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consumer reviews

  • dara_like_sara avatar

    where would you buy a backpack? as the title says–

    where would you buy a backpack from? brands and model of backpack

    share why you like it plz

    luxurytravel•...
    I don't buy backpacks as I'm fortunate enough (through work) to be gifted them from time to time. I've had quite a number, but the one brand I see shining through over the past decade is Osprey. If you haven't already, you might like to take a look at them....
    travel
    consumer reviews
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  • jordan avatar

    WeightWatchers. I feel sad about this:

    The body positivity movement, + ozempic (and other GLP-1 weight loss drugs) + the pandemic (WeightWatchers apparently was built on in-person support groups) meant that WeightWatchers went from $1.5 billion in revenue in 2018 to $770 million for this year.

    As a result, they’re trying to pivot to being a telehealth company, which (primarily?) sells the weight-loss drugs.

    On their walls it used to say it’s choice, not chance. and now CEO Sistani’s quoted saying that’s wrong. Also from Sistani We live in this clickbait world now where everything needs to try to come across in 15 to 30 seconds, which is whjy our marketing is so difficult.

    I don’t have any personal connection to WeightWatchers, but one thing I’m projecting on them is that they used to stand for empowerment through choice, diligence, restraint, and doing the difficult work of changing long-standing habits. And now it seems like they don’t stand for anything. It looks like they’re just at the whim of market forces and trying to fit in and still make money. Why do I care? I don’t know—but I feel sad, I think that they’re augmenting and accelerating a change which seems to not address deeper features; which seems to perpetuate unconsciousness and the grey. Aspects of the body positivity movement seem right to me: our beauty standards were ridiculous. Aspects felt like it went to far: there are physical and mental health issues that can be overlooked by focusing only on self-acceptance. I think it was an attempt to move towards more consciousness, and I respect and appreciate that.

    I like to play the game if it were me, what would I do? not because I think I could actually do it—I know nothing about the weight-loss market, the customers, the business model, etc!—but because I hate to criticize something without thinking up some alternative, even if it’s loco. But in this case my solution is predictable: I’d try to pivot WeightWatchers into a full suite integrally-informed consciousness raising program. Level Up for weight-watchers—Keep what’s been working in terms of lower right systems with counting points, include upper right drugs as necessary (but don’t try to promote them), enhancing the Lower Left cultural support with facilitators helping the groups in person and online look for deeper causes, add 1-1 and group coaching to the clinic offering in lieu of only UR drugs, build custom technology to support groups supporting each other throughout the day on mobile, build out curriculum from the world’s best and most famous therapists and psychologists about what’s underneath weight gain and loss cycles, and acquire / partner with up-and-coming health-ish supplement companies like LMNT, Mudwater, HelloFresh so the WeightWatchers program feels way cooler and you benefit from each other’s marketing.

    idk, just thought this might generate some interesting thoughts here.

    dara_like_saraSA•...
    I also used Noom for a time, and it didn’t work for me personally, but I think it did for a lot of others. My major issue was that it ran everyone through the same curriculum without accounting for prior knowledge. So, it was way too basic to hold my attention....
    health and wellness
    consumer reviews
    diet and nutrition
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    0
  • nat avatar

    Anyone drinking molecular hydrogen rich water? A friend of mine bought a water bottle that turns regular water into hydrogen rich water. She’s been drinking this water for several months and swears by it. She says she has more energy, recovers easily from physical exercise, and her senses are heightened.

    The water bottle is distributed by a MLM. I thought it was a new thing. But I researched and was surprised to see how popular molecular hydrogen rich water is.

    I’ll usually an early adopter of stuff like this but I’m hesitant because the long-term effects are not known.

    Is there anyone drinking this stuff? What has your experience been?

    nat•...
    I’m reposting this from a different thread: I’ve been using dissolvable tablets for about 2 weeks. I don’t notice a big difference. My body may recover faster after physical exercise???...
    nutrition
    health and wellness
    exercise and fitness
    skepticism and critical thinking
    consumer reviews
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    0
  • nat avatar

    Anyone drinking molecular hydrogen rich water? A friend of mine bought a water bottle that turns regular water into hydrogen rich water. She’s been drinking this water for several months and swears by it. She says she has more energy, recovers easily from physical exercise, and her senses are heightened.

    The water bottle is distributed by a MLM. I thought it was a new thing. But I researched and was surprised to see how popular molecular hydrogen rich water is.

    I’ll usually an early adopter of stuff like this but I’m hesitant because the long-term effects are not known.

    Is there anyone drinking this stuff? What has your experience been?

    nat•...
    I’ve been using dissolvable tablets for about 2 weeks. I don’t notice a big difference. My body may recover faster after physical exercise??? But I’m not 100% sure because the tablets I’m taking also have magnesium, known for relaxing the muscles....
    skepticism and critical thinking
    nutritional supplements
    consumer reviews
    exercise recovery
    Comments
    0
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