Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:All the "eat less" people's worlds are being rocked by glps and the more frequent recognition/diagnosis of lipedema. They've lost their moral high ground and ache to find a way to regain their superiority.
+1
That ache is so fascinating to see on this site! All these miserable, skinny women who base their self esteem on being thinner than everyone else are suddenly not so special anymore. It's entertaining.
I feel like the bitterness comes not so much from a sense of lost superiority but more from a growing realization that their self-imposed suffering was needless.
Some of you people are soo invested in this narrative that thin women are so mad about ozempic. I am thin. I have been thin my whole life. I don't get any kind of good feeling about being thinner than other people. I know a few people who have struggled with weight and use ozempic/wegovy/zepbound or whatever and are having good results - not only losing weight but feeling physically better and I am truly happy for them. I think overweight people think that other people are thinking about them wayyy more than they actually are.
Utter bs. I was thin most of my life until I was on extended bed rest when pregnant with multiples. I began gaining weight after having my children and dealing with stress from their medical issues, developmental delays. As I gained weight, my friends disappeared. My male friends were the worst. Slim women do not want to do things with overweight women. Every person who says otherwise is absolutely lying. I work with advocates for people with disabilities and do charity work and had all kinds of kind, aware friends who seemed kind and considerate. Every single woman I knew, even the overweight ones, at some point made a remark - either direct or veiled - that was insulting about my weight.
People who say they don't look down on overweight people are lying. Even overweight people look down on overweight people.