GLP Hunger Isn't Always Linear - Why Higher Doses Aren't Always the Answer
This post is for educational and research purposes only. This is not medical advice. A lot of people think appetite suppression on GLPs works like a straight line - you take it, hunger goes down, end of story. For some people, that's true. For others? Not so much. You're going to have periods where you feel like you're not even on a GLP. Intense hunger. Food noise. Cravings out of nowhere. A Real-World Example During the holiday season, someone might be sitting at 4mg of Retatrutide and still feel hungry all the time. Food noise is loud. Cravings are constant. This can happen even while eating at maintenance or above maintenance calories. The natural thought is that something must be broken, or the dose needs to go up. But that same 4mg dose, when someone gets a little busier, isn't sitting around snacking throughout the day, and has more structure in their routine? The food noise quiets down. The appetite suppression kicks back in. Same peptide. Same dose. Different results. It all comes down to routine, environment, habits, and timing. The Lesson Here Sometimes you're going to have to fight through cravings regardless of your GLP dose. That doesn't automatically mean you need to go higher. Before reaching for a higher dose, ask yourself: โ Has my routine changed lately? โ Am I snacking more out of boredom or habit? โ Am I eating foods that trigger more cravings? โ Is stress, sleep, or hormones playing a role? โ What does my environment look like right now? These factors matter more than people realize. When Should You Actually Go Up? If you've adjusted lifestyle factors and the hunger and food noise are still consistent for 4-6 weeks, then it might be time to consider increasing the dose. But that's the key - consistent for 4-6 weeks, not just a rough week or two. If It Feels Like Something Is "Broken" If the initial boom effect isn't there anymore, or it feels like the peptide stopped working, that's not always the case. Sometimes it just takes time. Especially for anyone who feels like the weight just won't fall off - time is going to be the key to everything here. Not a higher dose. Not a new peptide. Time.