“ This former one fifth is losing her hair because of the weekly shot.
Camila Cabello”
When will people stop abusing that drug for something it is not meant for? There are a lot of long term negative effects
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“ This former one fifth is losing her hair because of the weekly shot.
Camila Cabello”
When will people stop abusing that drug for something it is not meant for? There are a lot of long term negative effects
by Anonymous | reply 48 | January 29, 2024 4:29 AM |
Leave it to the clueless celebs to start taking Ozempic preemptively, just in case.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | January 27, 2024 8:02 PM |
Who?
by Anonymous | reply 2 | January 27, 2024 8:06 PM |
How are the long-term effects yet known?
by Anonymous | reply 3 | January 27, 2024 8:13 PM |
What about her beard?
by Anonymous | reply 4 | January 27, 2024 8:21 PM |
Her beard? Shawn and her have been broken up for a long time
by Anonymous | reply 5 | January 27, 2024 8:22 PM |
I just read that some people are going to have diarrhea for life after taking Ozempic. Is it worth it to be skinny? I don’t know that answer…
by Anonymous | reply 7 | January 27, 2024 8:33 PM |
Yes, r7.
Duh.
People smoke or coke to stay thin. Cancer and crazy. Why be a healthy fatty when you can be THIN and beautiful?
by Anonymous | reply 8 | January 27, 2024 8:39 PM |
Big hips and no tits. I think I'd switch with her (big tits and no hips here).
by Anonymous | reply 9 | January 27, 2024 8:43 PM |
OK, I'll ask. "One fifth" of what? The Fifth Dimension?
by Anonymous | reply 10 | January 27, 2024 8:46 PM |
One fifth of the Jackson 5, Rose.
by Anonymous | reply 11 | January 27, 2024 8:51 PM |
Of course it isn’t worth it. Just diet and work out. People don’t wanna work for shit. Of course there will be negative side effects. And beautiful? Ozempic people all looks crazy.
by Anonymous | reply 12 | January 27, 2024 8:51 PM |
She was a tubby fatass. She needed it.
by Anonymous | reply 13 | January 27, 2024 8:55 PM |
Pear shape was not working for her career.
by Anonymous | reply 14 | January 27, 2024 9:00 PM |
Wouldn't liposuction be much safer and effective for hip, thigh, and caboose issues? You'd be bruised and battered for a while, but at least the face remains healthy looking and once out of the post-op period, worry free.
by Anonymous | reply 15 | January 27, 2024 9:29 PM |
Her hair is falling out because Shawna braided it too tight.
by Anonymous | reply 16 | January 27, 2024 9:34 PM |
I thought it was a monthly injection?
I agree with the poster above that more longitudinal data would be helpful here.
Also, it’s a little freaky that another telltale sign of Ozempic/Wegovy weight loss emerged recently. “Spider fingers” in addition to sunken facial features, which can look like AIDS related lipodystrophy.
by Anonymous | reply 17 | January 27, 2024 9:34 PM |
You have to protect yourself from womanly tits. Yuk!
by Anonymous | reply 18 | January 27, 2024 9:58 PM |
The "spider fingers" are what the person would have looked like if they hadn't been fat. I hear this all the time, fat person loses a large amount of weight, and everyone freaks out like they have AIDS or cancer, it's the skinny old dried face of a normal weight person. Plus whatever stretched out skin.
by Anonymous | reply 19 | January 27, 2024 10:02 PM |
R19 no. Please already. When you lose weight the right way you don’t look like a cancer patient.
by Anonymous | reply 20 | January 27, 2024 10:07 PM |
Hair loss often accompanies significant or rapid weight loss. It’s not a side effect of Ozempic drug itself.
by Anonymous | reply 21 | January 27, 2024 10:10 PM |
Nobody will notice. It's not like she was ever attractive in the first place.
by Anonymous | reply 22 | January 27, 2024 10:34 PM |
Some of my friends on these meds look like melted candles, or Munch’s The Scream.
by Anonymous | reply 23 | January 27, 2024 10:52 PM |
I tried Ozempic and experienced significant hair loss. It was not due to a severely restricted diet or significant weight loss. I went off it, but more because it made me too nauseated and I thought I could loose the weight without it. I was wrong.
I don’t think it’s a common side effect, but it definitely happened to me.
by Anonymous | reply 24 | January 27, 2024 11:50 PM |
OP, that site is fake. Enough.
by Anonymous | reply 25 | January 28, 2024 12:08 AM |
R12, just dieting and working out doesn't have any impact when you have a genetic predisposition to T2 plus - in my case - several neurological conditions which drive obesity and T2. Other people have thyroid issues, metabolic syndrome, etc.
And no, I am not fat. I do heaps of things to not be fat, but it is fucking exhausting and expensive.
by Anonymous | reply 26 | January 28, 2024 1:33 AM |
r26 you can't explain to many people that ALL HUMAN BODIES DON'T WORK THE SAME. They are convinced it's a moral failing, not a physiological one. To them, EVERY BODY will work exactly the same, and if yours doesn't fall in line, it's YOUR fault. Sigh. Don't try to argue with these people - it's exhausting and not worth it.
It's sad, really, that people will take whatever opportunity they can to purposely ignore facts and just try to blame and shame in order to feel superior to others and (I guess) better about themselves, as if they know it all about everything. Your failing to lose weight just exercise and proper caloric intake is the ONLY reason why you're overweight/fat.
by Anonymous | reply 27 | January 28, 2024 1:38 AM |
[quote] There are a lot of long term negative effects
As a matter of fact, there aren’t.
by Anonymous | reply 28 | January 28, 2024 2:02 AM |
The nausea goes away. You treat it with Zofran in the beginning and if you need to increase dosage, but it eventually goes away on its own. People have been taking it for years. My hair grows like crazy on it.
by Anonymous | reply 29 | January 28, 2024 2:08 AM |
One of my friends had a gastric sleeve when those were all the weight loss rage.
Her hair also fell out. She said it was “normal” after getting a sleeve.
Like how the fuck is that “normal” ? Especially when you’re supposed to be eating a healthier diet.
by Anonymous | reply 30 | January 28, 2024 2:10 AM |
R30 I’ve known 3 people who got that and not one lost their hair.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | January 28, 2024 2:13 AM |
Type II almost always due to being a fat pig, very little genetics in it, and fatties also tend to drink and smoke. Now, if your parents and siblings were fat, it's because you learned pig behavior and continued the cycle.
by Anonymous | reply 32 | January 28, 2024 2:20 AM |
R32 Type II, as in diabetics?
by Anonymous | reply 33 | January 28, 2024 2:23 AM |
For the person saying their friend had a gastric sleeve and lost hair: losing hair after a major surgery, ANY major surgery, is very common. it's a huge shock to the body, and it's quite normal for people to experience post-surgical telogen eflluvium, sometimes as a result of the anesthesia that's used.
by Anonymous | reply 34 | January 28, 2024 2:28 AM |
Is this why Shawn dumped her as his beard?
by Anonymous | reply 35 | January 28, 2024 7:23 AM |
R32, we have people in our family who have T2 without being overweight or overeating.
But happy trolling.
by Anonymous | reply 36 | January 28, 2024 8:18 AM |
She's plenty hairy.
by Anonymous | reply 37 | January 28, 2024 11:05 AM |
Soon these Hollywood bitches will be taking Ozempic during pregnancy.
by Anonymous | reply 38 | January 28, 2024 1:10 PM |
It’s important to give your kid every advantage
by Anonymous | reply 39 | January 28, 2024 1:18 PM |
R7 I have read about people dying after taking it. A woman wanted to lose weight for her daughters wedding. She threw up every single day. She eventually died. Is it worth it? No. It should only be for the morbidly obese who have tried everything else. Not for slightly overweight people who could drop the weight with a better diet and exercise.
by Anonymous | reply 40 | January 28, 2024 1:24 PM |
People have got weight and morality hopelessly and idiotically mixed up in their heads. The Body Positivity movement is often dumb, and dangerous where obesity is concerned, but it has occurred in response to the damage done to people by all the moralizing. Here's what I mean.
I am on Ozempic, which I am open about. I don't have diabetes but I am considerably overweight, and my age and other health issues mean my doctor is delighted for me to take the drug. The thing is, friends who know I'm on it keep congratulating me on my weight loss. They can't come to terms with the idea that I'm not deliberately doing anything: it's all the drug.
They also keep harping on at me about how I need to modify my diet and eat "less carbs", even though they know I am losing half a kilo a week, which has always been considered the ideal amount to lose on a diet, and my doctor is perfectly happy. I HAVE modified my diet in that I can only eat about half what I used to at meals and I snack a lot less in between meals. I try to tell them the Mediterranean diet, which is also considered ideal, is crawling with pasta, risotto and gnocchi, not to mention vegetables, all of which are also carbs, but their [poorly] hidden agenda is that losing weight must feel like a punishment because you were wicked to gain it in the first place.
I have lost no hair, nor been nauseated nor had diarrhea, so I'm a terrible disappointment to those who wish harm on anyone who dares to gain weight. I'm on a low weekly dose, and my doctor says when I reach a BMI he's happy with for my age I can go off it and just use it as needed to keep the weight steady after that. The fact that all this is true, and that all Ozempic does is make me not feel too hungry, in exactly the same way THEY don't feel too hungry, drives the "fat is wicked" brigade mental. There are a lot more people who secretly hold that belief than you realize until you start something like this. The Fraus are at least as big on it as the gays.
R40, there is a very big spectrum between "slightly overweight" (who don't need the drug) and "morbidly obese". Now that we have these drugs nobody should have to become "morbidly" obese: people should be treated as soon as they cross the medical line into obesity. OTOH, I don't believe your story for a second. The Princess of Wales threw up every single day during all of her pregnancies and didn't die. The previous Princess of Wales threw up every day for years and years. Either your woman was taking massive overdoses, and not necessarily of semaglutide drugs, or there was something else wrong with her that went untreated, or you made it up.
by Anonymous | reply 41 | January 28, 2024 2:04 PM |
When I die, I want to be able to fit in my coffin.
by Anonymous | reply 42 | January 28, 2024 2:28 PM |
The woman R40 is talking about was taking two versions. It’s unclear if she was doubling up. She had significant side effects and if your read her husband’s account it sounds like she was obsessed with fitting into a particular dress. Almost all drugs have potential for abuse.
I’m the poster who gave up on it because of side effects. The moralizing is ridiculous. Once a friend told me that his wife was kind of irritated by women getting breast implants because it was taking away her competitive advantage. I’ve heard woman make a big point of how THEIR implants were part of reconstructive surgery after cancer. Like it’s somehow more justified because they suffered through cancer or because they are started from a worse aesthetic point than a woman who has small healthy breasts. They still just want to look better. It’s like the Winston Churchill joke about prostitutes. I think some people have a similar attitude about this.
Taking the drug is the RIGHT ethical choice. At this point one reason I’m considering trying again is because I think people are fucking stupid if they don’t. That’s the moral failing. There is a very safe (but not without any risks) drug that can help me and reduce my future medical costs and make me eat less = small positive impact on environment. I’m about 25-30 pounds overweight, so overweight enough that I can be visually identified as someone too stupid and selfish to do what I need to do - get on the drug.
Of course it’s better to manage your weight without. But I’ve been overweight for around eight years. Had a difficult , stressful period and just blew up. I lost 40 lbs on my own, but now I’m stuck. So I’ve clearly given doing it on my own a shot and I failed. What’s the right thing to do now? Stay fat, develop health problems and eat more than my share of food? Or give the drugs a second shot?
by Anonymous | reply 43 | January 28, 2024 2:29 PM |
It sounds a bit like that film Requiem for a Dream, Ellen Byrstyn’s character’s storyline.
by Anonymous | reply 44 | January 28, 2024 2:43 PM |
R36 I'm sure you do, most diabetes is from stuffing your faces, look it up ignorant troll.
by Anonymous | reply 45 | January 28, 2024 11:39 PM |
her chest hair
by Anonymous | reply 46 | January 29, 2024 1:51 AM |
Oh wow, weight loss makes your ring size go down. News at 11.
by Anonymous | reply 47 | January 29, 2024 2:57 AM |
Not with neurological conditions at play, r45.
Blocked.
by Anonymous | reply 48 | January 29, 2024 4:29 AM |
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