Food was my dopamine 😭 Now what?

To @GroovyLady821: when people make comments, just say "I'm not sure how to interpret that comment." It forces them to explain themselves. Usually, they'll realize they are being rude. Or as my Mom used to say: Chalk it up to ignorance and move on.
 
read tons of stories about hunger roaring back after people stop glp-1s. honestly convinced me that staying on it long term is the move, at least for me. without it, i don't think anything else would stick. protein and behavior changes never worked before.
 
muscle loss hits hard on these meds if you're not lifting and eating enough protein and calories. your body will torch muscle before fat unless you give it a reason not to.
 
I transitioned from diet to maintenance and hit a weird problem. during diet, I got really good at voluminous meals that kept me full, but when I go back to how I used to cook, it's way too calorie-dense. struggling to find middle ground.
 
might be eating too little — body holds fat thinking it needs to survive. try an online TDEE calc with your stats, if deficit isn't working, up the intake w/ healthy dense food for a week then cut again.
 
Without it, I'd be back to low-carb, high-protein, calorie deficit grind — but food noise and cravings would roar back. I don't lean on GLP-1s any harder than I lean on my BP meds. My body doesn't handle carbs right. This is the fix.
 
Trading food for scrolling is the classic pattern. The medication quiets the food noise but the dopamine loop finds something else. Finding what fills that gap intentionally beats discovering it by accident.
 
The on-edge feeling after losing food as a coping mechanism is real and under-discussed - the GLP-1 removes the reward pathway tool but doesn't replace it with anything. Most people who navigate this well find a substitute that hits the same loop: walks, crafts, anything that provides the small-cycle completion the food ritual used to deliver. The hunger signal normalizing is the other side of the same shift - the body eventually stops reading boredom and stress as food signals.
 
The empty space where the food urge used to be is genuinely uncomfortable at first - the instinct was doing real work as a coping layer, and finding what actually replaces it takes time and usually some trial and error with completely different activities.
 
ADHD and food dopamine tend to be tightly coupled because both run through the same reward circuit - appetite suppression on GLP-1 removes one input but doesn't rewire the underlying dopamine deficit. High sensitivity to medication means you're likely already experiencing some of the dopamine modulation effect earlier than most. Replacing the food reward loop usually requires a deliberate substitute: movement, social engagement, creative work, or sensory inputs that hit the same circuit without the caloric cost. The appetite suppression clears the behavioral space for that replacement - figuring out what fills it is the actual work.
 
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