I didn’t till a couple of months in when I knew it was working. The way I look at it it is my friends and family, people I love, care about or like, so I’m not going to pretend to them and lie by omission that I was suddenly able to do it myself. I wasn’t going to make anyone feel bad as they couldn’t as some had weight issues themselves.
my husband takes a different approach, our close social circle as said know, and our families, but that’s where he doesn’t go further so all his other mates, like friends he does golf with etc, he doesn’t tell, but he simply doesn’t engage on it at all.
he said he has had some comments from friends and people af work on his weight loss, and he’s responded with yes I feel great for it and shut it down. So he doesn’t go on about diets or something, he just simply doesn’t engage at all. For him it’s not up for discussion.
i also don’t discuss it at work, and don’t engage, but all my friends know and as said, I’ve now four on them. When I first started it was more taboo than it is now though, and I do recall the rather gobsmacked look on folks faces when I said, but after a few months of me shrinking , everyone was wanting to go on them.
i see no shame in it though, in fact im proud of it, proud of researching it, proud of earning enough to pay for it, proud of the lifestyle and diet changes I’ve made on it, proud of taking control of my health. But I don’t think men really think about it as deeply, at least my husband doesn’t. Likely as they don’t feel the same societal pressures women feel over weight, so for them admitting their taking drugs to drop weight feels a little vain and embarrassing.