Energy. Hair in the shower drain. Arms gone soft. When you're full after three bites, you're barely getting anything in, and it shows up in places the scale doesn't. Here are 8 things I wish I'd known sooner, and the one thing I actually do about it now.
The food noise going quiet was the best thing that's happened to me in years. You hear about the nausea and the rough first few weeks going in, I did too, and I made my peace with that part. What nobody connects is the quieter side. A few months in I was finding hair in the drain, dragging by mid-afternoon, and looking up at 9pm realizing I'd had half a cup of yogurt all day. So I started reading, and talking to my doctor, and it got clear fast.
I'm full after about three bites now. Some days I look up and it's the evening and I've had a coffee and a few spoons of yogurt, and that's it.
That's the part nobody says out loud: when the food goes, everything in it goes too. Protein, iron, calcium, B12, magnesium. A 2025 review in Frontiers in Nutrition found people on these meds were coming up short on fiber, calcium, iron, magnesium, potassium and a string of vitamins.4 You can be losing weight and running on empty at the exact same time.
Run down. No gas in the tank by the afternoon. The kind of wiped-out that sleep doesn't fix.
I wanted it to be something dramatic. It wasn't. When you're barely eating, your body's running on fumes, and the dietitians who work with GLP-1 patients say low energy is one of the first things they look at. It tracks with how little you're getting in.
Clumps. My brush full after one go. It scared me more than I let on.
It's a known thing with fast weight loss and low protein and nutrient intake, and the FDA's adverse-event system has logged more than a thousand hair-loss reports tied to these meds.5 I'm not going to tell you a scoop of anything regrows hair, because it doesn't. What I'll tell you is that the day I learned the link ran through nutrition, "am I even feeding myself" stopped being a vague worry and turned into a real question.
Deflated is the word I kept coming back to. Thinner everywhere, but the tone was just gone.
My doctor said it flat out: muscle is the first thing to go with fast weight loss. A joint advisory from four big medical and obesity groups put numbers on it, in one major trial about 38% of the weight people lost was lean mass, not fat.1 Their advice wasn't to stop. It was that what you eat matters more while you're eating less, not less. Muscle is the thing holding you up.
For the first time in my life the chatter stopped. No negotiating with myself all day. I'd have given anything for that.
The catch is the hunger cues went with it. If I don't set a timer, the day just goes by and I haven't eaten. A registered dietitian at UCHealth said the thing that finally made it click for me: when you're eating about half what you used to, every bite has to count.
So I bought one, like the Harvard piece suggested. Fine first step.
But it's a handful of isolated vitamins in a pill. On the days I'm barely eating, I wanted something closer to actual food, something that covered more than a few lines on a label. That's a different thing, and it's where I landed next.
I didn't want another routine. On a morning I'm forcing myself to eat, the last thing I need is five more bottles on the counter.
AG1 is one scoop in water, a whole-food-based daily foundation of 75 ingredients, including clinically studied probiotics for your gut, and it's clinically shown to close common nutrient gaps. I drink it with my protein, not instead of it. It's the one thing I can actually get down on a low-appetite morning when solid food isn't happening.
I'll say it twice because it matters. AG1 is food-based daily nutrition. It's not a drug, it doesn't replace your medication or your protein or your doctor's plan, and you should clear anything new with whoever prescribed yours.
What it does is plain and worth doing: on the days I eat like a bird, it's how I make sure I'm at least getting something real in. For me that was the missing piece. Your doctor will know what's right for you.
Across 50,000+ verified 5-star reviews, "simple" and "every morning" are the words that come up most.
$79 a month on subscription, about $2.63 a day.
The first order comes with the welcome kit: travel packs, vitamin D3+K2 drops, a canister and a shaker. Cancel anytime.
See the AG1 offerTalk to your prescribing doctor before adding any supplement while you're on a GLP-1.
If you're eating a fraction of what you used to and you've clocked the energy, the hair, the soft arms, the nutrition underneath is worth a real look. One scoop a day covers a lot of base. Run it past your doctor, then decide.
See the AG1 offerIt's a scoop of powder in water you sip, not another meal to get through. A lot of people find a cold glass easier than solid food when their appetite's gone.
AG1 is food-based daily nutrition, not a drug. But anything you add while on a prescription should be cleared with your prescribing doctor or pharmacist first. Please do that.
A multivitamin is isolated vitamins. AG1 is a whole-food-based foundation of 75 ingredients, clinically shown to close common nutrient gaps. Different breadth, different format.
No. Protein is its own priority while you're losing weight. AG1 is the daily base alongside your protein, not a swap for it.
$79 a month on subscription, about $2.63 a day, with a welcome kit on the first order.