Oprah Opens Up About Obesity, GLP-1s and Her Healthy New Life: 'I've Never Felt Stronger' (Exclusive)
- - Oprah Opens Up About Obesity, GLP-1s and Her Healthy New Life: 'I've Never Felt Stronger' (Exclusive)
Eileen FinanDecember 30, 2025 at 7:30 PM
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Jamie Green
Oprah Winfrey -
In a new PEOPLE cover story, Oprah Winfrey reveals what her life has been like since starting GLP-1 weight loss medication two and a half years ago
The icon has co-written a new book about obesity and opens up about her painful, public struggle with her weight and why she now feels "free"
Winfrey, who will turn 72 in January, says she's "more alive and more vibrant than I've ever been"
Makeup-free and still in loungewear as she joins a morning Zoom call from her hotel room in Australia, Oprah Winfrey is describing her recently consumed breakfast: âIâve just had a croissant. And I ate the full thing.â
Not long ago, she explains, a buttery indulgence would have been an all-day obsession.
âI would have been thinking, âHow many calories in that croissant? How long is it going to take me to work it off? If I have the croissant, I wonât be able to have dinner.â Iâd still be thinking about that damn croissant!â This morning, however, she is blissfully unbothered: âI felt nothing. The only thing I thought was, âI need to clean up these crumbs.â â
The insignificance of her breakfast is a monumental shift for Winfrey, who two and a half years ago started using a GLP-1 weight-loss medication. She began taking the drug following an aha moment of understanding that she suffers from obesityâand that she canât fight it without help. âI thought it was about discipline and willpower. But I stopped blaming myself,â says Winfrey, who shares her journey in a new book with obesity expert Dr. Ania M. Jastreboff, Enough: Your Health, Your Weight and What Itâs Like to Be Free, out Jan. 13. âI feel more alive and more vibrant than Iâve ever been.â
Avid Reader Press/Simon & Schuster
Winfrey's new book, co-written with obesity expert Dr. Ania M. Jastreboff
Her new outlookâand the medicationâhas utterly transformed her life, she says. As she approaches her 72nd birthday on Jan. 29, Winfrey has gone from someone who saw exercise as punishment to happily âside-planking and deadlifting.â Sheâs also stopped drinking alcohol (once, âI could outdrink everyone at the table,â she notes with a laugh) and is amazed that sheâs satisfied after she eats. âIâm not constantly punishing myself,â she says. âI hardly recognize the woman Iâve become. But sheâs a happy woman.â
Jamie Green
Oprah Winfrey photographed for PEOPLE in December.
Winfreyâs weight has been the subject of public curiosityâand tabloid fodderâfor more than four decades, ever since she starred in 1985âs The Color Purple and took her eponymous talk show into national syndication the following year.
Some of the cruelest headlines are still fresh in her mind: âOprahâFatter Than Everâ; âOprah Warned: âDiet or Die.ââ Her ups and downs were a regular punch line on late-night talk shows, starting with her first appearance on The Tonight Show in 1985, when she was goaded into agreeing to lose 15 lbs. by host Joan Rivers.
Oprah with Joan Rivers on the Tonight Show in 1985
As she built a media empire and rose to one-name star status, Winfrey remained painfully aware there was one aspect of her life that seemed out of her control. âIâve always been confident in whatever I was doing, but I was at the same time disappointed in my overweight body,â she says. âWas I embarrassed by it? Yes. Was I disappointed in myself for continuing to fail? Yes, every single time. I felt it was my fault.â And failure, she writes, âfelt doubly shameful because I have access to so much: chefs and trainers and the healthiest of foods.â
At the same time she was navigating the public humiliation, she was also contributing to the culture of weight shaming, she now admits. She spent four months in 1988 eating no solid food and ingesting shakes before appearing on her show pulling a wagon filled with 67 lbs. of fat to demonstrate how much she lostââall to prove I could get back into a pair of size 10 Calvin Klein jeans,â she writes. And she dutifully dropped 20 lbs. when Vogue editor Anna Wintour suggested doing so before posing for the cover in 1998. âI was just doing what the rest of the world was doing,â she says. âI thought I had proven that I had willpower.â
Oprah on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" in 1988
No matter what diet or exercise routine Winfrey took on, her body seemed to want to fight back, and her weight would stubbornly return to 211 lbs. (a concept her coauthor Dr. Jastreboff calls your bodyâs âEnough Point,â a set weight your body maintains based on environment and genetics). Knee surgery in 2021 allowed her to get back on her feet without pain, and she began hiking daily and eating a single midday meal. But even after taking on 10-mile hikes, she discovered sheâd gained 8 lbs. âI couldnât believe it. My body said, âWe trying to get back to that 211, girl. Weâre trying to get you.â â
Over the years Winfrey tried to embrace her bigger body. âI wanted to be one of those people who could be at peace with myself being overweight,â she says. âBut everything in my life, in the culture, in society, in my brain, was telling me the opposite: âYou have failed because you have not conquered this thing.â â And, she says, âI was not healthy at 211 lbs. A lot of people tell me they can be overweight and healthy. I was not. I was pre-diabetic, and my cholesterol numbers were high.â
When Winfrey hosted a special on obesity in 2023 with experts in the field, she had âan epiphany.â For years, âI avoided the word âobesity.â It connoted âout of control,â â she says. âBut I came to understand that overeating doesnât cause obesity. Obesity causes overeating. And thatâs the most mind-blowing, freeing thing Iâve experienced as an adult."
Sheâd heard about GLP-1 medications a few years earlier but dismissed them, still believing that her weight was âmy responsibility to fix.â But the revelation that obesity is a disease changed her mind. Having a medical solution felt âlike a relief . . . a gift,â Winfrey told People in 2023 when she first announced she was taking the drugs.
Despite that, only months after she started the injections, she decided to stop for a time in early 2024. She continued to eat healthy and work out, but put on weight. Now she knows the drugs will be "a lifetime thing.â
Winfrey calls the medication "a tool to help you manage the messages that are being sent to your brain about overeating." Typically she takes her shots weekly, but âsometimes I can go 10 or 12 days because I still feel the effects of the week before,â she says. Side effects have been minimal. âI had some digestion issues, so I have to drink enough water, and I have to take magnesium,â she says. âYou need to start slow and gradual. If you start by taking too much at one time, you have more of a chance of messing yourself up.â
The drugs have helped her keep weight off, but she says itâs now about more than the number. (In years past she has said her goal was 160 lbs., but she declines to share her current weight.)
The absence of food noise âhas given me a quiet strength that comes with everything I do. Everything is just calmer and stronger.â Itâs been such an important life change for her that she's paid out of her own pocket for GLP-1 medication for several acquaintances who couldnât otherwise afford it.
âIf you have obesity in your gene pool, I want people to know itâs not your fault,â Winfrey says. âI want people to stop blaming yourself for genes and an environment you canât control. I want people to have the information, whatever you choose to do with it, whether you get the medications, or whether you want to keep dieting."
Her own relationshipsâincluding with her longtime partner Stedman Graham, 74 (whoâs been ânothing but supportive,â no matter what her weight)âhave improved as well: âI feel like I have more to give to everybody. Iâm just more open to all.â Another unexpected effect of the medication: an indifference to alcohol. âI was a big fan of tequila. I literally had 17 shots one night,â she says. âI havenât had a drink in years. The fact that I no longer even have a desire for it is pretty amazing.â
Sheâs also had a change of heart about exercise. She works out six days a week for about two hours, hiking or doing cardio or resistance training. âI donât recognize the person who feels sluggish when she doesnât work out,â she says. Her hairstylist of more than a decade, Nicole Mangrum, agrees. âWhen I come in the mornings to start her hair, sheâs already on the treadmill," Mangrum says. "Sheâs looking better than sheâs ever looked and more confident. Itâs magnetic.â
Oprah/Instagram
Oprah hiking in Sydney, Australia in December
Thatâs especially evident in her newfound comfort in âhaving fun with fashion,â Mangrum says. âWhen she goes shopping, sheâll come back and do a little fashion show.â On her recent trip to Australia in December, her stylist suggested she wear only Australian designers. âThe thought of that would have sent me into a shame spiral 10 years ago,â Winfrey says. âNothing could fit, and I would have to get myself measured. I would not be able to pull clothes off the rack and wear them.â For this trip, dressing was âa delight.â
Jamie Green
Oprah Winfrey photographed for PEOPLE in December
When Winfrey comes across photos of herself over the years at sizes big and small, sheâs immediately transported. âI can tell you in any picture that pops up what was going on with my weight. Itâs all about the weight for me.â
But even with what she now knows about obesity, she says she wouldnât change a thing about her past.
âThereâs a wonderful African American spiritual that Maya Angelou used to sing: âI wouldnât take nothing for my journey now,â â she says, breaking into song herself. âIn spite of the shaming and blaming myself, I wouldnât take nothing for the journey. Whatever was happening needed to happen to get me to this point. And I rejoice at feeling liberated from the struggleâbecause I had a real public struggle. And I am healthier now.â âą
on People
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ