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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Anyone taken weight loss injections and regretted it?

157 replies

itsallfoggy · 13/07/2025 18:36

I feel losing weight wouid help me build my confidence and get life back on track but im
just really scared that something awful will happen. I am very close to ordering online. I need to lose around 2 stones. It just won’t shift. Please share your experiences. Thank you ☺️

OP posts:
Thread gallery
5
PutThe · 14/07/2025 14:41

WLIs are the very thing that make many people's minds and bodies accept the need for a calorie deficit!

Motnight · 14/07/2025 16:54

Migrainesandme · 14/07/2025 11:59

I think in the next few many years many will regret it for some reason.
Same as having fillers and botox etc.

Yes, it's exactly the same as having fillers and Botox etc 🤣

edwinbear · 14/07/2025 17:30

I don’t regret taking them, I had no side effects and it worked very well for me. I’ve just stopped taking them and should have stopped much earlier though. I’m currently 7st 5lbs and at 5ft 6, I look like a skeleton - a number of people have expressed concern for my health. DC are embarrassed at how thin I’ve become. Currently at a lovely AI hotel though and expecting to put about a stone on over the next fortnight, which will look much better.

Radioundermypillow · 14/07/2025 17:51

Motnight · 14/07/2025 16:54

Yes, it's exactly the same as having fillers and Botox etc 🤣

I've been having botox on and off for 10 years and intend to continue! Definitely don't regret it and I dont know anyone who has it who has regretted it.

People are so judgemental about women and their appearance/health.

JMSA · 14/07/2025 17:57

Migrainesandme · 14/07/2025 11:59

I think in the next few many years many will regret it for some reason.
Same as having fillers and botox etc.

Massive eye roll from me.
Done well, Botox is the best thing ever so don’t knock it.
You don’t see those who get Botox coming on here judging wrinkled, frumpy women.
To each her own.

WordsFailMeYetAgain · 14/07/2025 18:15

edwinbear · 14/07/2025 17:30

I don’t regret taking them, I had no side effects and it worked very well for me. I’ve just stopped taking them and should have stopped much earlier though. I’m currently 7st 5lbs and at 5ft 6, I look like a skeleton - a number of people have expressed concern for my health. DC are embarrassed at how thin I’ve become. Currently at a lovely AI hotel though and expecting to put about a stone on over the next fortnight, which will look much better.

Did your provider not do checks on your weight. Why didn’t you stop earlier. You are running huge risks with your health.

Elsvieta · 14/07/2025 20:35

sorrynotathome · 14/07/2025 06:46

If you lie in order to get the medicine (you may not be eligible if you’re only 2 stone overweight) the chances of “something awful” happening are much higher. If you buy it from a dodgy website (eg powder that needs reconstituting) the chances of “something awful” happening are high.

Powder that needs reconstituting? I've never heard of that. You mean they send a powder and you have to somehow turn it into liquid then inject?

BrunchBarBandit · 14/07/2025 22:40

Elsvieta · 14/07/2025 20:35

Powder that needs reconstituting? I've never heard of that. You mean they send a powder and you have to somehow turn it into liquid then inject?

Maybe it’s actually heroin, and you need a bit of tin foil and a lighter to prepare it
(lighthearted)

Seriously though, do people buy WLIs from unregulated providers?? Surely it’s obvious that’s asking for trouble

Smallsalt · 14/07/2025 22:54

God no. They are absolutely one of the best things that happened to me.
Apart from the weight loss, my autoimmune disease is in remission, my swollen diseased knees look normal and don't hurt for the first time in decades.
And my previously high blood pressure is positive athletic now .

LOLOL82 · 14/07/2025 23:19

BrunchBarBandit · 14/07/2025 22:40

Maybe it’s actually heroin, and you need a bit of tin foil and a lighter to prepare it
(lighthearted)

Seriously though, do people buy WLIs from unregulated providers?? Surely it’s obvious that’s asking for trouble

surprising what’s out there. I know people supposedly taking retatrutide which hasn’t even passed phase 3 clinical trials yet.

the way they get round selling the peptides is saying research purpose only. Knowing full well people will inject it. Mostly gym bros from what I’ve seen.

LOLOL82 · 14/07/2025 23:20

No regrets here. Helped me lost 3.5st. Will remain on it for maintenance as long as as I can. Game changer for me

beasmithwentworth · 14/07/2025 23:20

This thread reminds me of threads on alcohol consumption / addiction. Is it then fair to say to people who are addicted to alcohol or heroin ‘it’s simple.. just don’t drink / eat/ smoke/ Inject heroin’ ?

The thing in most cases that people are addicted to is not the heroin/ food etc itself- it’s the feeling they get from whatever their ‘drug’ of choice is. It’s an emotional addiction.

yes it’s easy and straightforward for some people but not for others. I don’t have a problem with food but I do understand addiction. If you don’t understand it and haven’t experienced it then refrain from your uninformed glib comments.

Roseblooms · 15/07/2025 05:48

I work in healthcare and was talking to a GP colleague who has a young patient who is now in renal failure after buying what she thought was MJ from a TikTok seller. She was sent a powder and administered it. It is awful to think people are injecting unregulated poison into their bodies that will do irreversible damage to their body. Fortunately the vast majority of people go through regulated sellers. I did also have a student who managed to get it by putting a cushion under their clothes and holding heavy weights on the scales.......scary!!

FeministUnderTheCatriarchy · 15/07/2025 05:58

I have zero research or proof to back up my issues with them, but I will share them here anyways.

I thought it was amazing, I was losing around 3kg a week and only had side effects on a Sunday night (injection night) where I would throw up a few times. I stayed on the lowest dose and still had no appetite which was also great.

However, I had to stop them due to finances and I was really shocked when I put back on about half the weight. I have lost and gained weight my whole life, but this time my entire body composition changed.

I have always been a very standard hourglass shape. No matter what size I have been, my shape was clear. Now, I am an apple. All the weight I gained back went to my tummy which has NEVER happened before.

My body looks completely different to how it has done my entire life.

I know this can happen in peri and after menopause but I am 33 (was 31 at the time) with no signs of that and it happened directly in correlation to stopping the injections.

I've now been off them 2 years and have lost the weight on keto, but my shape is still an apple and I can't shift my tummy.

Again, I can't prove that it was the injections, but I am convinced they changed the way my body holds and loses fat.

For that reason I would never use them again.

Firstshoes · 15/07/2025 06:36

My DH. They worked amazingly well and he lost 2 stone. He didn't want to be on them forever mainly due to cost. He's been off them for a month. I can confirm he is eating really low calorie and exercising but he's put ten pounds back on already. The scales keep climbing. I'm not sure if MJ messed up his metabolism or something but the weight is going on far more rapidly than it should be. He really wishes he'd lost it naturally.

TheInvisibleLife · 15/07/2025 06:41

3kg a week is a frightening amount to lose @FeministUnderTheCatriarchy and weekly vomiting sounds dreadful to me. Did you lose at that rate throughout? I would think that would be very damaging to the body; 1-2lbs a week is a safe rate of weight loss. Lots of people lose a lot in the first week or two (water weight) but if that kept going, along with the vomiting, I think you did have a very bad reaction to the drugs and were not tolerating them well.

TheInvisibleLife · 15/07/2025 06:49

Did he try other methods of weight loss before @Firstshoes ? I turned to MJ because absolutely nothing else would work, not anymore. There was no option to 'lose the weight naturally' as you put it (though on MJ, I pay very close attention to maintaining a healthy diet, not dangerously low-calorie but very balanced, and exercising for strength) Obesity really is a disease, and I couldn't fight it on my own. For me, and for many people taking it, there is no alternative - we live with obesity or we take the medication that enables us to beat it. I am taking it with the hope and expectation that I will need to be on some dose of it forever or I fully expect to be obese again. But I wouldn't have started the injections if there was anything left that I hadn't tried myself already (many times over three decades).

Hotandbotheredflower · 15/07/2025 06:55

I struggle with the responses of just eat less it’s not that hard. If that was the case then we wouldn’t have over weight people 🥴

Twelftytwo · 15/07/2025 06:55

FeministUnderTheCatriarchy · 15/07/2025 05:58

I have zero research or proof to back up my issues with them, but I will share them here anyways.

I thought it was amazing, I was losing around 3kg a week and only had side effects on a Sunday night (injection night) where I would throw up a few times. I stayed on the lowest dose and still had no appetite which was also great.

However, I had to stop them due to finances and I was really shocked when I put back on about half the weight. I have lost and gained weight my whole life, but this time my entire body composition changed.

I have always been a very standard hourglass shape. No matter what size I have been, my shape was clear. Now, I am an apple. All the weight I gained back went to my tummy which has NEVER happened before.

My body looks completely different to how it has done my entire life.

I know this can happen in peri and after menopause but I am 33 (was 31 at the time) with no signs of that and it happened directly in correlation to stopping the injections.

I've now been off them 2 years and have lost the weight on keto, but my shape is still an apple and I can't shift my tummy.

Again, I can't prove that it was the injections, but I am convinced they changed the way my body holds and loses fat.

For that reason I would never use them again.

Funnily enough I had the same thing when I lost weight with keto. I felt it went back on differently and more round my tummy. So perhaps it's something about ketosis.

Agree that 3kg per week is far too much and that would have terrified me!

I think what is becoming clear is that they give temporary effects only so people can feel 'locked in' long term. For me, I realised early on they adjust something in my chemistry and I accept I will need to stay on them very long term. I do worry about availability and safety of very long term use.

ChocolateGanache · 15/07/2025 06:56

Bimblebombles · 13/07/2025 18:42

I'd spend the budget for injections on a personal trainer and do some regular strength training a couple of times a week. Building lean muscle mass is the key for long term weight management and hormone regulation I have found.

This. And go low carb op. SOOOO much better for you long term!

MyUmberSeal · 15/07/2025 06:56

Agix · 14/07/2025 06:59

You can eat less for free. You don't need to spend money on the injections or a personal trainer or any of that nonsense.

Just eat less. If the weight doesn't come off, you're eating too much.

Calorie recommendations are too high for most people, including calorie recommendations for weight loss. It's very likely you need to eat quite a bit less than you've been told to, to lose weight. Yes, even less than the doctor recommends.

All the weight loss injections do is force that really low calorie intake, by making you not want to eat. But you can do it for free.

It'll seem an unhealthily low amount of food, but it's just what the injections would make you do too. People act like to have to pay 100s per month to be "allowed" to eat so little, but you can actually do it for free. If anyone questions why you're eating so little, you just tell them you're on the injections. You don't actually have to be. Save your money and just eat much less. It'll do the exact same thing.

Of course eating less will do the same thing, as you correctly say, but that requires the resistance of urges and willpower. WLI remove that element therefore the makes the process much easier for people.

It still comes down to eating less, the difference is that you eat less because you are not hungry and food isn’t on your mind, rather then thinking about food, wanting food and craving food, but still eating less.

ChocolateGanache · 15/07/2025 06:57

tobee · 14/07/2025 12:58

🙄

And they are all so defensive about it just now. Give it a couple of years. There will be law suits.

Zanatdy · 15/07/2025 06:59

I’m not on them, but what would worry me if the pancreatitis risk. I’ve had acute pancreatitis 5 times and it can be life threatening. I live in constant pain thanks to a damaged (and now half, after a surgery) pancreas, and don’t underestimate the devastating effect this could have on you if you were in the small minority who got it. You’ve got to weigh it up though with the health risks from being obese. I’ve seen people use the injections who have hardly any weight to lose (they can easily get them if know the right people), which is madness to me.

PutThe · 15/07/2025 07:11

TheInvisibleLife · 15/07/2025 06:49

Did he try other methods of weight loss before @Firstshoes ? I turned to MJ because absolutely nothing else would work, not anymore. There was no option to 'lose the weight naturally' as you put it (though on MJ, I pay very close attention to maintaining a healthy diet, not dangerously low-calorie but very balanced, and exercising for strength) Obesity really is a disease, and I couldn't fight it on my own. For me, and for many people taking it, there is no alternative - we live with obesity or we take the medication that enables us to beat it. I am taking it with the hope and expectation that I will need to be on some dose of it forever or I fully expect to be obese again. But I wouldn't have started the injections if there was anything left that I hadn't tried myself already (many times over three decades).

Edited

Yes, I expect most people paying for MJ wish they could've lost the weight naturally!

ProfessionalPirate · 15/07/2025 07:24

Agix · 14/07/2025 06:59

You can eat less for free. You don't need to spend money on the injections or a personal trainer or any of that nonsense.

Just eat less. If the weight doesn't come off, you're eating too much.

Calorie recommendations are too high for most people, including calorie recommendations for weight loss. It's very likely you need to eat quite a bit less than you've been told to, to lose weight. Yes, even less than the doctor recommends.

All the weight loss injections do is force that really low calorie intake, by making you not want to eat. But you can do it for free.

It'll seem an unhealthily low amount of food, but it's just what the injections would make you do too. People act like to have to pay 100s per month to be "allowed" to eat so little, but you can actually do it for free. If anyone questions why you're eating so little, you just tell them you're on the injections. You don't actually have to be. Save your money and just eat much less. It'll do the exact same thing.

You really don’t understand how WLI work. Have a look into insulin resistance for a start.