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Reply to "Lily Collins is too thin in Emily in Paris"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]She’s a gorgeous young woman but I can see her bones jutting out of her chest and she looks evacuated. It’s really sad to see! [/quote] I disagree. She's average looking at best, horse-like face nepo baby with a normal, healthy looking body. You Americans are all so big that you have a distorted view of what a normal weight looks like. Also she skipped the breast / butt implants, which was a very smart move. [/quote] NP. She has acknowledged struggling with anorexia in the past. But you do you and enjoy your 800-calorie-a-day diet. [/quote] I've never counted my calories, this is why I'm thin. I also don't use food as emotional support. Imo, as a foreigner, I see that American women are chubby mostly because of emotional eating. Mental health here is s*, expensive, unavailable and women are worked like freaking field animals. Commuting hours everyday, working a million hours, coming home, working more, dealing with the kids, school, house repairs etc. No wonder most of you die in your 70s. So much work, very little joy. [/quote] Tell me where mental health support is better? I believe it is shit everywhere. [/quote] Here you go. Working and commuting less, having more leisure time, and some sort of paid mental health services would do wonders for American women. When I look at all my friends from home, all and I mean ALL went back to their pre-pregnancy weight shortly after delivery. It's not the metabolism. It was the paid 2 years maternity leave and lots of help from families. Our mothers retired financially secure in their late 50s, and had the time to help. My SIL has a free gym and restaurant at her work and takes a 2 hour break to work out and have lunch. And she has the entire month of August off. https://www.william-russell.com/blog/countries-best-mental-healthcare/#:~:text=Sweden%20scores%20consistently%20high%20in,spending%20on%20mental%20health%20services.[/quote] I’m 100% behind paid caretaker leave, but it’s not the same as mental healthcare. I’m also 100% behind national health insurance. And many of us have gyms at work (including all three places I’ve worked at). But none of this is the same as mental healthcare that would address emotional eating. You still haven’t answered the question. Plus I think a number of US workplaces like mine offer weight watchers, so there’s that. [/quote]
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