Hang in there, it gets better!

Thanks for the followup. This is what folks worried about and glad you're okay. Passing out and low blood sugar show how intense fast drops can be. Hope no organ stress happened. Sounds like you learned from round one. Restarting slower with better food will make it safer. Best on the next chapter.
 
I'm cutting off a dopamine source my brain relied on, breaking old habits and building new ones. My brain's not happy yet. But it will get better, especially as the progress shows up.
 
This is so true! The first two months were the adjustment period for me - the nausea and fatigue had me wondering if I'd made a mistake. Then around week eight or nine things started leveling out and I actually started feeling good. Now I barely remember that early rough patch. For anyone just starting out, give it real time before you call it. The first few weeks are not the final verdict.
 
The encouragement posts are the ones that keep people going when the first few weeks feel impossible. The side effects really do ease up - weeks 3-4 tend to be the turning point for most people. 250 to 140 is extraordinary. How long did that take and what dose ended up being your maintenance level?
 
Side effects mellowing out by months 2-3 is the consistent pattern. The first month feels permanent and it usually is not. The research/doctor dynamic is a real tension - some providers are genuinely curious and collaborative, some are not. Finding one in the first group makes the whole process easier.
 
The doctor conversation is the right move. Mood shifts on these medications are real and worth discussing directly.
 
The travel strategy of keeping food simple and bland until the GI adjustment settles is the right call - most people find their tolerance window narrows significantly on injection days regardless of what they ate before starting.
 
The GI cycling pattern - nausea to diarrhea to constipation then settling - is the standard titration experience, not a sign of something wrong.
 
The dog chair geometry changing as you shrink is a surprisingly reliable indicator - 110 lbs down changes every relationship with physical space in ways that are hard to explain.
 
Back
Top