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ForumsPsychological & BehavioralBody dysmorphia after significant weight loss — July 2024

Body dysmorphia after significant weight loss — July 2024

maria_elpaso Mon, Oct 14, 2024 at 12:38 PM 15 replies 1,666 viewsPage 1 of 3
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maria_elpaso
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Sep 2024
El Paso, TX
Oct 14, 2024 at 2:03 PM#1

I've lost 82 pounds in 11 months on tirzepatide. By every objective measure, I have transformed. My doctor is thrilled. My bloodwork is incredible. I went from a size 22 to a size 12.

But when I look in the mirror, I still see the person I was. Not metaphorically. Literally. My brain has not caught up. I walk past a store window and catch my reflection and don't recognize myself — and then somehow ALSO still see myself as huge.

I went shopping last week. I kept picking up XL and XXL clothes. The sales associate gently said "honey, I think you need a medium." I almost argued with her. A MEDIUM. I haven't been a medium since high school.

I stood in that fitting room surrounded by clothes that fit and I couldn't process it. I just sat on the little bench and put my head in my hands. I don't know who I am anymore.

Does the dysmorphia ever catch up? Does your brain ever update the file?

24 6FitDadDave, RunnerRach, TrialNerd_Beth and 21 others
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BrianDallas92
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Oct 2024
Dallas, TX
Oct 14, 2024 at 2:20 PM#2

Licensed clinical psychologist here, specializing in body image and eating disorders. What you're describing is extremely common and has a clinical basis.

Body dysmorphia after significant weight loss is sometimes called "phantom fat" — your proprioceptive self-image (the internal map your brain uses to understand your body in space) was built over years at a different size. It doesn't update instantly. For some people, it takes months or even years to fully recalibrate.

Some things that help:

  • Body-neutral language — instead of trying to feel "good" about your body (which can feel fake), practice factual statements: "My body fits in this chair comfortably." "I can cross my legs now."
  • Photo comparisons — not for validation, but for reality testing. Side-by-side photos can help your visual cortex update.
  • Somatic therapy — working with a therapist who does body-based work can help reconnect your felt sense with your actual body.
  • Time — genuinely, this one is underrated. Your brain needs time to build new neural pathways around your current body.

The fact that you're aware of the disconnect is actually a really good sign. You're not in denial — you're in transition. Be gentle with yourself.

12 22mona_PHX, andrew_nyc, Dr.EndoEP and 9 others
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Dr.Martinez
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Oct 14, 2024 at 2:37 PM#3

Lost 95 lbs over 14 months. I'm 18 months post-goal and I STILL have moments where I try to squeeze through a gap I could easily walk through normally. My husband pointed it out once — "babe, you turned sideways to walk between those chairs. You have like two feet of clearance." I hadn't even realized I was doing it.

The brain updates slowly. But it does update. I'd say I feel like "me" maybe 70% of the time now. The other 30% I'm still surprised by mirrors.

Give it time. And consider therapy if you can access it. It helped me enormously.

37 6rachel_ABQ, traveltech_sara, AttorneyGrant and 34 others
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LeilaHI
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Jan 2025
Honolulu, HI
Oct 14, 2024 at 2:54 PM#4

I don't have advice but I want you to know I feel this in my bones. Lost 70 lbs, went to my high school reunion last month, and people literally didn't recognize me. One woman I'd known for 25 years walked right past me.

And I couldn't decide if I was happy or devastated. Maybe both. Because if they didn't recognize me... I don't fully recognize me either.

Identity is weird, man. We build our whole selves around being "the big guy" or "the big girl" and then that's gone and who are we?

15 18LondonLisa, mike_nyc, VendorMark and 12 others
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matt_MKE
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Sep 2024
Milwaukee, WI
Oct 14, 2024 at 3:11 PM#5

Ron, the identity thing is EXACTLY it. I was always "the funny fat friend." That was my role. I was loud and self-deprecating and the first to make a fat joke about myself before anyone else could. That was my armor.

Now the armor doesn't fit (literally) and I don't know how to be in the world without it. My therapist calls it an "identity vacuum" and says it's one of the hardest parts of major weight loss that nobody talks about.

I'm working on figuring out who I am when I'm not performing "lovable fat person." It's terrifying and lonely.

4 5DanielChem_CHI, marco_milano, pam_columbus and 1 other
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