Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have one friend whose mother was a beauty queen and she takes after her mother. She still looks great at 60+. She's definitely used GLP1s recently but who hasn't.
Nobody in my circle is taking any GLP1s. Who are you hanging out with?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have one friend whose mother was a beauty queen and she takes after her mother. She still looks great at 60+. She's definitely used GLP1s recently but who hasn't.
Nobody in my circle is taking any GLP1s. Who are you hanging out with?
They are.
Please. People I've known since college or for the past ten years and have always been a “normal” weight aren’t suddenly going to start taking weight loss drugs.
That would be a very odd decision.
And they’re not celebrities. I doubt a doctor would even be willing to prescribe it for people who aren’t overweight/obese.
Wow you're dumb. I've been a size 4 since college. I got up to a 6-8 after Covid and microdose Zepbound now at 45. Back to my happy weight and it's just a way to make weight maintenance easy. I eat small portions of whatever I like but it's used to take more effort to watch calories etc.
And it was easy to get prescribed. I used Ro. You submit your weight and height etc online. You're not getting weighed in so say whatever you want.
See that sounds miserable. I have no desire to lie to my doctors to abuse prescription drugs.
Also, the people in my circles aren’t clinging to teenage beauty standards. I agree that just about every single teen/20 something looks better if they get to the lower range of BMI weight for their height. However, between 30-50 weighing closer to the middle is much more flattering.
I don’t know anyone who wants to look like a skeleton just like nobody wants to be obese.
There is a balance and you’re on the wrong side of it.
Your friends probably know this is how you feel and that's the reason they haven't mentioned their GLP-1 use to you.
Signed, a person who was never fat but who used GLP-1 to lose post baby weight and continues a maintenance dose because it just makes life a little easier.
12% of Americans are on weight loss injections.
I know you are responding to the negative judgment of that other poster, but really, there's no need to accuse everyone of microdosing in secret, just to make yourself feel better. I don't care what you do. I don't judge. But I do know that the majority of Americans are not using these meds, A) because they can't afford them, and B) because a lot don't care that much about their appearance.
So instead of pretending that others are lying and secretly using... just accept that different people have different priorities in life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have one friend whose mother was a beauty queen and she takes after her mother. She still looks great at 60+. She's definitely used GLP1s recently but who hasn't.
Nobody in my circle is taking any GLP1s. Who are you hanging out with?
They are.
Please. People I've known since college or for the past ten years and have always been a “normal” weight aren’t suddenly going to start taking weight loss drugs.
That would be a very odd decision.
And they’re not celebrities. I doubt a doctor would even be willing to prescribe it for people who aren’t overweight/obese.
Wow you're dumb. I've been a size 4 since college. I got up to a 6-8 after Covid and microdose Zepbound now at 45. Back to my happy weight and it's just a way to make weight maintenance easy. I eat small portions of whatever I like but it's used to take more effort to watch calories etc.
And it was easy to get prescribed. I used Ro. You submit your weight and height etc online. You're not getting weighed in so say whatever you want.
See that sounds miserable. I have no desire to lie to my doctors to abuse prescription drugs.
Also, the people in my circles aren’t clinging to teenage beauty standards. I agree that just about every single teen/20 something looks better if they get to the lower range of BMI weight for their height. However, between 30-50 weighing closer to the middle is much more flattering.
I don’t know anyone who wants to look like a skeleton just like nobody wants to be obese.
There is a balance and you’re on the wrong side of it.
Your friends probably know this is how you feel and that's the reason they haven't mentioned their GLP-1 use to you.
Signed, a person who was never fat but who used GLP-1 to lose post baby weight and continues a maintenance dose because it just makes life a little easier.
12% of Americans are on weight loss injections.
I know you are responding to the negative judgment of that other poster, but really, there's no need to accuse everyone of microdosing in secret, just to make yourself feel better. I don't care what you do. I don't judge. But I do know that the majority of Americans are not using these meds, A) because they can't afford them, and B) because a lot don't care that much about their appearance.
So instead of pretending that others are lying and secretly using... just accept that different people have different priorities in life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have one friend whose mother was a beauty queen and she takes after her mother. She still looks great at 60+. She's definitely used GLP1s recently but who hasn't.
Nobody in my circle is taking any GLP1s. Who are you hanging out with?
They are.
Please. People I've known since college or for the past ten years and have always been a “normal” weight aren’t suddenly going to start taking weight loss drugs.
That would be a very odd decision.
And they’re not celebrities. I doubt a doctor would even be willing to prescribe it for people who aren’t overweight/obese.
Wow you're dumb. I've been a size 4 since college. I got up to a 6-8 after Covid and microdose Zepbound now at 45. Back to my happy weight and it's just a way to make weight maintenance easy. I eat small portions of whatever I like but it's used to take more effort to watch calories etc.
And it was easy to get prescribed. I used Ro. You submit your weight and height etc online. You're not getting weighed in so say whatever you want.
See that sounds miserable. I have no desire to lie to my doctors to abuse prescription drugs.
Also, the people in my circles aren’t clinging to teenage beauty standards. I agree that just about every single teen/20 something looks better if they get to the lower range of BMI weight for their height. However, between 30-50 weighing closer to the middle is much more flattering.
I don’t know anyone who wants to look like a skeleton just like nobody wants to be obese.
There is a balance and you’re on the wrong side of it.
Your friends probably know this is how you feel and that's the reason they haven't mentioned their GLP-1 use to you.
Signed, a person who was never fat but who used GLP-1 to lose post baby weight and continues a maintenance dose because it just makes life a little easier.
Anonymous wrote:My prettiest friend is still my prettiest friend. Slim, porcelain skin, amazing hair, and is a super stylish/put together dresser. She works at it, of course, but she has great genes and is naturally really pretty. She’s also a kind and wonderful person who is whip smart (a writer!).
Also dying at the “no one I know uses GLP1s” PP. it isn’t my cup of tea but I know many who are microdosing for vanity weight purposes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have one friend whose mother was a beauty queen and she takes after her mother. She still looks great at 60+. She's definitely used GLP1s recently but who hasn't.
Nobody in my circle is taking any GLP1s. Who are you hanging out with?
They are.
Please. People I've known since college or for the past ten years and have always been a “normal” weight aren’t suddenly going to start taking weight loss drugs.
That would be a very odd decision.
And they’re not celebrities. I doubt a doctor would even be willing to prescribe it for people who aren’t overweight/obese.
Wow you're dumb. I've been a size 4 since college. I got up to a 6-8 after Covid and microdose Zepbound now at 45. Back to my happy weight and it's just a way to make weight maintenance easy. I eat small portions of whatever I like but it's used to take more effort to watch calories etc.
And it was easy to get prescribed. I used Ro. You submit your weight and height etc online. You're not getting weighed in so say whatever you want.
See that sounds miserable. I have no desire to lie to my doctors to abuse prescription drugs.
Also, the people in my circles aren’t clinging to teenage beauty standards. I agree that just about every single teen/20 something looks better if they get to the lower range of BMI weight for their height. However, between 30-50 weighing closer to the middle is much more flattering.
I don’t know anyone who wants to look like a skeleton just like nobody wants to be obese.
There is a balance and you’re on the wrong side of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have one friend whose mother was a beauty queen and she takes after her mother. She still looks great at 60+. She's definitely used GLP1s recently but who hasn't.
Nobody in my circle is taking any GLP1s. Who are you hanging out with?
They are.
Please. People I've known since college or for the past ten years and have always been a “normal” weight aren’t suddenly going to start taking weight loss drugs.
That would be a very odd decision.
And they’re not celebrities. I doubt a doctor would even be willing to prescribe it for people who aren’t overweight/obese.
Wow you're dumb. I've been a size 4 since college. I got up to a 6-8 after Covid and microdose Zepbound now at 45. Back to my happy weight and it's just a way to make weight maintenance easy. I eat small portions of whatever I like but it's used to take more effort to watch calories etc.
And it was easy to get prescribed. I used Ro. You submit your weight and height etc online. You're not getting weighed in so say whatever you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my case, very much no. The pretty women from my late 20s/early 30s have all either overdone the interventions and look weird, or they gained weight and drank too much and look it.
What's your background? Are these old friends wealthy because all the wealthy professional women I know who were really pretty at that age had the funds and time to keep taking care of themselves and are still really pretty now that they are 40s and 50s.