
It’s wild when you think about it:
“I can’t stop eating…
but I can schedule a doctor’s appointment,
get a prescription,
pick it up,
inject it weekly,
and commit to months of hormone manipulation…
instead of just saying ‘no’ to another meal.”
That’s not a lack of ability.
That’s wasted effort in the wrong direction.
You’re doing more work to avoid discipline than it takes to actually have it.
And the result?
- You don’t build strength.
- You don’t build habits.
- You don’t build identity.
- You take on unknown risk.
You’re literally gambling with your hormonal balance — and for what? A smaller waistline and a marketing high? The tradeoff is real, even if the commercials won’t say it.
Most people don’t need Ozempic. Just like most people aren’t actually gluten sensitive.
Sure, there are rare exceptions — people in extreme medical situations, or with legitimate barriers to mobility. But the rest? The ads, the influencers, the endless hype — it’s a business. A money-making scheme.
You’re not being treated. You’re being targeted.
Injected Delusion
Ozempic doesn’t get you fit. It gets you smaller. And not always in the right ways. You’re not gaining muscle. You’re not gaining skill. You’re not building anything that lasts. You’re just tricking your body — and paying for the privilege.
Delusion isn’t always snorted or drank. Sometimes it’s prescribed.
That’s what this is: a medically sanctioned eating disorder wrapped in sterile packaging and hype.
There’s no finish line with drugs like these. Just a new baseline of dependence. And when you stop? You’re right back where you started — only now your metabolism’s slower, your hormones are disrupted, and your body’s more fragile than before.
Fitness By Filter
People aren’t modeling themselves after athletes anymore. They’re modeling themselves after edited actors. Celebrities don’t train like you. They don’t even look like what you see. Makeup. Filters. Lighting. CGI. PR teams.
You know who should be your fitness role model? The guy out there roofing in the Texas heat. The mom who strength trains and rucks before work. The coach who actually understands what food, movement, and effort feel like in a real body.
Instead, people watch an edited movie trailer and inject themselves with hormones — hoping for the same results from none of the work.
A System Engineered for Weakness
Ozempic isn’t an accident. It’s a solution to a manmade problem. Our food is engineered to hijack your cravings. Ultra-processed, ultra-palatable, ultra-addictive.
And now that millions of people can’t control their appetites? Pharma rolls in with the fix. You get sedated instead of educated.
The same system that sells you addiction now sells you relief — at a markup.
Why change the food when you can inject away the consequences?
Because of that, we’ve now created a new, self-reinforcing loop:
- Eat addictive food
- Gain weight
- Take a drug
- Stay weak
- Blame your body
- Repeat
This Is Health Care Now?
People complain that healthcare is expensive — and it is —
But what are we doing with it?
Paying thousands for a drug that hypnotizes you into skipping dinner.
Instead of… you know… skipping dinner.
This isn’t medicine.
It’s lifestyle anesthesia for people who’ve been sold comfort as a virtue.
Final Thought
We don’t have a cure for cancer,
but we’ve got ten ways to get a boner,
and now a weekly shot so you can feel skinny without trying —
all while the birth rate collapses and testosterone plummets.
Tell me again how this is “progress.”
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