Lost weight, but don't *look* like it??

I saw a post where someone said it took them almost a YEAR to lose 30 pounds on sema! They lost a bunch at first but then it slowed WAY down. It's encouraging to know other people are also "slow losers"!
 
It's such a real thing - the scale moves but the mirror is slow to catch up. I remember being at a lower number and still grabbing the same size jeans out of habit. Bodies tend to lose proportionally at first, so nothing looks dramatically different until you cross a threshold. Give it more time and you'll see bigger shifts.
 
I saw a guy online who lost about 70 lbs in a year. He took a shirtless pic and was super proud. That NSV - non-scale victory - is huge, right? Feeling good in your skin matters just as much as the numbers!
 
ive been at it almost a year and a half and down about 60 but i still cant see it myself. body dysmorphia hits different lol. what were your starting and current numbers? cause our body shapes look pretty similar and id love some hope here
 
This medication has been life-changing for so many. To go decades limited by weight, stuck in certain stores, uncomfortable in seats, unable to do normal things - that's real suffering. This gave people their lives back. You did the hard part - the med just helped make it possible. Huge congratulations on what you achieved.
 
The visual disconnect is genuinely one of the most disorienting parts of this process. Thirty pounds distributed across your whole body can be hard to register in the mirror, especially if you see yourself every day. The brain adapts slowly to what it's used to seeing. Other people around you often notice long before you do. Taking measurements alongside the scale helps - waist, hips, thighs show what the mirror misses. Photos from the same angle over time work even better. The brain needs hard data to update.
 
Got the injection partway through vacation and suddenly had zero interest in candy. Would've loved grabbing a pastry in Paris, but we ended up on this cruise with mediocre meals. Decided to dose on schedule instead of spacing it out, so now everything tastes boring. Fingers crossed it settles by the time we're back. Really craving some good pizza and a proper bagel. Pretty sure I'm the only person leaving a cruise ship with less weight than I arrived with.
 
Wearable baseline data makes subjective changes legible. Resting HR and HRV trends are often the first places a change shows up before the scale confirms anything.
 
Looking for meal variety here. Type 2 diabetic, lost 58 so far and aiming for 150s. Mostly dinner and occasional lunch, protein shake in the morning. Love cooking but want fresh ideas to break out of eating the same rotation.
 
That's wonderful! You must feel so good about everything you've accomplished. Do you mind saying if you were dealing with any health stuff on the side? How are things looking now?
 
The 30-pound milestone often doesn't read in the mirror right away, particularly if distribution hasn't shifted. Working out while losing addresses composition, and skin laxity at pace is a real concern - movement plus collagen support is the right stack for this phase.
 
The visual lag at 30 pounds is real and nearly universal - the change shows to others before it registers for the person living it.
 
The swim leggings with skirt are a genuinely good option for the in-between period - the yoga-adjacent look means you're not flagging the transition and you're not stuck in the wrong size. Comfortable coverage while the body keeps redistributing is underrated.
 
The health benefits track independently of whether anyone notices - metabolic markers and energy change before the visual does, and friends noticing tends to lag behind that too. Thirty pounds is real; the mirror lag is frustrating but temporary.
 
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