I feel actual hunger again, and even a little bit of food noise, just much less of both. Time to start working on actual healthy eating habits, which is still a work in progress.

My point is...I think maybe I've had an eating disorder my whole life and just now realized it. Like, I still want food, and enjoy it, but the signals my stomach make feel like something I should attend to in the relatively near future with a little bit of forethought, rather than a reason to head down to Casey's for a a slice RIGHT NOW.

Pizza Ranch seems like someplace I might want to go if I were hungry, eat one plate, maybe another half a plate if I were really hungry. (If you're unfamiliar with the franchise, I'm sure you can still guess it should not be a frequent stop for someone interested in maintaining a healthy weight) It no longer seems like someplace I should go every other Sunday and eat myself sick to "beat the buffet" regardless of whether I am actually very hungry around mealtime. Same with ordering from Dominos or Papa John's...right now, I have no interest in eating terrible greasy pizza or mediocre breaded chicken, because I am not hungry. I understand that this is how mentally healthy people probably feel about food all the time, but the idea that you would just not want food because you are not hungry is new to me.

(It might also be relevant that I've switched out diet soda for tea recently and stepped up water consumption, but I'm pretty sure that's minor compared to everything else)

I still want my snacks and my carbs, sometimes, but it feels like a choice now instead of a struggle that's futile because I'm just going to go back and eat the unhealthy choice later on top of the healthier choice. I make the less healthy choice sometimes because I know I won't stick with a regimen where I never make that choice once I come off phentermine anyway, but it's strange for it to feel like an actual choice now.

When I count calories, I'm not thinking, "Okay, this is how many packets of peanut M&Ms we can fit in because I went under today, and then I'll have one more because I was mostly good, and then I'll make it up tomorrow" and then I don't make it up tomorrow. It's more like "I should eat a little more fish because I didn't get enough protein today....and since it's the weekend and in-budget, I guess we'll have the one packet of peanut M&Ms and I can finish the rest tomorrow if I don't feel like eating them all today." Having a snack smaller than family-sized and not wanting to eat all of it immediately is another new thing.

I even feel like doing things other than playing video games. I feel like working on my programming skills again. I feel like going outside and walking! I'm having a little trouble getting motivated to lift weights, but I'm going to try again Monday. I haven't felt this way in a few years. (I am, of course, spending more time on job applications than exercise right now, but I have a few scheduled over the next couple weeks, a couple of which I feel good about.) It probably helps that the extra energy makes me feel a little more inclined to cook a little bit.

I am worried about how much of this I'll be able to carry over once I have to come off the phentermine in a month or so. My doctor says I can stay on the topiramate for a while, which should help with my appetite, but not as much as the phentermine. On the other hand, it looks like BED might be my problem more than appetite, which means that the topiramate might be more what I need anyway. I haven't had significant brain fog from it. Hopefully I don't start experiencing it once I come off the phentermine.

I still have some work to do. I weigh just under 200 now, and I'm not very muscular. Also, I know if I don't cement good eating and exercise habits this will all have been an absolute waste of time anyway. If I catch myself falling back into unhealthy thought habits about food, I might need to see about therapy.

I know when I'm hungrier I will want to eat more, but I'm really hoping I can continue this pattern of taking a moderate amount of time to prepare myself reasonable amounts of mostly healthy food most of the time. It feels very liberating to feel like I have this control over what I eat that I've been missing before, and if I could keep some of it going forward, maybe I could keep something like a healthy weight going forward.

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People’s opinions about weight loss

  • SW: 185 lbs
  • CW: 123 lbs
  • GW: 115 lbs

I’ve been on a weight loss journey since March of this year, and I’m currently 62 lbs down. I’m 8 pounds away from my goal weight. My doctor agreed that 115 is a perfectly healthy and fine goal weight for my frame and height.

However, I’ve been getting a lot of comments about my weight from my family recently. Some of these comments include saying that I look like I have an eating disorder, my legs are too thin, “I’ve gone too far”, etc. I’m genuinely not sure where these comments are coming from because I think I look like I am a perfectly healthy weight. I have a chubby face and stomach, a large chest, and my arms and legs are normal sized. I feel better than I ever have, I look better than I ever have (in my opinion), and I’m trying to feel happy and keep my momentum to lose these last 8 pounds. But, a part of me wonders if there’s any merit to these comments and maybe I am too thin. Has anyone else experienced this? Should I gain weight to appease people around me and be miserable? Or get to my goal weight and just deal with the remarks? It’s just very discouraging to be told I don’t look good when I feel good and feel like I look good.

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Saturday, September 30, 2023

Trouble losing weight during/after covid

I've been sick with covid for almost a week now and my calorie deficit is a lot larger than normal. Definitely haven't been eating enough. Yet I seem to be at a plateau....I weigh and look exactly the same as I did a week ago.

With my low intake and immune system increasing my calorie needs, I'm so confused why I haven't lost any weight. My best guess is that I'm retaining water due to being sick. It's just weird because everyone else seems to lose rapidly when they're sick with covid.

I'm wondering if anyone else experienced this, or had any trouble losing weight AFTER recovering from covid? I'm slightly worried that covid could cause metabolic changes that will make weight loss harder going forward. It's a weird and unpredictable virus so it seems plausible that it might happen to some people.

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What is the best and most accurate fitness watch?

I am starting my weight loss journey and want the most accurate fitness bracelet I can find to track my physical activity as well as other health stats.

I have been looking at Fitbit Charge 5 (but lots of reviews say that it breaks easily) and Versa 2 (also some mixed reviews + it is an older model so how accurate is it really?) as well some others but the reviews are very mixed, to say the least.

Would appreciate any and all advice and would love to hear what fitness tracker bracelets have worked best for you.

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NSV the why

49 pounds down and super happy,. But often I put a bit more emphasis on the numbers and forget what my why was.

Been larger my whole life and for the most part it didn't hold me back until covid. The extra few kg's added more strain, clothes a bit tighter and I started feeling crap.

Small changes have got me in a much better space. The biggest being moving more and exercise/community sport. The nutrition is key for the weight loss but the real victory is things like what happened yesterday.

At a grand final picnic (think Superbowl o/s people) we decided to play some football with the kids, including an incredibly active 7 year old boy. I think we played for a good 30 minutes, running, kicking, bit of play fighting. I was puffing, sweating, but didn't stop once. The rest of the adults had tapped out and when I saw Mr 7 red faced laying on the floor puffing... I felt bloody amazing.

Part of why I needed to lose it was to live a lifestyle I was proud of. And a part of that is moments like yesterday. To just enjoy being active and have fun without struggling.

Me a year ago wouldn't have even tried... too self conscious and embarrassed to move and injure myself or look silly.

I've gained a little more life back and that means more than any scale number!

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What are some things about weight loss you’ve noticed that are Awesome and Not So Awesome?

Personally, mine are mostly about food. (Apologies for the formatting, I’m on mobile).

What’s Awesome—

-I can eat foods like potatoes/cabbage and eat a crap ton of it and still not pass my calorie intake. I love it so much.

That said, heard marshmallows are good little treats for sweet tooth days and I’m considering getting a bag for when those moments appear and enjoy their “filling” affect without worrying about my calories to much.

-I like how you can technically eat all of the foods you want, you just have to monitor the intake amount so you don’t overdo anything. There’s a person here I believe who lost weight only eating fast food— I’m not saying that’s everyone’s taste/goal and it’s not mine either— but the fact he was capable of doing that is pretty awesome in my opinion.

On the flip side of Not So Awesome— a small fast food meal, a milkshake, or other “non-filling” foods have such a high calorie amount BUT DON’T FILL YOU UP 😭

-I hate it so much. It feels frustrating at times knowing you can eat a slice a cake with say 500 calories yet’s not going to fill you up in the same way 500 calories worth of potatoes would.

One can’t just “minimize” portions and hope to lose weight because the way CICO works and certain foods being more calorie dense than others.

I’m sure there are many many more, even bit food related. So what are some things you guys have noticed in the process of either losing weight or just aiming for a healthier lifestyle that’s awesome or not so awesome?

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Friday, September 29, 2023

hard to lose weight in season

Hi guys! I have posted here before but it’s kind of a different situation now and i need some advice. I started my weight loss journey in the summer and managed to lose about 10-12 lbs, definitely starting to see a difference. After coming to college about 5 weeks ago I can feel I have definitely gained at least some of the weight back from binge eating. The issue is at home I would do about 1400 calories and something small to exercise like a 3 mile walk or run. It wasn’t too hard to do and I felt it was working because I had a good routine going. Now that I am back at school, and in season for volleyball (play at a d3 school), i find it super hard to know how much i should be eating and at what times. especially because sometimes our practices are not super difficult. for reference, i am 19f, 5’9-5’10, and 180-185 lbs. When I left for school I had just gotten below 180 so not sure what I am at now. I find that I don’t have trouble having a small breakfast and lunch, but when it comes to dinner I have no idea how many calories I am eating and end up binging at night. I am super unhappy with the way I look and get very insecure when i end up going out on the weekends. Any advice?

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