I've been on it for 2 weeks. I felt nauseous first week. Stomach not great. Still hungry. 2nd week, no nausea but stomach still meh. This week, same. no nausea. stomach meh. not loving it.
Aggies1322 said:slaughtr said:Aggies1322 said:slaughtr said:Aggies1322 said:Rip*91 said:slaughtr said:Aggies1322 said:cecil77 said:
Again, it's NOT one size fits all! All of these "people just need to..." comments aren't accurate all the time.
Is your base metabolic rate 2400 calories per day? 1800 calories per day? 3800 calories per day?
Without know that, you don't know what "someone needs to do".
Wouldn't matter either way.. whether your body burns more or less calories, you will lose weight by intermittent fasting and eating less calories than you burn. So yes, one size does fit all.
All?
I'm an insulin dependent diabetic on an insulin pump. How, exactly, am I supposed to fast?
Your health be damned! You are supposed to follow the instructions of the ever brilliant posters of F16! They know more about what is good for you than you do.
I'm also an insulin dependent diabetic.. I fast 20 hours at a time, it has been wonderful for controlling my blood sugar. My A1C was in the prediabetic range despite me being a type 1 diabetic. But you're right.. none of us know anything.
Good luck controlling your insulin usage like that. My A1c has been in the low 6's for 35 years. I think I know how to manage my diabetes and fasting for 20 hours a day is insane.
Why is that? Have you tried? It hasn't had any negative impact on me controlling my insulin usage.
Why would I ever consider fasting for 20 hours a day? I like food and a normal life.
So you can't explain why it will be difficult controlling my insulin use? Why would you try- because it is healthy. Intermittent fasting has a ton of health benefits.
slaughtr said:Aggies1322 said:slaughtr said:Aggies1322 said:slaughtr said:Aggies1322 said:Rip*91 said:slaughtr said:Aggies1322 said:cecil77 said:
Again, it's NOT one size fits all! All of these "people just need to..." comments aren't accurate all the time.
Is your base metabolic rate 2400 calories per day? 1800 calories per day? 3800 calories per day?
Without know that, you don't know what "someone needs to do".
Wouldn't matter either way.. whether your body burns more or less calories, you will lose weight by intermittent fasting and eating less calories than you burn. So yes, one size does fit all.
All?
I'm an insulin dependent diabetic on an insulin pump. How, exactly, am I supposed to fast?
Your health be damned! You are supposed to follow the instructions of the ever brilliant posters of F16! They know more about what is good for you than you do.
I'm also an insulin dependent diabetic.. I fast 20 hours at a time, it has been wonderful for controlling my blood sugar. My A1C was in the prediabetic range despite me being a type 1 diabetic. But you're right.. none of us know anything.
Good luck controlling your insulin usage like that. My A1c has been in the low 6's for 35 years. I think I know how to manage my diabetes and fasting for 20 hours a day is insane.
Why is that? Have you tried? It hasn't had any negative impact on me controlling my insulin usage.
Why would I ever consider fasting for 20 hours a day? I like food and a normal life.
So you can't explain why it will be difficult controlling my insulin use? Why would you try- because it is healthy. Intermittent fasting has a ton of health benefits.
I guess I fell asleep the day they taught that method of basal insulin dosage in medical school. Have fun not eating.
Stonegateag85 said:
100g of chicken breast still only contains 30ish grams of protein, 6 egg whites is roughly 24g of protein. I don't have the time cook that much nor stomach capacity to eat that much dense food thus why supplementing is the way to go for me.
AtticusMatlock said:
If it reduces the strain on the healthcare system and reduces out payments by insurance companies, medicare, and medicaid for all of these chronic diseases caused by obesity, I'm all for it.
Obesity is directly linked to risk for stroke, heart failure, heart attack, diabetes, vascular disease, cancer, liver disease and a bunch of other stuff. Get people at a more normal weight for a few hundred bucks a month and you are saving the system billions of dollars in the future.
I've been on the same type of drug for 40 years. No issues caused by the drug in that time. If I didn't take it, I would have been dead for 40 years, so I'll continue.samurai_science said:Sure, sure, it wont be the first drug that was designed for a lot of things but years later we know its unsafe. Like CAR-T, took 7 years, but it was finally shown to induce Parkinsonism, it also was SAFE. lolTeslag said:BassCowboy33 said:Tramp96 said:
But is it sustainable?
Even if there are no long-term side effects (and you know there will be), is this a sustainable approach to weight loss?
Studies have shown that people gain the weight back upon stopping the drug. It's basically a "forever" drug. The long-term effects of paralyzing your internal organs isn't known at this time.
It was originally a diabetic drug so it was designed to be taken long term with minimal side effects
Let's compare that with the costs of diabetes. I'll give the retail costs for what I use for diabetes management.Foamcows said:
arent these drugs like 1000 a month? I would think that we see impacts from insurance companies costs going through the roof.
ts5641 said:
What could go wrong? Large amounts of people on Rx meds. Should work out fine.
cecil77 said:
These are sociological problems.
When most people were physically active all day, it didn't much matter what/when they ate.
You CAN exercise (i.e. move) yourself to healthy weight (barring complete lack of discipline in eating). It just takes focus.
Park at the back of the lot. Take the stairs. Flex your abs when driving. Put a Cubi under your desk. When carrying anything hold it out to your side (unbalanced loads exercise the core), or curl it or press it, just move around whatever you're carrying. In addition to 4-5 hours per week of focused exercise.
Do this kind of stuff all day, everyday and it becomes a habit. Makes a big difference, even if people do notice you doing it.
For weight loss?Teslag said:
These meds have been out for almost 20 years now.
Teslag said:cecil77 said:
These are sociological problems.
When most people were physically active all day, it didn't much matter what/when they ate.
You CAN exercise (i.e. move) yourself to healthy weight (barring complete lack of discipline in eating). It just takes focus.
Park at the back of the lot. Take the stairs. Flex your abs when driving. Put a Cubi under your desk. When carrying anything hold it out to your side (unbalanced loads exercise the core), or curl it or press it, just move around whatever you're carrying. In addition to 4-5 hours per week of focused exercise.
Do this kind of stuff all day, everyday and it becomes a habit. Makes a big difference, even if people do notice you doing it.
Obesity is mostly about poor diet and over eating, not exercise. Our food is terrible and we eat too much as a society.
Rip*91 said:
Good. People are trying to lose weight and take better care of themselves.
Harry Stone said:
I used to be super fit. Worked out for about 3 hrs/day, 6 days a week and ate clean. Then I got married, had kids and started 2 separate businesses. Was at the office at 4:30 am, quit exercising, basically got too busy to think about working out. This went on for almost a decade. Started eating for convenience, put on weight and just never felt like exercising. Then I got on Tirzepatide last year, lost 40lbs and got down to my pre kids/ pre marriage weight. I'm now back in the gym again 3-4 times a week, and feeling the best I feel in a decade. Had I not taken the shot I dont think I wouldve changed anytime soon, but seeing all that weight fall off reshaped my mentality to wanna get fit and healthy again.
Stonegateag85 said:
100g of chicken breast still only contains 30ish grams of protein, 6 egg whites is roughly 24g of protein. I don't have the time cook that much nor stomach capacity to eat that much dense food thus why supplementing is the way to go for me.
AggielandPoultry said:Stonegateag85 said:
100g of chicken breast still only contains 30ish grams of protein, 6 egg whites is roughly 24g of protein. I don't have the time cook that much nor stomach capacity to eat that much dense food thus why supplementing is the way to go for me.
Check out Muscle Egg they sell a great product. I may even rep them soon. Pasturized flavored or unflavored egg whites that ship frozen and last 1 month in the fridge. I use 4 gallons of vanilla a month. "26g of protein per cup" I eat 2 cups of egg whites with rice krispies 3 times a day and they taste amazing. Can't even tell they are egg whites, more like milk, you can mix them in coffee, cook them or just drink them, lots of options and flavors.
Nanomachines son said:AggielandPoultry said:Stonegateag85 said:
100g of chicken breast still only contains 30ish grams of protein, 6 egg whites is roughly 24g of protein. I don't have the time cook that much nor stomach capacity to eat that much dense food thus why supplementing is the way to go for me.
Check out Muscle Egg they sell a great product. I may even rep them soon. Pasturized flavored or unflavored egg whites that ship frozen and last 1 month in the fridge. I use 4 gallons of vanilla a month. "26g of protein per cup" I eat 2 cups of egg whites with rice krispies 3 times a day and they taste amazing. Can't even tell they are egg whites, more like milk, you can mix them in coffee, cook them or just drink them, lots of options and flavors.
A word of warning about muscle egg, your farts will set off an H2S monitor and clear a room easily multiple times a day. Nothing ever gave me the protein farts like muscle egg did, not even when I was eating 300g a day.
Teslag said:
Was yours covered by insurance?
Teslag said:
I've heard of those. Are the compounded versions the same as the formulary versions?
I don't like eating big meals and feeling full. I go the full gram as I workout 5-6x a week (at least I try to), some days I'll double up with 4-5 miles in the morning and a 30 min lift before I pick my son up from school. It's overkill but it works for me.Nanomachines son said:Stonegateag85 said:
100g of chicken breast still only contains 30ish grams of protein, 6 egg whites is roughly 24g of protein. I don't have the time cook that much nor stomach capacity to eat that much dense food thus why supplementing is the way to go for me.
Eat bigger meals, prepare before. It's trivial for me to eat a 1 lb burger. It should not be hard to consume 100g of protein in a single meal.
With that said, you don't need more than 0.7 grams of protein per lb of body weight unless you're using steroids. That is the only way for your body to absorb more protein on any given day.
Harry Stone said:Teslag said:
I've heard of those. Are the compounded versions the same as the formulary versions?
For the most part yes. A few texagers have used us. Main difference is we cant use an injection pen but rather a small insulin syringe. We can currently do while the drugs are on shortage or backorder. Once they go off then everyone has to go back to paying a small mortgage on them. But the demand has far outweighed the supply so theyll be on shortage for a while.
This.Stonegateag85 said:
We've been eating garbage food for decades. The record obesity is a new phenomenon. As kids we ate all kinds of garbage and nobody was fat.