Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Truly don’t care. They don’t owe us any info about their weight.
Nobody forces anyone to give info about their weight. But liars need to just shut up. If you’re ashamed of something keep it to yourself but don’t lie. You look stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Truly don’t care. They don’t owe us any info about their weight.
Anonymous wrote:Eh, I'm on it and look and feel amazing. I'm not telling a soul. I'm accepting everyone's compliments. If people outright ask me what I did, I just say I decided to stop eating so much junk food because I wanted to lose 20 lbs. That much is true. I used to look at ultra thin celebs with awe and envy and think they had supreme willpower (I'm sure they did). Now I look and think finally there's a way for all of us to achieve that without needing to be ultra disciplined. It's so freaking fabulous. If Mariah took Ozempic, I couldn't care less. She's struggled with weight for years and was looking fat and unhealthy bursting out of her tight evening gowns. I'm sure she felt gross, too. Bless the inventors of GLP-1s - truly life changing for me. I was never fat, but I wasn't as thin as I always wanted to be, and I was constantly obsessing over food and hating myself over what I ate and weighed. Now I am effortlessly slim and no longer make emotional eating decisions. I eat what's healthy and I eat far less than I used to, all while feeling totally satisfied.
Anonymous wrote:They owe us nothing unless they’re schilling a weight loss plan without admitting to their GLP use, like non celebrity amy bailey (beachbody hun) is. I hope those ones get sued for fraud otherwise don’t care at all what someone does with their body
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Truly don’t care. They don’t owe us any info about their weight.
+1
It’s none of our business.
Anonymous wrote:All these people who say it doesn’t matter are wrong. If a celeb is promoting one way to fitness and health, and yet they took a different, more efficient, but costly path, at best they are lying, but at worst they are personally unethical and business frauds.
If a celeb isn’t promoting anything, then their personal life is their own thing. But, when a celeb draws attention to their weight loss, calls the loss one thing but it’s another, or promotes a solution contrary to their own, transparency is required.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder about the side effects
Remember phen-fen? My aunt did get very skinny on it...she also had 5 heart attacks.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder about the side effects