That’s called skinny fat. Definitely consider exercising for your bone density. You don’t want to be cute and brittle later. |
| You can't fix stupid so stop trying op. |
| It’s not Ozempic. |
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Man, the Ozempic people are really worked up tonight!!
They really seem to want us to think it was self control that brought them down from 280 to 115 in 2 months. |
I really hope it's not cancer then. |
| I guess if your friend is anorexic, then an intervention is warranted. Ozempic is just a tool that might be being abused. The real issue is that they seem to have an eating disorder. I'm not sure if an intervention will work, though. It might just further alienate you from your friend when they need you most. |
| It’s semaglutide or a cousin of it. |
So now you can judge her for this instead of being fat. Win win for you, what's the problem here? |
| Maybe my post will resonate with some of these people who clearly have some sort of body dysmorphia, and maybe they will seek some help. |
Agree. I don’t know why we don’t call obesity an eating disorder when that’s clearly what it is. (Maybe that would stop everyone enabling it.) It makes sense that people with mental health issues will abuse the drug when they are no longer getting their fix from constant eating. |
| Your friend is smart to get as low as she can, because she will gain some weight back as she ages, it's unavoidable. |
| Anyone I know who has taken Ozempic for 2+ years looks very, very old. At first they look great, but years into it, they are looking old and weak. Some get fillers and plastic surgery and even that doesn’t seem to help for very long. |
| Gross and sad. |
| Soon looking meaty but trim will be the new status look. |
Finally, my time to shine! |