Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel sad at all the wasted years before Mounjaro

27 replies

JudesBiggestFan · 18/05/2026 19:38

I started on mounjaro a couple of weeks ago. I ca literally see the weight melting off me…cheekbones and collar bones emerging, hands and feet have lost their puffiness. I am calorie counting but I am not hungry at all. I can just eat my allocated meal and get on with my day.
For my entire life I have been chubby. Even as a five year old I wasn’t allowed school milk and was taken to ‘fat clinic’ as my mom called it. The only time I have been truly slim was in my teens when I starved myself until I regularly fainted for a year. I have managed to get down to a size 14 in my 20s but since children I have been between a size 16 and 20 depending on dieting and flare ups of ulcerative colitis which required steroids. I had accepted sadly I was just a bigger person. I resisted mounjaro for ages because I really just didn’t believe it wasn’t too good to be true. But after lots of research, I have taken the plunge. And I really believe that this is the answer. After years of on off dieting, fanatical exercise and knawing hunger/constant battling…it was chemical all the time. All the years of self loathing and wondering what I was doing wrong…and a simple drug can make me slim. Alongside healthy eating and exercise of course. It feels surreal. But it is also messing with my mind and making me ineffably sad about how long and how harshly I have punished myself for not being slim. Has anyone else had this weird mix of emotions? I am 46 and I feel like my whole sense of self is shifting. I’ve always been the funny one to deflect from my size.

OP posts:
SilenceInside · 18/05/2026 22:09

I just have an enormous sense of relief that there is now a solution to something that I have battled for my whole life, since childhood. I’m also thrilled that there are more and different versions of GLP1s being developed at the moment and becoming available in the near future.

It would have been great to have access to this in my 20s but I don’t think of it as wasted time, because the solution didn’t exist. It’s not like it was available but I couldn’t access it.

Pedallleur · 18/05/2026 22:20

It's the advance in medicine/drugs. At one time illnesses like heart issues were killers. Now heart surgery is routine and cancer treatments are far more successful. You can't fix your past but you have a chance with your future

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread