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ForumsPsychological & BehavioralThe food noise is gone and honestly it is kind of unsettling — anyone have experience?

The food noise is gone and honestly it is kind of unsettling — anyone have experience?

pat_auckland Fri, Sep 12, 2025 at 2:53 PM 7 replies 1,047 viewsPage 1 of 2
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pat_auckland
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Jun 2024
Auckland, NZ
Sep 12, 2025 at 4:18 PM#1

I don't even know how to describe this without sounding dramatic, but here goes.

I'm 6 weeks into semaglutide 0.5mg. The nausea, the appetite suppression — yeah, I expected all that. What I did NOT expect was the silence.

My entire adult life, there has been a running monologue in my head about food. What am I eating next. When is lunch. Should I have that thing. Don't have that thing. Okay have half. No, the whole thing. Feel guilty. Repeat. It was CONSTANT. I thought that was just... being a person? Like I genuinely believed everyone walked around with this nonstop food chatter.

Week 3, I was sitting at my desk at work and realized an hour had passed and I hadn't thought about food once. Not once. I actually started crying at my desk because I didn't know my brain could do that.

Is this what thin people feel like all the time? Is this what "normal" is? Because if so, I am grieving every year I spent white-knuckling it thinking I just lacked willpower.

Anyone else experience this? The quiet?

9 21NurseAsh_DET, BenResearch_OR, MikeKY_noInsulin and 6 others
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nancy_portland
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1,567
Aug 2024
Portland, ME
Sep 12, 2025 at 4:35 PM#2

I'm sitting here reading this with tears streaming down my face because YES. This is exactly it.

I described it to my husband as "the TV finally turned off." He didn't understand. He was like "what TV?" And I said "exactly. You've never had a TV blaring food commercials in your head 24/7. That's the whole point."

The grief is real. I'm 44 years old. I have spent DECADES hating myself for not being able to "just eat less." And it turns out my brain was literally wired differently. I wasn't weak. I was fighting a battle other people didn't even have to fight.

Week 8 here. The quiet is still here. I protect it fiercely.

Last edited: Sep 12, 2025 at 5:35 PM
45 4KristenIndy, MarkLI_maint, Dr.PeteFamMed and 42 others
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Dr.EndoIndy
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Oct 2024
Indianapolis, IN
Sep 12, 2025 at 4:52 PM#3

Neuroscientist here (not a physician, so not medical advice). What you're describing is one of the most fascinating aspects of GLP-1 receptor agonists, and it's very much grounded in brain science.

GLP-1 receptors aren't just in the gut — they're densely expressed in several brain regions:1

  • Hypothalamus — the hunger/satiety command center
  • Nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) — processes gut-brain signals
  • Mesolimbic reward pathway — the dopamine circuit that assigns "wanting" to stimuli

The "food noise" you describe maps onto what researchers call incentive salience — the degree to which food-related cues grab your attention and trigger craving. GLP-1 RAs appear to reduce this salience by modulating dopaminergic signaling in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and nucleus accumbens.2

You weren't "weak." Your reward circuitry was simply louder. The medication is essentially turning down the volume on that specific neural signal.

I didn't know my brain could do that

This line got me. It could always do it — it just needed the right support.


1 Turton et al., "A role for GLP-1 in the central regulation of feeding," Nature, 1996.
2 Mietlicki-Baase et al., "The food intake-suppressive effects of GLP-1 receptor signaling in the ventral tegmental area," Neuropharmacology, 2014.

29 23marcus_mpls, DeniseRN_TPA, SandraNC_45 and 26 others
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adam_van
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Nov 2024
Vancouver, CA
Sep 12, 2025 at 5:09 PM#4

Bro I'm a 6'3" 280lb dude who has powerlifted for 15 years and I literally cried in a Costco parking lot because I walked past the food court and felt nothing.

Nothing. No pull. No "just one slice." Nothing.

I called my mom. I couldn't even explain why I was crying. She just said "oh honey" and let me cry.

The food noise thing is the most life-changing part of this medication and nobody warned me it would feel like this. Like being freed from something I didn't know was holding me captive.

11 11tommy_boulder, hyun_seoul, jim_asheville and 8 others
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MariaRD
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Jun 2024
New Mexico
Sep 12, 2025 at 5:26 PM#5

Pinning this thread because I think it's one of the most important conversations we have on this forum.

A lot of people come here asking about dosing and side effects, and those matter. But this — the psychological liberation of reduced food noise — is what actually changes lives.

Quick reminder: if you're finding that the emotional processing around this is intense (and it can be), please consider talking to a therapist. Grief, relief, anger about lost years — these are all valid and sometimes need professional support. See our mental health resources thread.

6 9nancy_portland, rick_sfbay, maria_elpaso and 3 others
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