GLP Explained: The Appetite Signal No One Talks About
Week 1 – NourishHer Education Series
As we move into a new year, I’ve noticed more conversations happening around GLP.
Friends, family, and clients are hearing about it online, talking about it in passing, and quietly wondering if it might be something they should explore for themselves.
I’m on my own GLP journey as well, using a natural, food-focused approach. But before I began, I felt it was important to slow down and really understand what GLP actually is — what it does, how it works, and why it matters.
Not to convince myself one way or another — but to make sense of the conversation.
At the start, all I really knew was that GLP is a hormone. Like many people, I had heard that if it’s “activated,” weight loss follows.
That explanation felt incomplete.
So I spent time learning more — reading, listening, and paying attention to how my own body was responding along the way.
What I’ve discovered has been eye-opening. And my hope is that by sharing what I’m learning, it brings clarity to you as well — whether you’re simply curious, actively exploring options, or just trying to understand the conversation better.
If you’re reading this, I’m glad you’re taking a moment to slow down and approach this topic with curiosity.
Because before jumping in, I found myself asking a different question:
What actually is GLP — and why does it matter?
What Is GLP?
GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) is a hormone produced in your gut when you eat — yes, simply by eating.
Its role is to help your body manage the food you’re consuming.
GLP-1 supports the body by:
slowing digestion so nutrients are absorbed more steadily
sending fullness signals to the brain
supporting balanced blood sugar after meals
In simple terms, GLP helps your body decide:
“Have I had enough?”
“Do I still need fuel?”
This signalling system has always existed — long before medications, programs, or trends entered the conversation.
GLP isn’t something foreign to your body. It’s part of how your body is designed to work.
Why GLP Signals May Not Be Working the Same Way Today
This led me to ask:
“If my body already has GLP, why doesn’t it seem to be working the way it used to?”
There isn’t one single answer — but there are some understandable patterns.
1. Our food environment has changed
Highly processed foods tend to digest quickly and may not stimulate the same fullness signals as meals that include adequate protein, fibre, and healthy fats.
When digestion happens too fast, GLP signals may be:
weaker
shorter-lived
easier to override
This doesn’t mean anyone is doing something wrong.
It reflects how much modern food has changed from the foods our bodies evolved to recognise and respond to.
2. Chronic stress affects gut–brain communication
GLP works as part of a communication loop between the gut and the brain.
Long-term stress can interfere with this signalling by:
altering digestion speed
shifting hormone balance
changing appetite cues
This is why appetite often fluctuates during busy, emotional, or transitional seasons of life.
Gut health also plays a role. When the microbiome is out of balance, signalling — including GLP — may not feel as clear or consistent.
An important fact to understand
Eating less doesn’t mean your body needs less.
When food intake naturally decreases — whether from appetite changes, life transitions, or GLP-related hunger reduction — how you eat matters more than how much you eat.
If intake drops too low for too long without prioritising protein-forward meals, the body may struggle to maintain:
muscle
steady energy
metabolic stability
This is why understanding GLP is so important.
As hunger quiets, the focus needs to shift toward food quality and nutrient density, especially adequate protein, so the body continues to receive what it needs to stay strong and supported.
Eating less can feel easier. Eating well is what keeps the body healthy.
Where Protein Fits Into the Picture
Protein plays a unique role in how GLP works.
Research consistently shows that protein:
triggers stronger satiety signals than carbohydrates or fats alone
helps meals feel more satisfying and “stick” longer
supports muscle, metabolism, and repair — especially when intake is lower
This is why many nutrition professionals emphasise protein-forward eating, particularly when appetite is reduced.
Not because protein is magic — but because it supports the body’s existing signalling systems.
Protein-Forward Is Not a Diet
This distinction matters.
Protein-forward eating is not about chasing numbers or forcing intake when the body isn’t asking for it. It’s about responding wisely when GLP quiets hunger — and making sure the food that is eaten truly supports the body.
Protein-forward eating is not about:
counting grams obsessively
pushing extreme intake
replacing real food with supplements
Instead, it simply means:
protein has a place at each meal — breakfast, lunch, and dinner
meals are built to support fullness and nourishment
the focus stays on food quality, digestion, and balance
When GLP reduces appetite, protein becomes an anchor — not because it’s trendy, but because it helps protect muscle, energy, and metabolic stability.
Protein-forward eating isn’t a rulebook.
It’s a foundation.
And understanding GLP is what helps that foundation make sense.
Why This Conversation Matters
Many people eat less and assume that automatically means things are improving.
The scale may move.
Hunger may quiet down.
And from the outside, it can look like progress.
But what I’ve learned as I’ve dug deeper into GLP is this:
eating less isn’t the same as losing fat — and it doesn’t automatically protect muscle.
GLP reduces appetite. That’s part of how it works.
But when food intake drops, the body still needs clear signals of nourishment — especially protein — to protect lean muscle tissue.
Without that support, the body may begin breaking down muscle along with fat.
And muscle matters.
Muscle supports:
metabolic stability
strength and mobility as we age
blood sugar regulation
long-term energy and resilience
On a GLP journey, the goal isn’t simply weight loss.
It’s fat loss while preserving muscle — and what you eat plays a central role in that outcome.
When Food Quality Is Low, the Body Pays a Quiet Price
When appetite is reduced, it’s easy to rely on:
refined carbohydrates
sugary foods that go down easily
highly processed, low-protein options
These foods may feel easier to eat, but they don’t send the same nourishment signals.
Over time, this pattern may contribute to:
muscle loss due to inadequate protein
unstable energy levels
blood sugar swings followed by fatigue
increased cravings despite eating fewer calories
Not because GLP isn’t working —
but because the body isn’t getting what it needs within the smaller amount of food being eaten.
GLP quiets hunger.
Protein protects the body.
That connection is often missed.
A Thoughtful Close
As someone who is currently following a natural GLP-supportive approach to encourage my body’s own GLP-1 signalling, this learning has deepened my understanding even more.
What’s become very clear is this:
Whether someone is using a prescription GLP approach or supporting GLP naturally, protein-forward eating matters.
GLP may reduce hunger — but it doesn’t reduce the body’s need for nourishment.
Protein-forward meals help support muscle, energy, and metabolic stability, which are essential for long-term health.
This isn’t about choosing one path over another.
It’s about understanding what the body needs — no matter which path you’re on.
In the next blog, we’ll take this understanding one step further and explore what makes up a protein-forward meal — and how to balance your plate in a way that supports fullness, nourishment, and success on your own journey.
Education comes first.
And when we understand our body better, we’re able to support it more wisely.