What to expect when you start semaglutide or tirzepatide — the small things nobody warned you about, and the bigger things that actually matter.
GLP-1 receptor agonists — semaglutide, tirzepatide, and the next generation behind them — are the first weight medications in two decades that move the needle on body weight without requiring a daily decision to skip dessert.
That doesn't mean they're easy. The first month is a settling-in period. The food you used to crave at 9 p.m. doesn't sound interesting anymore. The portion size that used to fit you fits half as much. People around you notice that you eat slower.
GLP-1 is a hormone your gut releases after a meal. Semaglutide is a long-acting version of it. The drug slows gastric emptying, blunts the post-meal blood sugar spike, and — most importantly for the weight signal — turns down the food-noise loop your brain runs in the background.
The result, for most clients, is fewer thoughts about food, smaller meals that satisfy, and a slow downward drift on the scale. The drift is the goal. Clients who push hard on dose escalation looking for faster numbers usually pay for it with side effects.
Both semaglutide and tirzepatide are titrated — you start low and step up over time. The ladder isn't optional; it's how your clinician manages side effects while your body adapts. What follows is the shape of that ladder, not your prescription — the exact doses and timing come from your clinician and the label on your pen.
Stepping up slowly is the single biggest lever on how you feel. The same dose that's miserable when you rush to it is often fine once your body has had a few weeks at the level below.
If a step-up week is rough, the move is to hold, not to push forward. The medication works at every rung of the ladder. There's no prize for reaching the top dose fastest — there's only a body that adjusts, or doesn't.
Most clients have some side effects. The ones we'd tell a friend about over coffee:
The most common. Usually peaks in the 24-48 hours after the shot, fades by the third day. The trick is to eat smaller, more often, and to favor protein over carbs in the meals around your injection day.
Slower gut motility means slower transit. Drink more water than feels reasonable. Magnesium glycinate at night helps most clients; we can write for it on your next refill if you want.
The first two weeks of a step-up can flatten your energy. Most clients adjust within a week. If fatigue persists past two weeks at a new dose, message the care team — sometimes we hold the step-up.
Severe abdominal pain that doesn't go away within hours, gallbladder symptoms (sharp upper-right pain after meals), persistent vomiting that prevents you from keeping fluids down — these get a message to the care team the same day, not at your next scheduled visit.
Clients who do well on GLP-1 don't outsource the rest of their lifestyle to the drug. They use the appetite reduction as cover to rebuild habits that didn't work before.
Aim for 100-130 g of protein a day. With the appetite reduction GLP-1 gives you, this requires intention. Greek yogurt for breakfast, a real-portion-of-fish lunch, a leaner-than-usual dinner. We don't write protein-shake prescriptions, but most of our clients end up using one a day.
Lean mass is harder to keep when you're losing weight quickly. Two strength sessions a week — anything that asks you to move loaded weight — protects against losing muscle along with fat. The room you have to add this back is exactly the room GLP-1 creates by quieting the food noise.
Sleep regulates the hormones that GLP-1 doesn't touch — leptin, ghrelin, cortisol. Aim for seven hours. The clients who plateau and can't figure out why are usually the clients sleeping six.
Most plateaus break with a sleep audit and a strength session, not a dose escalation. We'll tell you that before we titrate up.
GLP-1 isn't a forever drug for most clients. The current model is to find a stable maintenance dose, hold it for six to twelve months while body composition catches up to the new set point, then step down on the same ladder you came up.
The clients who maintain their loss are the ones who used the GLP-1 window to build habits that work without it. We talk about this on every visit, starting from the first one. That's not because we doubt the drug. It's because we know how the next few decades of your life look — better with the habits intact than with the prescription on autopay forever.
Written for the Meridian Health care team and their patients. Read it once, refer back when something changes, share with the people you'd actually want to share it with.
Nothing here replaces a visit with your clinician — it sets the table for one.