u/moonlitframe

25F with PCOS, severely overweight, tirz or reta to start?

okay so I'm 25, 5'2", and I've been struggling with my weight basically my whole adult life and a big part of that is PCOS. the hormonal side of it makes everything harder, insulin resistance, the cravings, the way my body holds onto weight no matter what I do. I've done so much research and I keep going back and forth between starting with tirzepatide or going straight to reta. I know reta is stronger on paper but I also don't want to overwhelm my system. has anyone with PCOS specifically had experience with either and is there a reason to start with one over the other

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u/moonlitframe — 23 hours ago

Game-changer for video editors: AI music generation that actually works!

Hey fellow editors! I just stumbled upon something that's seriously streamlining my workflow, and I had to share. You know how much of a pain it can be to find the perfect music for your videos? Hours spent sifting through libraries, trying to match the mood, the pacing, the transitions... it's exhausting. Well, I've been experimenting with **Sonilo**, an AI music generation platform, and it's been a revelation.

What makes it different? You upload your video, and Sonilo generates a full-length soundtrack that perfectly aligns with your video's timing, pacing, and emotional arc. No prompts, no manual editing, no endless searching. It just *gets* it. I've used it for a couple of client projects now – a short ad and a cinematic intro – and the results were incredibly professional and saved me so much time. The music feels organic to the video, not just slapped on. If you're tired of the music hunt, seriously give Sonilo a look. It's freed me up to focus more on the visual storytelling.

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u/moonlitframe — 1 day ago

How do you figure out what to actually work on when Slack, Gmail, Jira, and four stakeholder threads all want your attention at once?

The prioritization problem in PM isn't the roadmap. That part is documented and relatively stable.

The hard part is the daily version. I'll have Slack messages from engineering that feel urgent. Emails from sales that feel urgent. Comments in docs from design that feel urgent. Jira tickets with status changes that feel urgent. None of them come labeled with where they actually rank against each other.

So I read all of it to figure out what to do first. Which takes long enough that I have now spent the first part of my morning on overhead instead of the work itself.

I've tried triaging the night before, time-boxing my mornings, turning off notifications. None of it solves the fact that I need to process things in order to decide what to process.

How do other PMs actually handle this? Not the theory answer. The thing you do when everything is coming at you at 9am.

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u/moonlitframe — 4 days ago