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

Weight loss injections/treatments

Discuss weight-loss injections and treatments, including personal experiences. Mumsnet hasn't checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. You may wish to speak to a medical professional before starting any treatments.

Mounjaro starters Nov ‘24 Thread 10 - The one where we are very nearly beach body ready 🥳

993 replies

Mounjaropen · 21/04/2025 21:03

Previous thread here

https://www.mumsnet.com/talk/weight-loss-injections/5301343-mounjaro-nov-24-starters-thread-9-the-one-where-we-dont-eat-all-of-the-easter-eggs?page=40&reply=143728593

Welcome to thread 10 to fellow MN weight loss friends old and new!

Feel free to lurk or post, absolutely no judgement here, just support and encouragement as we’ve successfully navigated Easter and head towards Summer Holiday Season. Stop here to celebrate NSV’s, weight loss milestones and admire our new svelte frames!

I’m on W25 D1 and on my second 7.5mg pen

F in my early 50’s
H 5’ 5.5”
SW 13st 11lb
CW 10st 9lbs
GW 10st (maybe 9st 7lb if I can)
Total loss so far 44lbs

We recommend the Shotsy app to monitor the amount of MJ in the system and pleasing graphs to look at…plus the MeThreeSixty body scan app to monitor inch loss for the weeks where weight loss is slow but you might have lost body fat etc. Both are free.

Feel free to swap recipes that might inspire anyone in a food rut, tips for managing side effects, exercise tips, tips for maintenance, titrating up or down and we love a beauty/ style chat too 🥰

Page 40 | Mounjaro Nov ‘24 Starters thread 9 - the one where we don’t eat all of the Easter Eggs 🐣 | Mumsnet

Link to previous thread : [[https://www.mumsnet.com/talk/weight-loss-injections/5283324-november-24-starters-thread-8-the-one-where-we-hop-into-sprin...

https://www.mumsnet.com/talk/weight-loss-injections/5301343-mounjaro-nov-24-starters-thread-9-the-one-where-we-dont-eat-all-of-the-easter-eggs?page=40&reply=143728593

OP posts:
Thread gallery
12
Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 16:16

@Gettingbysomehowgood luck tomorrow. You must feel amazing knowing how much you’ve done to ease recovery with that incredible loss.

Arglefraster · 06/05/2025 16:55

Gettingbysomehow · 06/05/2025 15:01

Having lost 4 stone I am off to the hospital tomorrow at 5am for my hip replacement. Recovery should be so much easier now all that weight has gone.

What an amazing thing you've done for yourself. Hope tomorrow goes really smoothly, best of luck 💐

Arglefraster · 06/05/2025 17:05

I could rant for far too long about women being expected to just get on with everything & run about after everyone else while unwell.... so sorry to hear about your back @GoldleafcatI do hope you get one of those miracle working physios! (My grandmother was a physiotherapist & despite being almost entirely immobile most of the time I knew her she could fix any pain by watching you then telling you what exercises to do! She had all the staff in her nursing home sorted out 🤣)

I'm obsessed with getting enough protein @evilharpyI find cottage cheese, Greek yogurt & chicken breast the easiest sources.

TeenLifeMum · 06/05/2025 17:13

Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 14:23

Hope your husband is being more helpful now @Goldleafcat Women picking up the slack is a real bug bear of mine. I’ve been a sole parent so at least I haven’t had any expectations

What has led to the decision to go it without MJ @TeenLifeMum? I spend so much time fretting about long term maintenance.

For the fancy opening last week I wore a dress I last wore 3 years ago for a funeral. I can’t believe the comparisons photos. It was busting at the seams! I really don’t want to go back to that.

I feel that once I get under 10st I cannot justify the cost - I have 3 dc and every £100+ I spend is money I’m taking from them. I feel selfish spending this much on me once I’m “healthy”. I also wonder if the tiredness is partially linked to side effects and wonder if I stop taking it will I feel less tired. There is something about putting medicine into my body long term when I no longer need it. It might be a disaster but that’s where I am with it. I plan to keep a close eye on my weight so it doesn’t creep up again, using what I’ve learned.

BagQueenBee · 06/05/2025 18:11

Gettingbysomehow · 06/05/2025 15:01

Having lost 4 stone I am off to the hospital tomorrow at 5am for my hip replacement. Recovery should be so much easier now all that weight has gone.

Well done 4 stone loss is an amazing feeling isn’t it?

Good luck with your op, it will make such a difference for you.

Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:16

Goldleafcat · 06/05/2025 13:46

This is so true. It is infuriating. This was exactly what was going through my mind this morning which led to my teary outburst on the phone.

I do have to laugh, my DS keeps telling me he has a bad back, he can’t get up etc… copying mummy with quite realistic groans and actions. He’s shown some sympathy but it didn’t stop him refusing to put his shoes on etc this morning. He did climb into his car seat though so there is hope!

Good news - I’m being referred to a physio (hope I can cope in the mean time, will see if the GP can help with pain management).

Good luck to everyone with this week and bring on the losses. X

Keep buggering on. I swear to God my life would be easier somedays if I lost the 15stone that bothers me the most 😂

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:17

SerenePeer · 06/05/2025 13:59

Just a blip - more water and back on your treadmill and it will soon disappear!

I've been at the treadmill and Pvolve today...clean eating only. Wish me luck!

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:26

SerenePeer · 06/05/2025 14:01

Omg yes. My DH conveniently forgets that I did the school run and dog walks on my own for years and I never take a day off sick. He takes to his bed at the drop of a hat though! The only time I managed to take to my sick bed was when I had covid!

Oh yes. My Covid 'lie in' was quickly trumped by his own bout (more serious than mine, obvs). He also forgot all of the times I organised my meetings around assemblies, parents evenings, school performances, school fetes, school trip chaperoning etc etc etc. It IS possible to do it all, but only if you WANT to. In the main, Dads don't see the importance of being selected for the Netball team or Orchestra/whatever and if you came from a family where it didn't matter either, where is the harm? Unless your kid is the only one in the class with no Mummy at the Mother's Day assembly... funny how Dad's aren't required to put a meeting in bloody Paris on hold until after you can get there having attended the Mother's Day assembly because... Dad's would just phone the school and explain it is unreasonable....(which it is obvs). All conveniently forgotten now of course.

And yes, the 'family' dog (the one I said would be a massive pain in the arse whenever we wanted to go away at the drop of a hat) has of course solely become my problem...🤔At least the Dog understands me I guess😂

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:27

SerenePeer · 06/05/2025 14:03

I've just cleared two bin bags of clothes from my wardrobe and it feel so good! Anything that was too big, worn out or reminded me of feeling awful about my body is gone!

👏

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:28

Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 14:23

Hope your husband is being more helpful now @Goldleafcat Women picking up the slack is a real bug bear of mine. I’ve been a sole parent so at least I haven’t had any expectations

What has led to the decision to go it without MJ @TeenLifeMum? I spend so much time fretting about long term maintenance.

For the fancy opening last week I wore a dress I last wore 3 years ago for a funeral. I can’t believe the comparisons photos. It was busting at the seams! I really don’t want to go back to that.

Loving the NSV of the dress! excellent news!

Sorry if I am being insensitive with you being on your own. At least you know you aren't missing out I guess!!!

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:34

evilharpy · 06/05/2025 14:43

@Goldleafcat so sorry about your back. I had a herniated disc a few years ago that needed surgery and I had literally no life for months - it was the start of my weight gain actually. I have so much sympathy for you, I don't think anyone really understands back problems until they have been through it. Sorry I haven't seen your earlier posts but have you had an MRI?

I'm worried that I'm not eating enough protein. I don't really eat enough in general but I especially don't eat enough protein and I need to do better because I can't afford to lose muscle mass. Are any of you tracking this? I've been looking at what I would need to eat to get the recommended amount and it just seems like so much and I really struggle to eat when I'm not hungry. I might have to look at protein shakes.

It is the only macro I monitor. On my OMAD program I do have a large portion of protein with a salad as my main meal around lunchtime (ish). Large tuna steak/large portion of chicken/ couple of salmon fillets or a large steak usually takes me to my target of 1g per Kg of my weight if not exceeding it.

with respect to protein powders, look carefully at the origins and choose organic if you can. A lot of the cheaper powders are a by-product of farming (a good thing) but if pesticides are used, the resultant product can contain a lot of the residual heavy metals contained within a pesticides (not so good).

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:37

Gettingbysomehow · 06/05/2025 15:01

Having lost 4 stone I am off to the hospital tomorrow at 5am for my hip replacement. Recovery should be so much easier now all that weight has gone.

Wishing you all the luck! Let us know you're ok when you can. 💐

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:39

TeenLifeMum · 06/05/2025 17:13

I feel that once I get under 10st I cannot justify the cost - I have 3 dc and every £100+ I spend is money I’m taking from them. I feel selfish spending this much on me once I’m “healthy”. I also wonder if the tiredness is partially linked to side effects and wonder if I stop taking it will I feel less tired. There is something about putting medicine into my body long term when I no longer need it. It might be a disaster but that’s where I am with it. I plan to keep a close eye on my weight so it doesn’t creep up again, using what I’ve learned.

You've got this! 💪

Also, you've a lot of stress going on right now, so cut yourself some slack!

OP posts:
TeenLifeMum · 06/05/2025 18:42

Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:39

You've got this! 💪

Also, you've a lot of stress going on right now, so cut yourself some slack!

I think my stress has peaked so high I’ve stopped feeling stressed… it’s just too much. Massive project deadline at work is coming up and if it all goes wrong I’ll piss of 16k colleagues 😂

Dreamqueen · 06/05/2025 18:48

Gettingbysomehow · 06/05/2025 15:01

Having lost 4 stone I am off to the hospital tomorrow at 5am for my hip replacement. Recovery should be so much easier now all that weight has gone.

Hope all goes well for you.

Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 20:09

Mounjaropen · 06/05/2025 18:28

Loving the NSV of the dress! excellent news!

Sorry if I am being insensitive with you being on your own. At least you know you aren't missing out I guess!!!

Haha it’s fine. They are both grown up now and we muddled through. And at least I always knew I had to do things myself 😂

Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 20:12

TeenLifeMum · 06/05/2025 17:13

I feel that once I get under 10st I cannot justify the cost - I have 3 dc and every £100+ I spend is money I’m taking from them. I feel selfish spending this much on me once I’m “healthy”. I also wonder if the tiredness is partially linked to side effects and wonder if I stop taking it will I feel less tired. There is something about putting medicine into my body long term when I no longer need it. It might be a disaster but that’s where I am with it. I plan to keep a close eye on my weight so it doesn’t creep up again, using what I’ve learned.

Good luck with going it alone. I will follow your journey with interest. I feel bad spending money on myself too but I think I’m probably about breaking even with less wine, snacks and takeaways. I’m sure I would have spent £35 a week easily. My thinking is I want this to be forever and I don’t want to have spent what I have already to go back to where I was.

TeenLifeMum · 06/05/2025 23:28

Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 20:12

Good luck with going it alone. I will follow your journey with interest. I feel bad spending money on myself too but I think I’m probably about breaking even with less wine, snacks and takeaways. I’m sure I would have spent £35 a week easily. My thinking is I want this to be forever and I don’t want to have spent what I have already to go back to where I was.

Maybe my difference is that up to 2022 I was running, did a half marathon in 2020 but then 5-10ks 2-3 times a week and ate well, then my world went upside down summer 2022. Sounds dramatic I know but I truly loved my job, was well respected by exec team etc and then my organisation changed. All execs gone, my director gone, new director and team from merging company took over and bullied me horrendously. My qualifications and experience suddenly meant nothing. There were a couple of nights I was suicidal - never had mh issues ever up to that point. My husband was my rock, my dc pulled me through. “They” did what they could to break me but I refused to allow them to ruin the career I built. I kept my dignity and, it’s taken 3 years but I’ve proven myself. Dh pointed out throughout, they have nothing. If they truly believed I wasn’t competent they’d have used performance management to get rid. They couldn’t; I’m good at my job. I dug deep, showed up to work, crying on my drive in (I’m not a crier) but I also, alongside this, completed a masters level qualification at a Russell group uni (despite their constant digs about it being above me I got a distinction - last November, a piece of paper that proves I’m good enough and more qualified than the bullies - indisputable proof).

Now, during that time I comfort ate EVERYTHING!

Things are now improved. The team I manage are awesome and my cheerleaders. They witnessed it all and have confirmed my paranoia was justified. They do not let anyone badmouth me because I’m a good manager. I don’t mean that with arrogance. I care about my team, I push them to be the best they can for them, I believe in them, I want them to want to be in my team and know I have their back. They values they previously tolerated and thought were normal are gone. They are respected and valued.

Sorry that’s very long but that’s my story of how, in November 2024 I finally felt happy with who I am with paper evidence and a team who’ll sing my praises. That’s when I started mj because I wanted to get back to the me I was before the hurt.

FYI - I still work very hard but… between the hours of 9 and 5. Outside of that it’s 100% my family’s time and I take lunch breaks.

I guess, in short, I’m hoping that the damage I did was due to a very specific set of circumstances and outside of that I hope I can manage my weight once it’s back to pre career catastrophe.

apologies for epic post - quite cathartic though.

lovealongbath · 07/05/2025 04:28

Well done @TeenLifeMum . I admire you for sticking it out.
I was bullied in the workplace, they (3 people) drove me out, made life impossible for me and I left. It was all very traumatic and your post has made me reflect, that was probably the start of my eating /alcohol down fall .

Mounjaropen · 07/05/2025 05:08

TeenLifeMum · 06/05/2025 23:28

Maybe my difference is that up to 2022 I was running, did a half marathon in 2020 but then 5-10ks 2-3 times a week and ate well, then my world went upside down summer 2022. Sounds dramatic I know but I truly loved my job, was well respected by exec team etc and then my organisation changed. All execs gone, my director gone, new director and team from merging company took over and bullied me horrendously. My qualifications and experience suddenly meant nothing. There were a couple of nights I was suicidal - never had mh issues ever up to that point. My husband was my rock, my dc pulled me through. “They” did what they could to break me but I refused to allow them to ruin the career I built. I kept my dignity and, it’s taken 3 years but I’ve proven myself. Dh pointed out throughout, they have nothing. If they truly believed I wasn’t competent they’d have used performance management to get rid. They couldn’t; I’m good at my job. I dug deep, showed up to work, crying on my drive in (I’m not a crier) but I also, alongside this, completed a masters level qualification at a Russell group uni (despite their constant digs about it being above me I got a distinction - last November, a piece of paper that proves I’m good enough and more qualified than the bullies - indisputable proof).

Now, during that time I comfort ate EVERYTHING!

Things are now improved. The team I manage are awesome and my cheerleaders. They witnessed it all and have confirmed my paranoia was justified. They do not let anyone badmouth me because I’m a good manager. I don’t mean that with arrogance. I care about my team, I push them to be the best they can for them, I believe in them, I want them to want to be in my team and know I have their back. They values they previously tolerated and thought were normal are gone. They are respected and valued.

Sorry that’s very long but that’s my story of how, in November 2024 I finally felt happy with who I am with paper evidence and a team who’ll sing my praises. That’s when I started mj because I wanted to get back to the me I was before the hurt.

FYI - I still work very hard but… between the hours of 9 and 5. Outside of that it’s 100% my family’s time and I take lunch breaks.

I guess, in short, I’m hoping that the damage I did was due to a very specific set of circumstances and outside of that I hope I can manage my weight once it’s back to pre career catastrophe.

apologies for epic post - quite cathartic though.

Edited

That bloody awful to read. I’m so sorry you went through this. Workplace bullying is just the worst. I went through something similar post mat leave when I was at Director level. I hired the best lawyer I could (after documenting everything) and took them for the most amount of money they’d ever had to pay out. And that gave me time at home with DD before getting a better paid role with more flexible hours. Tiny goblin man (who was the protagonist in my case) was left looking very silly indeed and did not last long after I left. It’s funny how corporations manage to choose the wrong women to pick a fight with isn’t it?

Anyway, look at you now - properly thin AND with a Masters. They do say what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, and you are now invincible my friend 💪💪💪

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 07/05/2025 05:15

lovealongbath · 07/05/2025 04:28

Well done @TeenLifeMum . I admire you for sticking it out.
I was bullied in the workplace, they (3 people) drove me out, made life impossible for me and I left. It was all very traumatic and your post has made me reflect, that was probably the start of my eating /alcohol down fall .

So sorry to read this too. How are you now? I hope your confidence has been rebuilt? Work does tend to define us when we are younger, especially if we’ve worked hard and climbed the corporate ladder so I hope you know you’re good enough.

Generally speaking, bullying tends to be the default setting for not-very-bright and overly promoted twats who couldn’t run a bath let alone a team/company. And it’s also usually because they know they can’t match your pace/intelligence or ability. Keep faith that whilst you can’t see it at the time, there is always something better for you coming down the line. 💐

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 07/05/2025 05:16

Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 20:12

Good luck with going it alone. I will follow your journey with interest. I feel bad spending money on myself too but I think I’m probably about breaking even with less wine, snacks and takeaways. I’m sure I would have spent £35 a week easily. My thinking is I want this to be forever and I don’t want to have spent what I have already to go back to where I was.

And this is why you will succeed.

You’ve got this 💪

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 07/05/2025 05:19

Cantbesure · 06/05/2025 20:12

Good luck with going it alone. I will follow your journey with interest. I feel bad spending money on myself too but I think I’m probably about breaking even with less wine, snacks and takeaways. I’m sure I would have spent £35 a week easily. My thinking is I want this to be forever and I don’t want to have spent what I have already to go back to where I was.

I agree. My wine bill was certainly something to behold 😳

I’m now not prepared to give up the extra massage/beauty stuff I’ve offset the savings against 😉

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 07/05/2025 05:20

Good luck today @Gettingbysomehow we’ll be thinking of you. 💐

OP posts:
Mounjaropen · 07/05/2025 06:01

Interesting article in The Times yesterday that I forgot to share. Content below. Worth a read and especially good for those approaching maintenance.

The doctor’s diet: I’m a GP — this is how I stopped binge eating
Eight science-backed strategies helped Dr Camilla Stokholm to lose weight and fix her relationship with food. She shares them with Anna Maxted

Dr Camilla Stokholm: “Eating a high-protein meal will keep you full for much longer”
BEN KNIGHT FOR THE TIMES; HAIR MAKE UP CHLOE JOHN
Anna Maxted
Tuesday May 06 2025, 12.00am, The Times

Do you give “brain space” to worrying about what you eat? Dr Camilla Stokholm wants to knock that on the head. “Let’s just come back to having a happy relationship with food,” she declares. Her own sounds ideal. “When I eat, I’m not thinking how many grams of this should I put on my plate, or I need this amount of protein, this amount of fat,” she says. “I’m guided by what I fancy, what I feel like eating that day, then I’ll eat as much as I need to feel full, and then I’ll stop.”
Stokholm, 34, an Exeter-based GP, grew up in Denmark, Switzerland, Australia and Italy. Naturally, she enjoyed a “wonderful food culture”. Much of her childhood was spent in Tuscany. “My parents pressed their own extra virgin olive oil.”
Her first book, What Your Doctor Eats — evidence-based, practical — “summarises everything I want my patients to know to prevent, treat or even reverse disease”. (It’s hard to cram all the latest science on how to achieve sustainable weight loss, improve your cholesterol, blood pressure, blood sugar, and general physical and mental health into ten-minute appointments.) And it lists delectable recipes from her mouthwatering Instagram account @whatyourdoctoreats.
How much sugar are you really eating?
Reading this, one might imagine that her path to nutritional wisdom and wellbeing ran smooth. Not quite. Stokholm moved to the UK aged 19 to train as a doctor. At medical school she cooked from scratch because it was cheap. But on qualifying, that changed. Deciding, “I’m a busy doctor, I shouldn’t have to cook,” she bought “fancy ready-made meals”, ate ultra-processed foods (UFPs) at the Devon hospital where she worked and “lived off” artificially sweetened cordials instead of water. “Within a couple of months, I’d jumped two dress sizes.”
It got worse. “I became more and more hungry because of all the ultra-processed foods damaging my microbiome,” she says. She became trapped in a binge-restrict cycle. The extra virgin olive oil she had always loved became verboten. She would ignore her appetite, then snap and “gorge”. Her next obsession involved following the (bad) advice of YouTube “fitfluencers”. High-protein chocolate bars and kale smoothies became staples. Her hormonal acne “exploded” and she developed IBS, fatigue, brain fog, insomnia and depression.
Realising that “diet culture is terrible”, Stokholm abandoned it for “intuitive eating”. But at that point, intuition didn’t work because by then her appetite was ruled by a range of undesirable factors, from the addictive nature of UPFs to high background insulin levels. “Suddenly I gained ten kilos,” she says.
How did she transform her health? “The biggest change that I made to my own lifestyle was that I started to cook my own food,” Stokholm says. Her Instagram posts are inspiring. Her meals look beautiful, are no-fuss and, unlike some recipe-writing doctors, she understands flavours. Plus she’s not a perfectionist. “I’m much more interested in making food exciting and fun”

Stokholm’s guide to eating well — for life

  1. Binge eating? Stop restricting calories

There’s still a focus on restriction of calories to lose weight. But “food is more than a calorie”, she says. We can’t “calculate” how much to eat — bad news for people who weigh out food and count their “macros”. Many factors influence how much energy we get from food, from our genes to its form (eg whole almond v almond butter — if it’s “pre-chewed” by a machine, “you can absorb all the fat and fast”), to when we eat it (and what with) and our biology. Plus, if your body senses that you’re not consuming enough calories it fights back, perceiving the situation as a famine. It slows your metabolism, drastically drops your levels of the hormone leptin, increasing appetite, and furiously spikes ghrelin, your hunger hormone.
“It forces you to binge eat,” Stokholm says. “People think that’s a character flaw, but it’s actually an evolutionary mechanism.”

  1. Eat a filling meal (and ditch that smoothie habit)

Many people purposely don’t eat enough to satisfy their hunger, Stokholm says. “You pat yourself on the back for resisting the urge to feel full.” But in our evolution “that’s not how we behaved and it’s not how our biology is designed. You are supposed to experience satiety.” If you don’t eat to “stimulate your fullness mechanisms” — with fibre, protein and fat in every meal — “you’re going to feel hungry”. The first step in stimulating your satiety mechanisms is chewing. But protein shakes and breakfast smoothies are simply swallowed, so you miss that important cue, Stokholm says. “If you don’t want to stimulate your appetite, I wouldn’t have the smoothie.”
Second, “the stomach needs to be stretched. That will stimulate more satiety mechanisms.” Again, soft UPFs, smoothies and flavoured drinks don’t do this, whereas fibre-rich food does. And it sits in the stomach for longer. In your gut, the first “stop eating” sign is triggered by fat. “Don’t be scared of healthy fats — nuts, seeds, oily fish, Evoo [extra virgin olive oil], fermented dairy,” she says. Then the mechanism gets to work, responding to fibre, protein and fat. Further down, there’s another fullness mechanism stimulated by protein. “That’s why eating a high-protein meal will keep you full for much longer.”

  1. Understanding insulin is key to health

Key to managing our weight — and health — is understanding the hormone insulin. When insulin is in the blood, you’re in energy “storage” mode, Stokholm says. Only when it drops can you use your fat stores. But many of us eat and live in ways that mean we frequently have higher insulin levels, so we’re constantly in energy storage mode. Over time this can lead to insulin resistance — a build-up of glucose in the bloodstream. It’s the root cause of “all the things we’re most likely to die from — strokes, heart disease, dementia, type 2 diabetes”.
While many people with obesity have higher insulin levels, she says, “a lot of people who appear to have a healthy weight are insulin-resistant”. When Stokholm’s blood sugar was erratic (she often felt faint and “sugar hangovers” left her hungry and lethargic), she wore a continuous blood glucose monitor for two weeks to learn how foods affected her. She discovered “even 100 per cent fermented rye bread spikes my blood sugar quite a lot”. She still eats bread, but “it’s not my main carbohydrate. I try to mix things up,” opting for quinoa, bulgur wheat, pearl barley, spelt, coloured rice, beans, legumes and different varieties of potato.

  1. Time-restricted eating improves metabolic flexibility

“Most people have a huge eating window. They’ll start very early in the morning and they’ll keep eating right until before they go to bed,” Stokholm says. Consequently, their insulin stays high for too long. Stokholm advocates TRE (time-restricted eating) “so you let your insulin fall during the day”. Her eating window is midday to 8pm. However, “you get the same metabolic benefits from a ten-hour eating window as you do from eight”. So, you could have breakfast at 8am, and “nothing crosses your lips past 6pm”. Stokholm eats at predictable times — if your body knows when to expect food, it will spike ghrelin at the appropriate hour. But, she warns, “this will only work if you’re appropriately stimulating your fullness mechanisms”. Metabolic flexibility essentially means that when you run out of glycogen, your body can access your fat stores for energy. For some, that happens overnight if they haven’t eaten for 12 hours; for others, it takes longer. Stokholm says, “If you have very high insulin levels, you’re dependent on glucose,” so becoming metabolically flexible can take weeks. But if you let your insulin fall by consistent TRE, you’ll eventually “flip the metabolic switch”.

  1. Stick to black coffee or green tea between meals

Between meals, Stokholm doesn’t graze, snack, chew gum or drink anything artificially sweetened or sugary — because doing so signals to the body that food is coming. “Your pancreas will release more insulin each time you are exposed to flavour,” she says, “turning that fat-storing switch to on mode all day.” In other words, even if something doesn’t contain calories, swirling a sweet taste in your mouth can spike insulin, just from the taste alone. “If you spike your insulin but you don’t have any calories coming in, that can then cause a paradoxical blood sugar dip.” She explains how the brain and body then think, “Oh no, we’re running out,” so they shoot up ghrelin, resulting in “hanger”. What doesn’t spike insulin? Anything bitter, like black coffee, black tea, green tea or plain water.

Dr Camilla Stokholm: “Don’t be scared of healthy fats — nuts, seeds, oily fish and extra virgin olive oil“

  1. If you’re a high-achiever, beware of the effect of stress on your weight

We think we have lousy willpower if we can’t stop eating when full or not hungry, “but actually it’s much more complicated than that”, Stokholm says. “If you’ve got chronic stress — and therefore raised cortisol — it tickles your hedonic appetite pathways and makes you not just hungry, it makes you pine for food.”
Say you’re confronted by a tiger, she says. “Cortisol suddenly releases your blood sugar so you can run away. But if you let it bubble away long term, you’re constantly letting your blood sugar be a bit too high.” It pushes up your background insulin, she says, adding: “And through that you store more fat, become more resistant to insulin, and it becomes a vicious cycle.” It’s common, Stokholm says, “especially with high-achievers”. And raised cortisol is often “the missing puzzle piece” when their weight and health is a struggle.

  1. No need to eat ‘breakfast food’ for breakfast

Stokholm doesn’t eat much “breakfast food”. Instead she’ll have a bowl of giant Greek beans, roasted squash, olives, pickled red onions, feta and jarred artichoke hearts with extra virgin olive oil. Or cannellini beans with radishes, pea shoots, fennel, cucumber, avocado, jarred artichoke, fresh mint, extra virgin olive oil, a squeeze of lemon juice, plus leftover potato and tinned mackerel. “I often don’t distinguish what I eat at different meals any more. My ‘breakfast’ is often just leftovers.” Too often, her patients choose breakfasts that spike their blood sugar — sweet, simple carbohydrates, very little fibre, little protein or fat — then soon feel hungry. Keep it savoury “with a decent portion of protein and plenty of fat,” she advises. Swap cereal for eggs, salmon and tofu. For a bit of sweetness, have full fat Greek yoghurt with nuts, seeds and berries, which are “very low sugar compared to other fruits”. Stokholm eats about two portions of fruit daily and always after meals to lessen the glucose spike.

  1. Be a microbiome enthusiast

If you feed your microbiome food that it loves, like prebiotics — found in asparagus, bananas, oats, rye and mushrooms — Stokholm says the microorganisms “will produce medicines that will bring your blood sugar down”. A well-fed microbiome also produces more satiety hormones, she adds, which can directly alter your cravings too, since if you eat more plants “you support the bacteria that like to feed off those plants, and they’ll signal to your brain: eat more of this”.
Stokholm always has a “nice crunchy salad with vinaigrette” before dinner. The fibre helps to stabilise blood sugar and “entertains” her gut bugs. She’s a big fan of asking “What can I add to this?” Try seeds, pesto, tahini or salsa

Does this sound too holy? Stokholm’s approach simply celebrates good food. And if you want pudding? Have it and enjoy — just not every day. And while she doesn’t generally drink much alcohol, if on holiday or celebrating she’ll “easily” exceed the recommended 14 weekly units. “I don’t overthink it. Not everything I do is for my health,” she says. “Life is to be lived.”

What Your Doctor Eats by Dr Camilla Stokholm (Ebury, £16.99).

Anna Maxted | The Times & The Sunday Times

Anna Maxted has been a freelance writer for more than 30 years, for a variety of national newspapers and magazines. She has written features for Times2 and the Weekend section since 2013, and is the a

https://www.thetimes.com/profile/anna-maxted

OP posts: