Man you have a vendetta! You don't need to be the gatekeeper. There is no shortage of these drugs. Make the decision that is right for YOU and stay in your lane. This country has a huge obesity epidemic. |
I have never once said an ill word about a person who meets the clinical indications for taking this drug. I am not talking about obese and/or diabetic individuals. I am talking all to you bragging about your eating disorders over this thread. |
What’s my personal beef with people with eating disorders using fake health claims to justify what they do? Is that really the question? By the way, I am far from the only one commenting strongly on this topic. |
The issue is that many of us have fought for years to stay thin or "just 20 lbs overweight". We could have let it slide and then nobody would have a beef with it. Again, it's not any of your business. The one person is saying it has made them less disordered in their thoughts about food, which I totally understand, but you aren't open to hearing it. |
[img]
Welcome to the internet - if you post on it, randoms like me get to comment, that’s how this place works. |
Yes, that's exactly the question. I could see you feeling sorry for people you think have eating disorders using this method to lose more weight. Or perhaps being worried for them. But instead you seem personally angry at them. You're acting like the choice to take a GLP-1 when not obese is a personal affront to you. Is there a reason? |
+ 1. There are a few people here with very strong feelings about other people’s choices and easily throw the words anorexia, disorder eating, insane and “just hope she dies”. It makes this sub-forum one of the most rude and aggressive. |
The “jealousy” argument makes no sense to me - I don’t struggle to maintain weight, but I’m certainly not the only one here. It feels like so much wishful thinking from women who take the meds, which is of course your right! But there’s such a strong desire in some people like you to think that others think “jeez now I won’t be special because she is thin.” That’s like a 2000s era romcom mentality to me, I’ve never heard anyone express any thoughts like that. People have always been awful based on different prejudices we recognize as wrong, and until the 1970s at the absolute earliest, it was a real outlier to be heavy. But there were classist and racist and several otherizing, nasty classifications in play. This kind of use of this kind of drug is innately classist to me, so only poorer people will be stigmatized for failing to be successful enough to afford thinness. And that’s not your problem to solve, totally get it. It just sits wrong, like the worst off of us will get an enhancement, an aggravating factor to the shame. Again - not your fault. And if there are other health applications like autoimmune or dementia prevention (? No idea) elements, great. There’s just complexity around this, and I don’t think anyone should expect people to be all rah rah over privileged people microdosing, and the absence of rah rah isn’t “ooh you’re so jelly that I’m a size 23 in Mother!” I mean, come on. |
I don’t want my daughters to live in a world where eating disorders are normalized. Personally I have stated this multiple times. Again, I am far from the only one commenting. |
Who's bragging? Nobody. Just sharing experience, as the OP requested. Maybe you consider sharing stats bragging - that's probably it - and it really shows the seductiveness of thin. Someone simply states their height and weight and you call it bragging, I guess because you deem that low BMI to be desirable and thus bragworthy. It's seems silly that you give a pass to obese people taking this drug to lose weight but not to a normal weight person taking it so that it's not such a mental and physical struggle to stay healthy and slim. I watched the Oprah special about GLP-1s and she said, "All this time I thought skinny people had more willpower than I did. But now I realize, ya'll just weren't thinking about FOOD." My response to that is, as a thin person, all I ever did was think about food. When am I going to eat, what will I eat, how many calories will I allow myself, will I give in and smash an entire pint of Ben and Jerry's? And if I do, I'll starve myself the next day to make up for it. It was exhausting. And I did this for a solid 30+ years. In the last few years, with the birth of my last child and the entry to perimenopause, I just felt like I couldn't fight anymore. I gained 15 pounds during Covid and despite trying for years to lose it, I couldn't. I felt so disgusted by myself, every day. I actually feel bad for how much time I wasted obsessing about food, hating myself, fighting with myself. For the first time in my adult life, I feel a peace around food. I recognize that the way I was living was unhealthy and disordered. GLP-1s have healed me. Why hate me for that? (I don't actually care; I find your rage entertaining, so carry on, and I'll keep eagerly checking for your unhinged responses. )
|
Lots and lots of words for someone who doesn’t care. |
| I am the person who posted I am on a low dose tirzepatide with my doctor’s blessing. She believes that it is helping my autoimmune disease and that in time we will come to understand that these meds are helpful for other things and they will likely be authorized for those uses. A lot of meds are like that. They are created for one reason but then other uses are found and they get approved for them. There is no shame in taking them and the person who has such strong feelings that she says everyone has an eating disorder because they want to be thin clearly has her own issues. OP - do what works for you and don’t worry about the haters. They aren’t you or living your life. |
Different poster and fully agree. I am thin and not on GLP1 and would never shame you OP for taking them, I understand why it has been so helpful to you. The raging poster bringing ED red flags and insulting everyone she disagrees with has her own issues with food and weight to deal with. |
OP is dangerously thin though. Not just thin. |
150 and 5’6” is not “dangerously thin”. It’s on the upper end of “healthy” getting close to overweight on the BMI scale. |