Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. She actually HAS lost some weight. July 2020 versus May 2021. But I'm guessing, like a lot of morbidly obese people, Covid really terrified her into doing it.
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I'm not seeing any noticeable weightloss. The top of her underwear and the bikini are sitting differently in location to her belly button, but she looks exactly the same size-wise in these photos.
If you're so big that you lose 100lbs and it's not readily apparent... you have a problem.... and that problem is not anorexia.
Anonymous wrote:I have suffered from ED for 20 plus years. Regardless of what she is going through, I have compassion. It is a horrible fight to recover. I can’t imagine having my living be my body and having to recover. It is an awful feeling and you hate yourself everyday.

Anonymous wrote:seriously who is this lady and why do we care? lots of people out there struggling with weight and what people think about their weight. model is a stretch
Anonymous wrote:Wow. She actually HAS lost some weight. July 2020 versus May 2021. But I'm guessing, like a lot of morbidly obese people, Covid really terrified her into doing it.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think that you can become that obese without an eating disorder. I'm not sure if Anorexia is the right word for it though. Obese people tend to binge on food and then go on extreme diets. I think that is fundamentally different from an anorexic who has issues with perfectionism. Just throwing that out there, American Psychology Association. For free.
Actually, you can. Imagine eating an extra slice of pizza or dessert every day— so 500 calories more than your body needs to maintain the same weight. It’s not binging, but it adds up over time. On top of that, many people who lose substantial amounts of weight need fewer calories to maintain that weight vs someone of the same weight who has never lost substantial weight. So, as an example, a formerly obese person might maintain a weight of 1XX pounds on 1200 calories while someone who has never been obese might maintain the same weight on, say 1600 calories. So the formerly obese person can regain weight very quickly on what objectively might be a fairly standard diet, or even on a relatively restricted diet.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think that you can become that obese without an eating disorder. I'm not sure if Anorexia is the right word for it though. Obese people tend to binge on food and then go on extreme diets. I think that is fundamentally different from an anorexic who has issues with perfectionism. Just throwing that out there, American Psychology Association. For free.