Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s amazing and incredible, but that looks like self harm.
No it doesn’t. Go away.
Starving your body is self harm.
Bodybuilders build muscle and eat 6 times a day to do it. You have no idea.
They literally starve themselves and dehydrate themselves.
Look at the incident of health related issues in bodybuilders as well as suicide rates.
Here’s what’s crazy is people align themselves with the person and then they cannot for a second see the negative.
This is a wonderful person who went through an insane experience and has turned our life into something amazing and bodybuilding is self harm.
It's not, but continue to weigh in on this from your couch. Of course it can be taken to unhealthy extremes, but this isn't that.
+1 PP has no idea if it’s even being taken to unhealthy extremes and just wants to judge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s amazing and incredible, but that looks like self harm.
No it doesn’t. Go away.
Starving your body is self harm.
Bodybuilders build muscle and eat 6 times a day to do it. You have no idea.
They literally starve themselves and dehydrate themselves.
Look at the incident of health related issues in bodybuilders as well as suicide rates.
Here’s what’s crazy is people align themselves with the person and then they cannot for a second see the negative.
This is a wonderful person who went through an insane experience and has turned our life into something amazing and bodybuilding is self harm.
It's not, but continue to weigh in on this from your couch. Of course it can be taken to unhealthy extremes, but this isn't that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Real bodybuilding and working on strength and building muscle? Awesome.
But these competitions are never healthy. It's not sustainable - the body they have in these competitions are never a body people stick with, because it's not healthy or realistic to keep.
Starving and dehydrating yourself leading up to competition is not "Strong."
Bet she can kick your ass. It doesn’t have to be sustainable.
Probably not - I workout and have lifted regularly for 10+ years.
What's the point of this, if it's not sustainable? If you don't want to be strong and fit for life?
Why are you working out and lifting? It’s not sustatinable. Eventually you will have injuries and arthritis. And only 10 years? Are you a teen?
Are you drunk?
Put down the mommy juice, and go lift something heavy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Real bodybuilding and working on strength and building muscle? Awesome.
But these competitions are never healthy. It's not sustainable - the body they have in these competitions are never a body people stick with, because it's not healthy or realistic to keep.
Starving and dehydrating yourself leading up to competition is not "Strong."
Bet she can kick your ass. It doesn’t have to be sustainable.
Probably not - I workout and have lifted regularly for 10+ years.
What's the point of this, if it's not sustainable? If you don't want to be strong and fit for life?
NP-Elizabeth Smart has been an active and fit person for a long time. She's been running, including marathons, for 10+ years! I doubt that she will stop exercising after she stops doing competitions, if she does stop. It seems like she just enjoys a challenge and new goals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Real bodybuilding and working on strength and building muscle? Awesome.
But these competitions are never healthy. It's not sustainable - the body they have in these competitions are never a body people stick with, because it's not healthy or realistic to keep.
Starving and dehydrating yourself leading up to competition is not "Strong."
Bet she can kick your ass. It doesn’t have to be sustainable.
Probably not - I workout and have lifted regularly for 10+ years.
What's the point of this, if it's not sustainable? If you don't want to be strong and fit for life?
Why are you working out and lifting? It’s not sustatinable. Eventually you will have injuries and arthritis. And only 10 years? Are you a teen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Real bodybuilding and working on strength and building muscle? Awesome.
But these competitions are never healthy. It's not sustainable - the body they have in these competitions are never a body people stick with, because it's not healthy or realistic to keep.
Starving and dehydrating yourself leading up to competition is not "Strong."
Bet she can kick your ass. It doesn’t have to be sustainable.
Probably not - I workout and have lifted regularly for 10+ years.
What's the point of this, if it's not sustainable? If you don't want to be strong and fit for life?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Real bodybuilding and working on strength and building muscle? Awesome.
But these competitions are never healthy. It's not sustainable - the body they have in these competitions are never a body people stick with, because it's not healthy or realistic to keep.
Starving and dehydrating yourself leading up to competition is not "Strong."
Bet she can kick your ass. It doesn’t have to be sustainable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s amazing and incredible, but that looks like self harm.
No it doesn’t. Go away.
Starving your body is self harm.
Bodybuilders build muscle and eat 6 times a day to do it. You have no idea.
They literally starve themselves and dehydrate themselves.
Look at the incident of health related issues in bodybuilders as well as suicide rates.
Here’s what’s crazy is people align themselves with the person and then they cannot for a second see the negative.
This is a wonderful person who went through an insane experience and has turned our life into something amazing and bodybuilding is self harm.
Anonymous wrote:Real bodybuilding and working on strength and building muscle? Awesome.
But these competitions are never healthy. It's not sustainable - the body they have in these competitions are never a body people stick with, because it's not healthy or realistic to keep.
Starving and dehydrating yourself leading up to competition is not "Strong."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s amazing and incredible, but that looks like self harm.
No it doesn’t. Go away.
Starving your body is self harm.
Bodybuilders build muscle and eat 6 times a day to do it. You have no idea.
They literally starve themselves and dehydrate themselves.
Look at the incident of health related issues in bodybuilders as well as suicide rates.
Here’s what’s crazy is people align themselves with the person and then they cannot for a second see the negative.
This is a wonderful person who went through an insane experience and has turned our life into something amazing and bodybuilding is self harm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s amazing and incredible, but that looks like self harm.
No it doesn’t. Go away.
Starving your body is self harm.
Bodybuilders build muscle and eat 6 times a day to do it. You have no idea.
Anonymous wrote:She’s amazing and incredible, but that looks like self harm.