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Insights/GLP-1

What I share with my prescriber, what I keep to myself

Half of what I write down isn't for my prescriber. It's for me.

AM
AgentM Studio6 May 2026 · 1 min read

When I first started tracking I assumed the journal was for my prescriber — like a homework folder I'd hand in at the next appointment. Six months in I realised it's two things at once. There's the bit my prescriber actually needs — dose date, what changed, a flag if something felt different.

That's a paragraph. Then there's the bit that's for me — the full sentence about the week, the thing I'm noticing about myself, the question I haven't decided how to ask yet. That bit isn't medical.

That bit is mine. Titra keeps both on my device, and I decide what gets read out loud at the appointment versus what stays the private version. The boundary matters.

Titra keeps both on my device, and I decide what gets read out loud at the appointment versus what stays the private version.

Not everything I write is data.

M
AgentM Studio

Part of our GLP-1 series — field notes from building Titra.

Health · Private · An AgentM app

Get Titra

Private GLP-1 tracking that stays on your phone.

More from this cluster

GLP-126 Jun · 2 min

you're not logging for today-you — you're leaving a note for a version of you who's completely forgotten this week

GLP-126 Jun · 2 min

the thing that kills tracking isn't motivation — it's perfectionism (a record full of holes still beats memory)

GLP-125 Jun · 2 min

your prescriber sees a few minutes every few months — the in-between is the real story, and only you can record it

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