I started my journey on a GLP-1 in October 2024. While my doctor did what good doctors do—he gave me the warnings, the precautions, the usual advice about what to avoid and watch for—I quickly realized something was missing. No one really told me what it would feel like. More importantly, no one explained that this first month doesn’t unfold in one neat, predictable way, but instead moves along several paths depending on the person, their biology, their habits, and frankly, a bit of luck.
So, as I’ve watched friends, patients, and many people start this same journey, I’ve come to understand that the first month is less about weight loss, and far more about discovery, adjustment, and occasionally confusion. While people expect something simple, they get instead of variation, and that variation can make them think something is wrong when everything is going exactly as it should.
Most people begin this process believing they will take the medication, lose their appetite, and watch the scale steadily drop. While that story is appealing, it simply isn’t how the body works, because biology rarely follows a script, and in this case, the first month is more like learning a new language than following a plan.
What becomes clear quickly is that people fall into different patterns. While none of these patterns are right or wrong, understanding which one you are in can make all the difference in how you interpret the experience.
Some people, myself included, are what we call hyper responders. Although we don’t fully understand why this happens, the effect can be dramatic. Within about twelve hours of my first dose, something shifted in a way I did not expect, as the constant chatter in my head about food—what we used to call head hunger—simply disappeared, and I didn’t even know it had been there until it was gone.
During that first month, I lost twelve pounds, and while most of that was water and glycogen with some fat mixed in, the real change was not on the scale, but in my appetite. This dropped so noticeably that I found myself stretching out the time between doses. Interestingly enough, my obstructive sleep apnea improved, which was not something I had anticipated, but certainly appreciated.
At the same time, my doctor had warned me to drink more fluids, and that advice was critical, because much of the water we normally get comes from food, and when food intake drops, hydration must be a conscious effort. So I adjusted by adding a protein shake in the morning and increasing my iced tea throughout the day, and that simple change made a meaningful difference in how I felt. You can find my recipes for protein shakes on the recipe section of my site, terrysimpson.com.
On the other hand, most people do not have that kind of immediate response, and instead they fall into what I would call the normal responder group, where the changes are subtle at first, and because they are subtle, they are easy to miss, which leads many to think the medication isn’t working, especially when they compare themselves to others who seem to be losing weight quickly.
What they don’t notice, however, is that they are snacking less, leaving a bit of food on their plate, and skipping that second helping more often than before, and while these changes may seem small, they add up over time, because when someone tells me they only lost four pounds in a month, I translate that into nearly fifty pounds in a year, and suddenly the perspective shifts from disappointment to possibility, because that is a sustainable path.
Then there is the third group, the strugglers, and these are the people who feel the effects right away but not in a pleasant way, because nausea, delayed gastric emptying, and an uncomfortable sense of fullness can make the experience feel miserable rather than helpful, and in these cases, intervention becomes important, since without adjustment, these individuals can run into real problems.
What helps here is not complicated, but it does require attention, because smaller meals, avoiding fatty foods early on, focusing on liquids, and most importantly, never eating until full can turn things around, and more often than not, dehydration is the hidden issue, which is why something as simple as popsicles made from electrolyte solutions can provide both relief and hydration, and the key word for this group, more than anything else, is pacing.
Before GLP-1 medications, we often described something called head hunger, which is that feeling of wanting food even when the body does not need it. The distinction between real hunger and head hunger is easier to understand than most people think. If you are truly hungry, something simple like a meatball will satisfy you, whereas if it is head hunger, you will find yourself reaching for cookies, candy, or snacks high in calories but low in nutrition.
This is what we now call food noise, and for many people, it is constant, although they may not recognize it until it disappears, which is exactly what happens on a GLP-1, and that disappearance can feel both liberating and unfamiliar at the same time.
I can always tell when mine starts to come back, and recently, I delayed my dose for a few days because I was celebrating my wife’s birthday, and the next day, before I resumed the medication, I found myself buying multiple boxes of ice cream bars, not because I needed them but because that voice had returned, quietly suggesting that I might want them, and once I took the dose again, that same voice faded, leaving me to wonder why I had bought them in the first place.
That voice is persistent, not loud but steady, and it doesn’t shout like an alarm but instead calls like a siren from an old story, inviting you toward something you don’t need but think you want, and turning that down is one of the most profound changes this medication brings.
As the first month unfolds, the early days are often inconsistent because appetite may vary from one day to the next, and while some meals feel normal, others feel different, and this unpredictability can make people uneasy, especially if they expect immediate stability.
Gradually, however, things begin to settle, and by the third or fourth week, satiety arrives earlier, meals become smaller without effort, and foods that once felt irresistible lose some of their pull, not because they are forbidden but because they are no longer as compelling.
At that point, behavior starts to align with biology, and instead of forcing discipline, people find themselves responding to signals that finally make sense.
Success in the first month comes down to a few consistent themes, and while none of them are complicated, they are easy to overlook, because smaller meals tend to feel better, slower eating becomes natural, hydration proves essential, and real food often becomes more appealing, all while the pressure to eat disappears.
In addition, forcing food when you are not hungry rarely ends well, and learning to stop earlier than you used to becomes one of the most important adjustments you can make.
The Emotional Shift No One Talks About
One of the most surprising aspects of this process is not physical but emotional, because when the constant thinking about food quiets down, there is a sense of relief, yet at the same time, there can be a feeling of disorientation, as if something familiar has gone missing.
For many people, food fills more than just hunger because it fills time, emotion, and habit, and when that changes, there is space to be filled in new ways, which can feel uncomfortable at first but ultimately becomes an opportunity.
The first month on a GLP-1 is not about rapid weight loss, and it is not about perfection, and it certainly is not about willpower, because what it really represents is a shift in how the body communicates and how the mind responds.
Instead of fighting hunger, you begin to understand it, and instead of chasing food, you begin to choose it, and in that process, something changes that goes far beyond the number on a scale.
If you are considering this journey, it is worth finding a board-certified obesity specialist because they have the training and experience to guide you through these changes in a way that most physicians simply do not, and that guidance can make the difference between frustration and success.
And as for that first month, it is less about what you lose and more about what you learn, because what you are really discovering is what it feels like to not be controlled by food for the first time in a very long time.