Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
But you want people to fix it right? You would also LOVE to deny them the tools that make it easier/possible? Do you see how you're TA?
I think the drugs are wonderful innovation. I also think people should be aware of the mechanism of action and the downside to using them, and we should also not be clamoring for innovation to be free - e.g. people claiming it’s criminal what these drugs cost out of pocket when the compounding exceptions go away.
I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs. But hey, if you want to train for a marathon but using a shake weight and act like you did something impressive, go right ahead I guess.
The one addressing the metabolic disorder you don’t think exists beyond a “narrow” population? Ok.
Do yourself a favor since I know you can’t read the label insert anyways.
Go to most favorite LLM based AI tool and ask it why there is an obesity epidemic. Maybe even feed it a prompt where you try to blame it on metabolic disorder that is not resultant from over consumption of calorie dense foods that are widely available, along with lack of movement, stress, and poor sleep. Get that answer and come back and let us know if it’s metabolic disorder that just appeared out of nowhere as a biological mutation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
But you want people to fix it right? You would also LOVE to deny them the tools that make it easier/possible? Do you see how you're TA?
I think the drugs are wonderful innovation. I also think people should be aware of the mechanism of action and the downside to using them, and we should also not be clamoring for innovation to be free - e.g. people claiming it’s criminal what these drugs cost out of pocket when the compounding exceptions go away.
I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs. But hey, if you want to train for a marathon but using a shake weight and act like you did something impressive, go right ahead I guess.
The one addressing the metabolic disorder you don’t think exists beyond a “narrow” population? Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
What’s amazing to me is: you had no answer to the question, and then chose to spew your bullSh*t anyway.
You’re no better than any flat-earth anti-vaxxer alternative-facts imbecile who prefers to fling opinions out of their a$$ rather than look at facts and use critical thinking skills. You didn’t even google it. Or maybe you did and realized it did not support your from the a$$ theory.
This is not as simple as you think. Ask a goddamned doctor. And stop class shaming with the Walmart thing too, f*kface.
Oh look, the out of control woman who swears at posters is back.
DP but you totally deserve it. You are an insuferable moron who just loves to stir up shit and then cry foul when people react to your BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
But you want people to fix it right? You would also LOVE to deny them the tools that make it easier/possible? Do you see how you're TA?
I think the drugs are wonderful innovation. I also think people should be aware of the mechanism of action and the downside to using them, and we should also not be clamoring for innovation to be free - e.g. people claiming it’s criminal what these drugs cost out of pocket when the compounding exceptions go away.
I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs. But hey, if you want to train for a marathon but using a shake weight and act like you did something impressive, go right ahead I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
Anonymous wrote:Does everyone know that these drugs are being used off label and formally trialed right now to treat various substance abuse disorders including alcoholism and opioid addiction? Are we going to tell them that they're taking the easy way out too?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
But you want people to fix it right? You would also LOVE to deny them the tools that make it easier/possible? Do you see how you're TA?
I think the drugs are wonderful innovation. I also think people should be aware of the mechanism of action and the downside to using them, and we should also not be clamoring for innovation to be free - e.g. people claiming it’s criminal what these drugs cost out of pocket when the compounding exceptions go away.
I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs. But hey, if you want to train for a marathon but using a shake weight and act like you did something impressive, go right ahead I guess.
Of course, we accomplished something. Are you under the impression that my 70lbs weight loss came with absolutely zero effort? Are you under the impression it didn't make a huge impact on my health? Why do you, a person who has no firsthand knowledge of what it takes, feel the need to keep coming back to tell us how lame we are? Ultimately, your opinion is irrelevant (and BTW OF COURSE these drugs should be cheaper, you idiot), but I find it very curious that someone with no dog in this fight feels the need to keep coming back to mock people for working on themselves. Do you feel elevated in some way when you bully perfect strangers online? Is it some kind of insecurity that is driving this ludicrous behavior?
DP. I thought the woman who let the gym promote her was beyond lame. I’m not sure why you would defend her. Lance Armstrong really did ride his bike and train, but he was also deceitful.
That's not who you referenced above. Get real. You are calling everyone who takes these drugs lame, lazy and deceitful.
There are multiple people commenting. Scroll up, lady. You are so angry, you are not reading. This is what the poster said:
“I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
But you want people to fix it right? You would also LOVE to deny them the tools that make it easier/possible? Do you see how you're TA?
I think the drugs are wonderful innovation. I also think people should be aware of the mechanism of action and the downside to using them, and we should also not be clamoring for innovation to be free - e.g. people claiming it’s criminal what these drugs cost out of pocket when the compounding exceptions go away.
I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs. But hey, if you want to train for a marathon but using a shake weight and act like you did something impressive, go right ahead I guess.
Of course, we accomplished something. Are you under the impression that my 70lbs weight loss came with absolutely zero effort? Are you under the impression it didn't make a huge impact on my health? Why do you, a person who has no firsthand knowledge of what it takes, feel the need to keep coming back to tell us how lame we are? Ultimately, your opinion is irrelevant (and BTW OF COURSE these drugs should be cheaper, you idiot), but I find it very curious that someone with no dog in this fight feels the need to keep coming back to mock people for working on themselves. Do you feel elevated in some way when you bully perfect strangers online? Is it some kind of insecurity that is driving this ludicrous behavior?
DP. I thought the woman who let the gym promote her was beyond lame. I’m not sure why you would defend her. Lance Armstrong really did ride his bike and train, but he was also deceitful.
That's not who you referenced above. Get real. You are calling everyone who takes these drugs lame, lazy and deceitful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
But you want people to fix it right? You would also LOVE to deny them the tools that make it easier/possible? Do you see how you're TA?
I think the drugs are wonderful innovation. I also think people should be aware of the mechanism of action and the downside to using them, and we should also not be clamoring for innovation to be free - e.g. people claiming it’s criminal what these drugs cost out of pocket when the compounding exceptions go away.
I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs. But hey, if you want to train for a marathon but using a shake weight and act like you did something impressive, go right ahead I guess.
Of course, we accomplished something. Are you under the impression that my 70lbs weight loss came with absolutely zero effort? Are you under the impression it didn't make a huge impact on my health? Why do you, a person who has no firsthand knowledge of what it takes, feel the need to keep coming back to tell us how lame we are? Ultimately, your opinion is irrelevant (and BTW OF COURSE these drugs should be cheaper, you idiot), but I find it very curious that someone with no dog in this fight feels the need to keep coming back to mock people for working on themselves. Do you feel elevated in some way when you bully perfect strangers online? Is it some kind of insecurity that is driving this ludicrous behavior?
DP. I thought the woman who let the gym promote her was beyond lame. I’m not sure why you would defend her. Lance Armstrong really did ride his bike and train, but he was also deceitful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
What’s amazing to me is: you had no answer to the question, and then chose to spew your bullSh*t anyway.
You’re no better than any flat-earth anti-vaxxer alternative-facts imbecile who prefers to fling opinions out of their a$$ rather than look at facts and use critical thinking skills. You didn’t even google it. Or maybe you did and realized it did not support your from the a$$ theory.
This is not as simple as you think. Ask a goddamned doctor. And stop class shaming with the Walmart thing too, f*kface.
Oh look, the out of control woman who swears at posters is back.
Nope, different poster. And if PP gets to call people lazy, I get to call them f*kface. That's how it works.
You guys seem really in control of your emotions and actions. Not to examine there . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take trizeptide because it helps stop binge eating disorder.
When I tell the shamers that they usually change the subject.
Were you actually diagnosed with BED? I ask because tirz stopped my binging also. It has changed my life, which was formerly dominated by food obsession and disgusting, frequent episodes of smashing burgers, candy, pastries and ice cream. I never called it BED though nor did I ever receive a diagnosis. I just considered it laziness and lack of discipline on my part and I still do. Probably why I keep my lips tightly zipped about taking this med. I feel I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own - I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I stuffed my face with so much crap constantly before. It’s interesting though, if I think about it as a disorder, then it feels less shameful. At any rate, tirz has been miraculous for me. I’m back to a size 4 again and I feel beautiful, strong, happy and in control.
NP I was diagnosed when I went to an obesity specialist to try medication. Is it it’s crazy how I struggled with something for 30 years and it has immediately stopped. Zero binges in 12 weeks after having multiple per week. I even had some very stressful situations
It stopped immediately because you have a metabolic problem, and the medication addressed it. You don’t have a willpower problem, despite most of the people on this thread wanting to say so.
Where was this metabolic problem before the wide availability of extremely calorie dense and widely available shelf stable food?
Where was it? People have always had metabolic disorders that cause weight gain. It’s not like, oh, for example—hypothyroidism—is a new thing. But medications (psych meds and prednisone come right to mind) disrupt hormones and cause weight gain as well, and such medications are now ubiquitous. Probably all kinds of other endocrine disruption happening as well that we don’t know about.
Get over your nasty need to paint overweight people as sitting in front of a television pounding pizza and twinkies—it says more about you than anyone else.
What you describe is a rounding error in terms of the causes of obesity in the world. You know that, you just don’t like it. Metabolic disorder such as what you describe is very narrow whether you like it or not.
The overwhelming majority is people eating calorie dense non-satiating food in huge quantities, being overly stressed, poor sleep, and not moving enough.
Where is your evidence of this? Please include the evidence that shows them to be mutually exclusive, and for the metabolic issues to be “very narrow”?
The check out line at Costco and Walmart generally. Maybe we need a live camera feed on Saturday in Springfield to see the piles of garbage people are buying in bulk.
It’s amazing people like you are so hell bent on avoiding reality. But go ahead and continue living in the upside down where obesity is happening to people like bee stings and car accidents, and it’s all explainable by metabolic disease that fell out of the sky like locusts in biblical times.
But you want people to fix it right? You would also LOVE to deny them the tools that make it easier/possible? Do you see how you're TA?
I think the drugs are wonderful innovation. I also think people should be aware of the mechanism of action and the downside to using them, and we should also not be clamoring for innovation to be free - e.g. people claiming it’s criminal what these drugs cost out of pocket when the compounding exceptions go away.
I also think people acting like they accomplished something is lame AF, like the poster who is all happy about the marketing piece that was done without disclosing use of the drugs. But hey, if you want to train for a marathon but using a shake weight and act like you did something impressive, go right ahead I guess.
Of course, we accomplished something. Are you under the impression that my 70lbs weight loss came with absolutely zero effort? Are you under the impression it didn't make a huge impact on my health? Why do you, a person who has no firsthand knowledge of what it takes, feel the need to keep coming back to tell us how lame we are? Ultimately, your opinion is irrelevant (and BTW OF COURSE these drugs should be cheaper, you idiot), but I find it very curious that someone with no dog in this fight feels the need to keep coming back to mock people for working on themselves. Do you feel elevated in some way when you bully perfect strangers online? Is it some kind of insecurity that is driving this ludicrous behavior?