It infuriates me that being overweight is treated as a moral failing. If we were on insulin injections or other equally medically valid medication, no-one would make these judgemental comments.
I have always been fit and active but I started piling on weight in my mid-20s and now at 51 reached a BMI of 40. This despite being very physically active, frequently doing 100-mile cycle rides or 500-mile walks for charity. I tried so hard for so many years to lose weight. I am a research scientist; despite much unsolicited advice over many years I actually do know how I’m supposed to lose weight. If it were possible through willpower & lifestyle changes alone I would have succeeded. I suspect many of you have had the same experience.
BUT…
12 days ago, I tried the MJ jab.
Thought, why not? I’m resigned to being fat and it probably won’t work, but let’s give it a go.
To my astonishment I have lost 4.5kg. IN TWELVE DAYS. That is pretty much ONE. POUND. LOST. EVERY. SINGLE. DAY.
Fair to say, this has been a bit of a surprise.
So, ladies, what does this tell us about obesity being a medical issue vs a moral failing? The only possible conclusion we can draw from the fact that these jabs are so extraordinarily effective is that obesity is a genuine medical condition, and the jabs are a legitimate and justifiable medical treatment.
I have seen how very hard people have worked before the advent of these jabs to try to lose weight; believe me, being obese is not because of a lack of willpower or ignorance about healthy eating. The pervasive ever so suble suggestions from our slim colleagues, friends, family, that we just need a bit of willpower and maybe this nice recipe suggestion and have you tried excercise bla bla, is profoundly insulting.
So next time your judgemental colleagues bewail the evil jab and those feckless cheating fatties using it, who just need a bit of willpower really, I suggest you loudly declaim on the fecklessness of diabetics with their cheating jabs, and dramatically roll your eyes about people who take antidepressants when they just need to cheer up, and the ridiculousness of people wanting to deal with broken bones by putting limbs in casts and inconveniencing everyone around them for weeks on end, and GOODNESS, imagine demanding chemotherapy when you get cancer when all you need is a positive attitude and maybe some prayers.