She Lost 160 Pounds With Ozempic, But That’s Only Half the Story (3 of 3)

The candidness struck a nerve. Thousands of users flooded Amy’s videos thanking her for “keeping it real” and showing the not-so-glamorous side of extreme weight loss. Others shared their ownexperience. Some were considering Ozempic, others had already started and were bracing themselves for the same skin situation.
Still, Amy’s message stays hopeful. She’s proud of her progress and doesn’t regret using Ozempic one bit. In fact, she says it saved her life and gave her the push she needed to finally stick with her goals. That doesn’t mean life has been easy for her. Amy’s transformation brought mental and emotional baggage along with the physical changes. Losing weight so quickly meant that her mind hadn’t fully caught up with her body. She describes it as “being a new person in the same skin, both literally and figuratively.”
And then there’s the practical side: excess skin removal surgery is expensive. Most insurance companies won’t cover it unless it’s medically necessary, so Amy’s now navigating a whole new battle trying to raise funds for the procedures she needs to feel fully at home in her body. She’s transparent about this, too, recently launching a GoFundMe for anyone who’d be willing to help her out.
Amy’s story is a poignant demonstration that even “miracle” weight-loss journeys have their dark twists. She admits that she’s not trying to tell people to use Ozempic or sell some “toad oil” fantasy. She’s just telling her followers how things are in the real world with all the candid details: loose skin, mental adjustments, financial hurdles, and all.
And that’s what’s made her so relatable. Whether you’re on your own weight-loss journey or just trying to sort through the hype around Ozempic, Amy offers something rare on the internet—honesty.
In the sea of AI-generated beauties, edited selfies, and fake “after” photos, she’s the one lifting the curtain to show what it really looks like to lose 160 pounds in less than a year.