Anonymous wrote:You sound like a bad friend tbh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know anyone like this, but it stands to reason that some people who suffer from eating disorders will abuse the drug. That's why there should be regular in-person medical checks for this medication.
Agree. [b]I don’t know why we don’t call obesity an eating disorder when that’s clearly what it is. ([b]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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The friend who was fat for 20+years and took Ozempic and started losing weight and people made a big deal about it and now they can’t stop? Now they say”I need to lose a few more pounds.” And they are literally skin and bones. Zero muscle. No muscle at all, but very thin.
So now you can judge her for this instead of being fat. Win win for you, what's the problem here?
Anonymous wrote:There are 3 50-something wealthy women in my neighborhood that have literally 'disappeared'. These women were not fat, not even chubby prior to vanity dosing Ozempic.
The 3 all happen to be petite (short)--now their bodies resemble 80-something/7-year old boys. That's the only way I can describe it. It looks like they buy their jeans at Baby Gap, only they have gone from looking and moving youthfully--to looking 80. They look like they are about to snap in half. One fall could knock them out. Their faces have aged tremendously.
They appear to be loving it--so who knows. And, no, I'm not jealous. I am the same age and muscular, work out, eat healthy but not starving myself to get to some absurd bird-like body.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know anyone like this, but it stands to reason that some people who suffer from eating disorders will abuse the drug. That's why there should be regular in-person medical checks for this medication.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Anonymous wrote:I really don't see the need to talk about that friend, no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do, they are literally killing themselves. So, yeah, unlike you I care.
This. Two of my sisters are skin and bones. But they won’t stop. They look ragged and unhealthy, but seem to feel glamorous in their newfound thinness.
These drugs are making an already screwed up thin culture even worse.
Are you overweight yourself?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do, they are literally killing themselves. So, yeah, unlike you I care.
This. Two of my sisters are skin and bones. But they won’t stop. They look ragged and unhealthy, but seem to feel glamorous in their newfound thinness.
These drugs are making an already screwed up thin culture even worse.
Are you overweight yourself?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do, they are literally killing themselves. So, yeah, unlike you I care.
This. Two of my sisters are skin and bones. But they won’t stop. They look ragged and unhealthy, but seem to feel glamorous in their newfound thinness.
These drugs are making an already screwed up thin culture even worse.
Anonymous wrote:I do, they are literally killing themselves. So, yeah, unlike you I care.