Snack-Progress
Well-known member
Hey everyone, been observing here for months, absorbing your shared insights while tracking my own journey. Decided to lay it all out there. Fire away with your questions.
About me:
30 years young, around 6'2, working shifts in a German factory. No gym. No specialized diet plans.
Stats:
Starting point (June '25): 283 pounds, BMI 36.1, body fat around 41.5%, muscle mass around 31.3%
Current (Feb '26): 237 pounds, BMI 30.5, body fat at 30.7%, muscle now 34.9%
Total change: Lost about 46 pounds. Body fat reduced by about 11%. Muscle mass increased nearly 4% – without stepping foot in a gym.
My Diet:
Aiming for 1700–2000 calories each day. Around 180–220g of protein. Nothing fancy. Simple, repeatable meals: Greek yogurt with protein powder and berries for breakfast, meat with veggies for lunch, something light for dinner. Shift work throws off meal timing, so I plan meals around the shifts, not the clock.
Wegovy is what makes it doable. Not because it's tracking calories – but because the hunger is significantly reduced. I'm eating less from a place of desire, not obligation.
My Activity:
No gym visits. But I'm far from inactive.
Aiming for 10,000 steps daily. Doing construction work on my property about 4 times a week. Swimming for an hour twice a week for my joints. Biking about 5 miles to work twice a week. Car stays parked if I can help it.
It amounts to more calorie expenditure than you might think – without lifting weights.
My Break (4 months):
Around month 4, I paused for about 4 months. Life happened.
Expected a significant weight regain. Barely any. Because I kept up the nutrition and activity. That’s where the real lesson was: Wegovy’s just a tool, not a magic bullet. The people who struggle after stopping are likely the ones who didn’t change anything else.
Started up again 2 weeks ago. Next goal: 198 pounds.
The Unexpected:
Here’s what’s been a real game-changer for me – and it’s rarely discussed.
It's quieter in my head now.
Not just regarding food. Everything.
No more cravings. No more wanting sugar all the time. No constant mental chatter about wanting *something*. GLP-1 receptors aren’t only in the gut – they extend into the brain's reward system. The dopamine response gets toned down. That constant "want" mode is reduced.
I come from a past where that mental "noise" was amplified. Substances, impulses, etc. Won’t go into detail, but those who understand, understand.
Semaglutide actually did something I didn't anticipate. The quiet spans beyond food.
There's active research on this – Ozempic is being studied for addiction treatment. Yet, few discuss it in personal accounts except for “I don’t crave alcohol now.”
For me, it's deeper than that. And I'm curious how many others share this experience.
Happy to discuss:
My detailed supplement list and why each one is there. The specifics of the 4-month break – what went down, what didn’t. Shift work alongside GLP-1 – why it can actually be beneficial. Body recomposition without the gym. The neurological aspect of the quiet mind. Stalls – I experienced them, and here’s what I learned.
Ask away.
About me:
30 years young, around 6'2, working shifts in a German factory. No gym. No specialized diet plans.
Stats:
Starting point (June '25): 283 pounds, BMI 36.1, body fat around 41.5%, muscle mass around 31.3%
Current (Feb '26): 237 pounds, BMI 30.5, body fat at 30.7%, muscle now 34.9%
Total change: Lost about 46 pounds. Body fat reduced by about 11%. Muscle mass increased nearly 4% – without stepping foot in a gym.
My Diet:
Aiming for 1700–2000 calories each day. Around 180–220g of protein. Nothing fancy. Simple, repeatable meals: Greek yogurt with protein powder and berries for breakfast, meat with veggies for lunch, something light for dinner. Shift work throws off meal timing, so I plan meals around the shifts, not the clock.
Wegovy is what makes it doable. Not because it's tracking calories – but because the hunger is significantly reduced. I'm eating less from a place of desire, not obligation.
My Activity:
No gym visits. But I'm far from inactive.
Aiming for 10,000 steps daily. Doing construction work on my property about 4 times a week. Swimming for an hour twice a week for my joints. Biking about 5 miles to work twice a week. Car stays parked if I can help it.
It amounts to more calorie expenditure than you might think – without lifting weights.
My Break (4 months):
Around month 4, I paused for about 4 months. Life happened.
Expected a significant weight regain. Barely any. Because I kept up the nutrition and activity. That’s where the real lesson was: Wegovy’s just a tool, not a magic bullet. The people who struggle after stopping are likely the ones who didn’t change anything else.
Started up again 2 weeks ago. Next goal: 198 pounds.
The Unexpected:
Here’s what’s been a real game-changer for me – and it’s rarely discussed.
It's quieter in my head now.
Not just regarding food. Everything.
No more cravings. No more wanting sugar all the time. No constant mental chatter about wanting *something*. GLP-1 receptors aren’t only in the gut – they extend into the brain's reward system. The dopamine response gets toned down. That constant "want" mode is reduced.
I come from a past where that mental "noise" was amplified. Substances, impulses, etc. Won’t go into detail, but those who understand, understand.
Semaglutide actually did something I didn't anticipate. The quiet spans beyond food.
There's active research on this – Ozempic is being studied for addiction treatment. Yet, few discuss it in personal accounts except for “I don’t crave alcohol now.”
For me, it's deeper than that. And I'm curious how many others share this experience.
Happy to discuss:
My detailed supplement list and why each one is there. The specifics of the 4-month break – what went down, what didn’t. Shift work alongside GLP-1 – why it can actually be beneficial. Body recomposition without the gym. The neurological aspect of the quiet mind. Stalls – I experienced them, and here’s what I learned.
Ask away.