Drop_Cookie
Active member
FOOD NOISE, APPETITE & GLP-1 MEDS: WHAT'S ACTUALLY HAPPENING?
Hey all - newbie guy here who has been reading everything I can get my hands on about GLP-1 meds (tirzepatide, semaglutide, retatrutide, etc.). After digging through tons of posts and living through my own early experience, I realized a lot of us are confused about one big thing:
Is the "magic" appetite suppression? Or is there something else going on?
People seem to judge their dose entirely by:
And when hunger returns, many assume they need to titrate up.
But weight loss doesn't always line up neatly with hunger levels. So I wanted to put together a comprehensive breakdown of what I've learned from the community and from research.
--------------------------------------------------
1. WHAT PEOPLE MEAN BY "FOOD NOISE"
--------------------------------------------------
"Food noise" is that constant background chatter about food. Not physical hunger. More like:
For many of us, GLP-1 meds turn that volume way down.
And for some people, the first injection feels like flipping a switch. Suddenly:
That "normal" feeling can be emotional. A lot of people feel relief - and even anger - realizing they were blamed for something that may have been hormonally driven.
--------------------------------------------------
2. APPETITE SUPPRESSION VS. WEIGHT LOSS
--------------------------------------------------
Here is where it gets tricky.
Some people:
Important point: appetite suppression is a tool, not the entire mechanism.
GLP-1 medications work through:
So yes, eating less is part of it. But hormonal and metabolic shifts also play a role.
That said: fat loss still requires a calorie deficit.
If weight truly is not decreasing over time, something in the equation has to change - intake, output, dose, or time.
--------------------------------------------------
3. "I'M EATING 900-1000 CALORIES AND NOT LOSING"
--------------------------------------------------
This comes up constantly.
Possible explanations include:
A. Tracking errors
Even people who weigh food can underestimate cooking oils, sauces, bites, beverages, etc.
B. Water retention
Hydration matters more than people realize. Several members have reported:
If you're under-hydrated, your body may hold onto fluid.
C. Hormonal shifts (especially post-menopause)
Metabolism and body composition change. Fat loss may be slower and masked by fluid changes.
D. Recomposition
Some people go months without scale change but lose inches.
E. True metabolic adaptation
Long-term low calorie intake can reduce energy expenditure. Increasing movement (even walking) sometimes restarts loss.
Important: chronically eating extremely low calories is not usually recommended long-term without medical supervision.
--------------------------------------------------
4. DOSE ESCALATION: SHOULD YOU GO UP JUST BECAUSE HUNGER RETURNS?
--------------------------------------------------
Common pattern:
Reality: hunger returning does not automatically mean failure.
Questions to ask:
Some people report:
There is no universal "right" appetite level.
--------------------------------------------------
5. "WHY AM I HUNGRIER ON A NEW MED?"
--------------------------------------------------
Switching between medications (for example from tirzepatide to retatrutide) can be confusing.
Things to consider:
If you were on a higher therapeutic dose before, restarting at a very low dose might understandably feel like increased hunger.
Also, hunger suppression intensity varies widely by individual.
--------------------------------------------------
6. THE WEIRD SIDE EFFECTS NOBODY EXPECTS
--------------------------------------------------
Beyond nausea and GI stuff, people report:
Food aversions
Some compare it to pregnancy-like aversions.
Energy swings
Burping and reflux
Delayed gastric emptying can cause this.
Vivid dreams
Especially around injection days for some.
Reduced alcohol desire
Very common.
Behavior changes
Some report less impulse spending or gambling urges. Others feel emotions shift because food is no longer the coping outlet.
When food is no longer the main dopamine source, your brain may feel "unanchored" temporarily.
--------------------------------------------------
7. EMOTIONAL IMPACT: THE ANGER PHASE
--------------------------------------------------
A surprising number of people report feeling angry after their first dose.
Why?
Because for the first time, they experience satiety without fighting themselves.
Many realize:
That can bring relief - and grief.
It's okay to feel both.
--------------------------------------------------
8. WHEN WEIGHT LOSS STALLS
--------------------------------------------------
If the scale hasn't moved for several weeks:
Consider:
Some people report months of "nothing" followed by a sudden 4-5 lb drop that stays off.
Fat loss is rarely linear.
--------------------------------------------------
9. PRACTICAL STRATEGIES
--------------------------------------------------
Hydration
Many find 80-100 oz daily helps minimize stalls and constipation.
Protein first
Food aversions can make this tricky. Try:
Small, balanced meals
Undereating all day can lead to evening junk choices because it's "the only thing that sounds tolerable."
Do not chase zero hunger
Complete appetite suppression is not required for fat loss.
Adjust with your provider
Dose increases should consider:
--------------------------------------------------
10. FINAL THOUGHTS
--------------------------------------------------
GLP-1 meds are not just appetite killers.
They:
For some, appetite suppression is dramatic.
For others, subtle.
For many, inconsistent.
The real question isn't:
"Am I never hungry?"
It's:
"Is this helping me build a sustainable pattern?"
Long-term success seems to come from:
I'm still early in this journey, but understanding that hunger, food noise, weight loss, and dose are not identical variables has helped me relax a bit.
Curious how others experienced this - especially people who had hunger return but still lost weight.
- DC
Hey all - newbie guy here who has been reading everything I can get my hands on about GLP-1 meds (tirzepatide, semaglutide, retatrutide, etc.). After digging through tons of posts and living through my own early experience, I realized a lot of us are confused about one big thing:
Is the "magic" appetite suppression? Or is there something else going on?
People seem to judge their dose entirely by:
- "Is my appetite gone?"
- "Is the food noise back?"
- "Am I hungry again?"
And when hunger returns, many assume they need to titrate up.
But weight loss doesn't always line up neatly with hunger levels. So I wanted to put together a comprehensive breakdown of what I've learned from the community and from research.
--------------------------------------------------
1. WHAT PEOPLE MEAN BY "FOOD NOISE"
--------------------------------------------------
"Food noise" is that constant background chatter about food. Not physical hunger. More like:
- Thinking about your next meal while eating your current one
- Planning snacks even when you're full
- Feeling pulled toward the kitchen at night
- White-knuckling cravings
- Obsessing over what you "can't" eat
For many of us, GLP-1 meds turn that volume way down.
And for some people, the first injection feels like flipping a switch. Suddenly:
- You eat a small portion and feel done.
- You stop at one slice of pizza.
- You forget about food between meals.
- Alcohol cravings drop.
That "normal" feeling can be emotional. A lot of people feel relief - and even anger - realizing they were blamed for something that may have been hormonally driven.
--------------------------------------------------
2. APPETITE SUPPRESSION VS. WEIGHT LOSS
--------------------------------------------------
Here is where it gets tricky.
Some people:
- Have massive appetite suppression and lose quickly.
- Have mild appetite suppression and still lose steadily.
- Lose more at lower doses than higher ones.
- Feel little appetite change but notice waist shrinking.
- Go weeks with no scale movement, then drop several pounds suddenly.
Important point: appetite suppression is a tool, not the entire mechanism.
GLP-1 medications work through:
- Slowing gastric emptying
- Enhancing satiety signaling
- Improving insulin sensitivity
- Affecting reward pathways in the brain
- Reducing glucagon
So yes, eating less is part of it. But hormonal and metabolic shifts also play a role.
That said: fat loss still requires a calorie deficit.
If weight truly is not decreasing over time, something in the equation has to change - intake, output, dose, or time.
--------------------------------------------------
3. "I'M EATING 900-1000 CALORIES AND NOT LOSING"
--------------------------------------------------
This comes up constantly.
Possible explanations include:
A. Tracking errors
Even people who weigh food can underestimate cooking oils, sauces, bites, beverages, etc.
B. Water retention
Hydration matters more than people realize. Several members have reported:
- Scale stalls when drinking too little water
- Sudden drops after improving hydration
- Temporary gains despite low intake
If you're under-hydrated, your body may hold onto fluid.
C. Hormonal shifts (especially post-menopause)
Metabolism and body composition change. Fat loss may be slower and masked by fluid changes.
D. Recomposition
Some people go months without scale change but lose inches.
E. True metabolic adaptation
Long-term low calorie intake can reduce energy expenditure. Increasing movement (even walking) sometimes restarts loss.
Important: chronically eating extremely low calories is not usually recommended long-term without medical supervision.
--------------------------------------------------
4. DOSE ESCALATION: SHOULD YOU GO UP JUST BECAUSE HUNGER RETURNS?
--------------------------------------------------
Common pattern:
- Start low dose
- Huge suppression
- Weeks later hunger returns
- Assume medication "stopped working"
Reality: hunger returning does not automatically mean failure.
Questions to ask:
- Is the food noise back, or just normal hunger?
- Are you still able to stop eating when satisfied?
- Is weight trending downward over 4-8 weeks?
- Are side effects manageable?
Some people report:
- Best weight loss at lower doses
- No difference in appetite at higher doses
- Splitting injections (with provider guidance) to smooth hunger
- Needing higher doses for additional effect
There is no universal "right" appetite level.
--------------------------------------------------
5. "WHY AM I HUNGRIER ON A NEW MED?"
--------------------------------------------------
Switching between medications (for example from tirzepatide to retatrutide) can be confusing.
Things to consider:
- Dose equivalency is not straightforward.
- Starting too low after being on a higher dose previously can feel like nothing is working.
- Your body may not have re-stabilized after a break.
- Recency bias - hunger feels extreme compared to suppressed baseline.
If you were on a higher therapeutic dose before, restarting at a very low dose might understandably feel like increased hunger.
Also, hunger suppression intensity varies widely by individual.
--------------------------------------------------
6. THE WEIRD SIDE EFFECTS NOBODY EXPECTS
--------------------------------------------------
Beyond nausea and GI stuff, people report:
Food aversions
- Sudden disgust toward former staples (eggs, chicken, nuts)
- Craving odd things (pickles, bread, cake, carrots)
- Protein becoming hard to tolerate
Some compare it to pregnancy-like aversions.
Energy swings
- Super productive days
- Exhausted days
Burping and reflux
Delayed gastric emptying can cause this.
Vivid dreams
Especially around injection days for some.
Reduced alcohol desire
Very common.
Behavior changes
Some report less impulse spending or gambling urges. Others feel emotions shift because food is no longer the coping outlet.
When food is no longer the main dopamine source, your brain may feel "unanchored" temporarily.
--------------------------------------------------
7. EMOTIONAL IMPACT: THE ANGER PHASE
--------------------------------------------------
A surprising number of people report feeling angry after their first dose.
Why?
Because for the first time, they experience satiety without fighting themselves.
Many realize:
- They weren't weak.
- They weren't lacking discipline.
- Their hunger signals were different.
That can bring relief - and grief.
It's okay to feel both.
--------------------------------------------------
8. WHEN WEIGHT LOSS STALLS
--------------------------------------------------
If the scale hasn't moved for several weeks:
Consider:
- Trend over 8-12 weeks, not days.
- Measure waist and hips.
- Check hydration.
- Review protein intake.
- Assess activity level.
- Evaluate sleep.
Some people report months of "nothing" followed by a sudden 4-5 lb drop that stays off.
Fat loss is rarely linear.
--------------------------------------------------
9. PRACTICAL STRATEGIES
--------------------------------------------------
Hydration
Many find 80-100 oz daily helps minimize stalls and constipation.
Protein first
Food aversions can make this tricky. Try:
- Greek yogurt
- Protein shakes
- Cottage cheese
- Lean fish
Small, balanced meals
Undereating all day can lead to evening junk choices because it's "the only thing that sounds tolerable."
Do not chase zero hunger
Complete appetite suppression is not required for fat loss.
Adjust with your provider
Dose increases should consider:
- Weight trend
- Side effects
- Blood sugar (if applicable)
- Overall function
--------------------------------------------------
10. FINAL THOUGHTS
--------------------------------------------------
GLP-1 meds are not just appetite killers.
They:
- Change satiety signaling
- Shift reward pathways
- Influence insulin and glucagon
- Alter gastric emptying
- Impact behavior
For some, appetite suppression is dramatic.
For others, subtle.
For many, inconsistent.
The real question isn't:
"Am I never hungry?"
It's:
"Is this helping me build a sustainable pattern?"
Long-term success seems to come from:
- Patience with stalls
- Avoiding extreme restriction
- Monitoring trends, not daily swings
- Working with your body instead of against it
I'm still early in this journey, but understanding that hunger, food noise, weight loss, and dose are not identical variables has helped me relax a bit.
Curious how others experienced this - especially people who had hunger return but still lost weight.
- DC