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How other people react when you lose weight. What to expect and why their opinions are about them, not you.

When you lose a visible amount of weight, people react. This article covers what those reactions look like, why they happen, and how to handle them without derailing your progress.
Lose 10, 20, or 30 kg (22-66 lbs) and you will hear from everyone around you. Here's what to expect:
At 92-93 kg, my neighbor and my parents both told me I looked "so thin." One asked, "Is everything okay?" I had been 10 kg lighter before and perfectly healthy. But visible change triggers visible reactions.
These responses have almost nothing to do with your goals. They come from other people's feelings, insecurities, and frames of reference.
Social life runs on signals. Your body is the most visible signal you broadcast. It's there before you say a word. Body language, posture, clothing, and weight all communicate information before any conversation starts.
When your body changes dramatically, you disrupt the image other people have built of you. They categorized you one way. Now you don't fit that category anymore. This creates discomfort for them, not you.
The reactions break down like this:
People create a version of you in their heads and store it there. You're "the big guy" or "the one who loves food" or whatever category they assigned. When you lose 20 kg, you break that category.
Some people adjust. Others struggle with it:
You might reach a point where someone who used to see you as "the heavy one" now weighs more than you. Their tone changes. Their jokes shift. That moment is strange and revealing.
These reactions aren't personal. They're about the other person working through their own relationship with body image and control.
Social meals are built around abundance. Portions are large. Courses keep coming. Saying "no thanks" draws attention. Eating differently from the group makes you the odd one out.
If you live with other people, this pressure is daily. Their cooking smells fill the house. Their snacks sit on the counter. They eat dinner while you're trying to hold your deficit. A family birthday means cake on the table. A work lunch means a restaurant you didn't choose. A weekend barbecue means someone handing you food every ten minutes.
The hardest part isn't the food. It's the social cost of saying no. People notice when you don't eat what everyone else eats. They ask questions. They push. They take it personally.
There's no way to eliminate this. But you can manage it:
You don't need to cut people off. You need to be clear about what you're doing and why, at least with the people closest to you.
This means saying things like: "I'm tracking my food right now. I'd appreciate it if you didn't offer me snacks." Or: "I'm going to eat something different tonight. It's not about your cooking."
Some people will respect it immediately. Others will push back or joke. That's normal. Hold the line anyway. You've lived with your dissatisfaction longer than anyone else. You've thought about this in ways they haven't. You don't need their permission.
Your personal reasons for doing this, whether it's fitting into clothes, improving health, gaining confidence, or preparing for an event, are yours alone.
Here's what nobody tells you: other people notice your transformation before you do. They see a different person walking toward them. You still see the old version in the mirror.
This gap creates a strange period where the world treats you differently but you haven't caught up internally. People respond to your new body. You're still responding from your old self-image.
Weight loss doesn't turn rejection into approval. What it does is remove the initial negative signal. People stop dismissing you before you've opened your mouth. You get to participate instead of being filtered out. What happens after that still depends on confidence, posture, and how you carry yourself.
The deeper work is internal. Your own critic was always louder than anyone else's.

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