Foods you just can't stand anymore?

Thin-Possible said:
I'm just starting out, but I'm getting SO many cravings... Is that normal?
Totally normal. Give it a few weeks. It takes time for the medication to really work on your blood sugar and appetite. Try upping your protein intake; that can help.
 
Oz makes my gag reflex way more touchy. When I've got drainage in the morning and try to clear it out, I'm right on the edge most days.
 
Used to be obsessed with coffee, now I can't even stand the taste. It's got this weird metal flavor to it and I just don't want it anymore. Totally caught me off guard.
 
Some foods just taste off to me now. Coffee smells weird and I can't drink it the way I used to - has to be with cream or something. Chips don't hit the same either.
 
If you're just looking at what the science says, this med regrows cartilage, which people thought wasn't possible. There's actual research backing this with barely any side effects. Saw a good video breaking down the studies—you can find the details by searching.
 
The food aversion is one of the stranger changes. Things that used to feel like a treat now just feel wrong - it's not willpower, the appetite signal itself changed. Some find it fades as doses stabilize, others find it shifts permanently. For things you miss, trying a small amount again tells you whether the aversion stuck or not. A lot of people find what they thought they loved doesn't actually live up to the memory.
 
Gas disrupting sleep is a distinct issue from appetite suppression - delayed gastric emptying means food ferments longer, peaking at night. High-fiber and high-fat foods are the usual triggers, which often overlaps with foods you're already finding aversive. Simethicone helps short-term; checking what was eaten 4-6 hours before bed usually identifies the culprit.
 
Sucralose hides in a lot of products that aren't obviously sweet. Reading labels becomes a reflex. Anything that works without it is worth flagging for the thread.
 
Food aversion rotation is one of the stranger effects - what was a comfort food for years becomes unappealing almost overnight. The reward pathway recalibrating is what changes the ceiling from a full serving to a taste. High-salt high-fat combinations seem to get hit hardest.
 
Whey aversion on GLP-1 is a consistent report - something about the way the dairy protein interacts with the slower digestion. Plant proteins tend to sit better for most people who hit this. Pea protein especially seems to avoid the nausea trigger that whey can bring on.
 
The food preferences that shift are usually the high-fat, high-salt ones first - the brain's reward signal for those is part of what the medication dials down.
 
The alcohol shift is one of the more consistent surprises - the cross-reward suppression GLP-1s cause hits the wanting response across the board, not just food. Cured meats and rich cheeses tend to follow once satiation kicks in earlier than expected. The flavor appeal stays but the volume tolerance drops.
 
The tracking-until-it's-habit approach works well for the appetite suppression window because hunger cues aren't reliable anymore - food aversions and reduced appetite can mean you're under on nutrients without realizing it. Small planned meals plus an app is the practical fix until the new baseline settles.
 
Chicken aversion is one of the more common ones - something about the texture or smell just stops working. Some people find it comes back eventually, others don't.
 
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