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ForumsExercise & Body CompositionRucking (weighted walking) on GLP-1 — my results so far

Rucking (weighted walking) on GLP-1 — my results so far

Dr.SportsMedIN Sun, Jan 19, 2025 at 5:39 AM 36 replies 1,870 viewsPage 1 of 8
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Dr.SportsMedIN
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Indianapolis, IN
Jan 19, 2025 at 7:04 AM#1

I know this isn't groundbreaking advice but I need to share this because the difference has been INSANE.

Background: Been on semaglutide since January. First 4 months I was losing about 1.5kg/month which felt slow compared to what I see other people posting. I wasn't exercising at all — just relying on the appetite suppression.

In May I started walking 10,000 steps a day. Nothing fancy. No gym, no equipment, just walking. Sometimes around my neighborhood, sometimes on a treadmill watching Netflix, sometimes pacing around my house like a weirdo.

Results since adding walking:

  • Weight loss accelerated to 2.5-3kg/month
  • Energy levels went from "exhausted all the time" to genuinely good
  • Sleep improved dramatically — falling asleep faster, sleeping deeper
  • Mood is noticeably better. Like, my husband commented on it.
  • The "GLP-1 fatigue" I was experiencing mostly disappeared
  • Weirdly, my appetite regulation feels BETTER — more consistent hunger cues instead of the chaotic "starving then nauseous" cycle

I realize walking isn't sexy or Instagram-worthy but holy crap does it work. If you're on GLP-1 and not doing ANY movement, just start walking. That's it. That's the post.

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Dr.Martinez
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Jan 19, 2025 at 7:21 AM#2

This is actually really well-supported by the science. Walking at a moderate pace is the quintessential "Zone 2" cardio — you're keeping your heart rate in the fat-oxidation zone (roughly 60-70% of max HR) which means you're primarily burning fat as fuel.

10,000 steps is roughly equivalent to burning an additional 300-500 calories per day depending on body weight, pace, and terrain. Over a month, that's an additional 9,000-15,000 calories — or about 1-2kg of additional fat loss. Which lines up perfectly with your accelerated results.

But the benefits beyond calorie burn are arguably more important:

  • Improved insulin sensitivity — walking after meals especially helps with glucose regulation, which synergizes with how GLP-1 meds work
  • NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) — walking contributes to your total daily energy expenditure without being so intense that it spikes appetite
  • Mental health — sunlight exposure, fresh air, movement all contribute to mood regulation
  • Gut motility — walking helps with the constipation many GLP-1 users experience

Walking is genuinely underrated. It's the most accessible, sustainable, and evidence-based exercise there is.

Last edited: Jan 19, 2025 at 12:21 PM
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Dr.RheumBOS
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Apr 2024
Boston, MA
Jan 19, 2025 at 7:38 AM#3

I went from literally 1,200 steps/day (desk job, work from home, basically a sentient office chair) to 8,000-10,000 and the transformation wasn't just physical. My mental health completely shifted.

The trick for me was making it non-negotiable and also not boring:

  • Morning: 20 min walk with coffee (no phone, just thinking time)
  • Lunch: 15 min walk around the block
  • After dinner: 20-30 min walk with a podcast or audiobook

That gets me to 7,000-9,000 steps and then normal daily movement fills in the rest. Breaking it up made it sustainable — I tried doing a single 90-min walk once and wanted to die.

Last edited: Jan 19, 2025 at 1:38 PM
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FranDenver
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Oct 2024
Denver, CO
Jan 19, 2025 at 7:55 AM#4

"basically a sentient office chair" is sending me 💀 That was literally me. I worked from home, ordered everything delivery, and my step count was genuinely embarrassing. Some days it was under 1,000.

And yes, breaking it up is KEY. I also do the 3-walks-a-day approach. Post-meal walks especially help with the GLP-1 nausea — something about gentle movement after eating settles my stomach way better than sitting still.

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nick_SD_fit
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Sep 2024
San Diego, CA
Jan 19, 2025 at 8:12 AM#5

Counterpoint that I don't think gets said enough: 10,000 steps is an arbitrary number that was literally invented as a marketing slogan for a Japanese pedometer in the 1960s. It's not a magic threshold.

Recent research suggests significant health benefits kick in around 7,000-8,000 steps/day with diminishing returns beyond that. So if 10K feels overwhelming, don't let that number discourage you. Going from 2,000 to 6,000 steps is arguably more impactful than going from 6,000 to 10,000.

The best step count is the one that's MORE than what you're doing now. 🤷‍♂️

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