Corporations hope that the right concept will turn things around overnight. This is what you might call the crash-diet approach: starve yourself for a few days and you'll be thin for life.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I don't know if those things work, where you do, like, this crash diet or crash starvation. It's just not something I've ever been into.
What's wrong with extreme dieting and hard-core fitness plans is that they don't take into account the rest of your life.
I would never recommend going on a crash diet. Drastically reducing your calorie intake can cause numerous problems, and your body will store fat because you have sent it into starvation mode. I eat every two hours to maintain my blood sugar levels.
I have tried every diet to lose weight. When you restrict yourself, you're setting yourself up for failure.
People are unhappy when they are on diets, because it's 'don't do this, don't do that, do this, do that.'
Diets are a scam.
Whole Foods Market tries to embody all of the principles of conscious capitalism all the time, but like any person or company, we sometimes fall short.
At Andreessen Horowitz, we talk about the notion of being 'too hungry to eat.' That's to say, we often see startups that are so entrenched in the product that the founders forget they need muscle to grow.
I'm not going to starve just to be thin... I want to enjoy life and I can't if I'm not eating and miserable.
I have 40 pounds to lose. It is not the fault of the fast food people, and anyone who's trying to sue the fast food places needs a therapist, not an attorney.
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