Ozempic messing with my head?

Nicky37

Active member
I'm about six weeks into using Ozempic, and I'm finding the mental adjustment tougher than the physical stuff. It's like, some days I feel like I've got this under control, I'm not as hungry, and other days I'm just strangely tired or just not myself. Then the overthinking starts – is it even working? Am I doing something wrong?

I've been trying to figure out what the deal is, and I've spotted a pattern: the days where I feel better are usually the ones where I've slept enough, kept up with my fluids, and been more in tune with how I'm feeling in general. Before this, it felt random, and I'd get anxious and start doubting everything.

It's hit my confidence harder than I was expecting. When you're in the dark, your mind jumps to the worst conclusion. I even started thinking it wasn't working when it probably was.

Has anyone else had this mental game going on before things settled down? And what helped you feel more in charge, instead of just waiting and hoping?
 
You've nailed the difference between muscling through and actually listening to your body. Most people spend the first couple of months in a "is this real?" loop, and it can drive you nuts.

Connecting sleep and hydration to your good days is more valuable than the drug itself. Because that insight sticks around even if you stop the medication or hit a wall.

The anxiety is a beast! Your mind wants a simple answer, but bodies are complicated. They operate on rhythms. And you're starting to see yours. That's the key.
 
I've found that the things I always knew intellectually, but my crazy hunger always bulldozed over, are now in the driver's seat.

Like, I might feel super hungry after eating a bunch of sugary stuff. I knew that happened to other people, but I never felt it because my hunger was always at 11. Now I notice it.
 
I started tracking my side effects in a spreadsheet to give my doctor better data, and I was shocked by the patterns I found. I was already tracking my weight, but it wasn't the complete picture. Having a log has helped manage my mood disorder a LOT. I can predict and handle my mental state much better now.
 
For me, the breakthrough was consistently logging stuff. I started using an app mostly to track weight and small changes, and it showed me my bad days weren't random. Seeing it all laid out helped me stay focused, because I wasn't just going on memory or feelings anymore.
 
Some days I'm dragging.
Some days I'm not as hungry.
Some days I want to eat all the things.
Some days I feel blah.
Some days I feel great.

This is just life, whether you're using Ozempic or not.

Ozempic has really only changed one thing for me: it's cut back my appetite a decent amount, maybe a little nausea, but nothing major. I've learned that just because I inject Ozempic every week doesn't mean that any weird feelings are automatically caused by it. Those happen anyway...

Even if you don't believe it, pretending can help you get through. Placebo effects are real.
 
I've been on it for a year, and I can tell you it does even out. Now I mostly only feel tired or hungry or get a headache on shot day, which is today for me. The other 6 days, I'm totally fine. I take my shot on Sunday, so it's my lazy day. Today, I woke up early, hungry, with a headache because it's shot day. So, I took my shot, doom-scrolled for a while, and then went back to sleep. I know I won't get much done, maybe just buy groceries for the week. My husband knows this too, and we work around it. I even take a two-hour nap in the afternoon; he'll watch sports or do his own thing.
 
Gene_Sis said:
I wanted to add that I've also had some interesting mental clarity since starting this. It's like a fog has lifted. I can focus better, and I feel more present in the moment. It's a pleasant surprise!

OMG, I'm glad someone else said it! It's like the constant food noise is quieter, and I can think about other things. I'm still working on some bad habits, but it's like Ozempic gave me the space to actually DO it.
 
Okay, this is interesting. I'm also on another medication, BPC157, for an old injury and I'm wondering if these two are interacting. Has anyone noticed getting more anxious while on these? I was doing fine on the BPC157 before the Ozempic...
 
It's possible [mention=Nicky37], some people report anxiety with both BPC-157 and semaglutide. Everyone reacts differently to these meds.
 
I've had some memories surfacing lately. I think it's somehow connected to finally not obsessing over food constantly. It's weird, but cool.
 
Lost my job and insurance so Ozempic's off the table. My blood sugar's been wonky and I'm tired, not energized like before. Cravings came back and I've put on over 40 lbs of what I'd lost. That's the hardest part—watching it come back when I had so much more to lose. Working on getting set up in a new state right now.
 
The 6-week mental adjustment is common - the metabolic shift affects mood, energy, and focus in ways that feel disorienting even when progress is happening. GLP-1s can alter absorption of oral medications including psychiatric meds; worth flagging with your prescriber if relevant.
 
Tracking your mood changes when something feels off is the exact right move - if it's medication, the pattern shows up pretty quickly and consistently with your injection timing. Having that data makes the conversation with your prescriber much more concrete than 'I've just been feeling off lately.'
 
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