Newsletter Subject

The Weight-Loss Drug Revolution Won’t Save Us

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Sun, Jan 21, 2024 11:00 PM

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Every morning, before I go downstairs, I step on a scale. My goal is to see as low a number as possi

Every morning, before I go downstairs, I step on a scale. My goal is to see as low a number as possible, so I take no chances. I do not wear clothes when I weigh myself. I use the toilet beforehand but do not drink any water. Sometimes I even suck in my gut while standing on the scale, as if rearranging my torso to look more superficially flattering will somehow change the number glowing back at me. I have an ideal weight in mind for myself: 210. The scale rarely, if ever, hits this magic number. When it goes higher, particularly if it nears 220, my brain instinctively conducts a mental inventory of the previous day’s eating, looking for the primary culprit. It was the cookies. You had too many cookies. Today you will not eat cookies. And then I begin my day with the appropriate amount of shame. This routine constitutes progress for me. I am healthy for my age (47), although I didn’t arrive at this point without a struggle. I was an overweight child who never weighed myself because I knew what I’d have to confront if I did. The word husky still triggers me. I still have stretch marks on my sides from my love handles breaking contain. I still have breast tissue. I went to a weight-loss program in middle school that accomplished nothing except making me feel like I was at fat camp. I topped the dreaded scale at 280 in college, then dropped back down to 200, then gained 60 of it back more than a decade later, and then dropped the weight again. I have tried fad diets, exercise, posting my weight daily on social media, calorie counting, intermittent fasting, you name it. Some of those weight-loss schemes worked, others did not. In the end, always in the end, the scale served as the final arbiter of how much that month’s scheme had succeeded. How much I had succeeded. I needed that scale. I fucking hated that scale, and still do. [View in Browser]( [Men's Health]( [SHOP]( [MVP EXCLUSIVES]( [SUBSCRIBE]( [Alternate text] THIS WEEK'S MUST-READ [Alternate text] [The Weight-Loss Drug Revolution Won’t Save Us]( [The Weight-Loss Drug Revolution Won’t Save Us]( [Every morning, before I go downstairs, I step on a scale. My goal is to see as low a number as possible, so I take no chances. I do not wear clothes when I weigh myself. I use the toilet beforehand but do not drink any water. Sometimes I even suck in my gut while standing on the scale, as if rearranging my torso to look more superficially flattering will somehow change the number glowing back at me. I have an ideal weight in mind for myself: 210. The scale rarely, if ever, hits this magic number. When it goes higher, particularly if it nears 220, my brain instinctively conducts a mental inventory of the previous day’s eating, looking for the primary culprit. It was the cookies. You had too many cookies. Today you will not eat cookies. And then I begin my day with the appropriate amount of shame. This routine constitutes progress for me. I am healthy for my age (47), although I didn’t arrive at this point without a struggle. I was an overweight child who never weighed myself because I knew what I’d have to confront if I did. The word husky still triggers me. I still have stretch marks on my sides from my love handles breaking contain. I still have breast tissue. I went to a weight-loss program in middle school that accomplished nothing except making me feel like I was at fat camp. I topped the dreaded scale at 280 in college, then dropped back down to 200, then gained 60 of it back more than a decade later, and then dropped the weight again. I have tried fad diets, exercise, posting my weight daily on social media, calorie counting, intermittent fasting, you name it. Some of those weight-loss schemes worked, others did not. In the end, always in the end, the scale served as the final arbiter of how much that month’s scheme had succeeded. How much I had succeeded. I needed that scale. I fucking hated that scale, and still do.]( [READ MORE]( [Alternate text] [Last-Minute Valentine’s Day Gifts That Aren't a Box of Chocolates]( [Last-Minute Valentine’s Day Gifts That Aren't a Box of Chocolates]( [Quick-shipped picks that are fun and creative.]( [READ MORE]( [This 4-Week Workout Will Help You Build a Superhero Chest]( [This 4-Week Workout Will Help You Build a Superhero Chest]( [You'll need a cape after you finish this training plan.]( [READ MORE]( [Alternate text] [Alternate text] [10 Best Men's Quarter Zip Sweaters, Tested by Style Editors]( [10 Best Men's Quarter Zip Sweaters, Tested by Style Editors]( [J.Crew's Heritage Cotton Half Zip and Sunspel's Cashmere Zip Neck Jumper came out on top in our testing.]( [READ MORE]( [Are Nuts Good or Bad for Weight Loss?]( [Are Nuts Good or Bad for Weight Loss?]( [Dietitians explain.]( [READ MORE]( [Alternate text] [Alternate text] [Amazon's Coupon Page Is Loaded With Can't-MIss New Year Deals]( [Amazon's Coupon Page Is Loaded With Can't-MIss New Year Deals]( [Take up to 60% off across all product categories.]( [READ MORE]( [Alternate text] [14 Horror Movies We Expect to Rattle Us in 2024]( [14 Horror Movies We Expect to Rattle Us in 2024]( [It's an exciting year of remakes, reboots, and prequels.]( [READ MORE]( [Alternate text] [Puzzmo]( [LiveIntent Logo]( [AdChoices Logo]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Notice]( | [CA Notice at Collection]( Men's Health is a publication of Hearst Magazines. ©2024 Hearst Magazines, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This email was sent by Hearst Magazines, 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019-3779

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