User:LumaSlim Reviews

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What's more ridiculous, the idea LumaSlim that the health care profession completely understands the human body and has still created a situation where over two-thirds of the U.S. population is overweight, or the idea that maybe they're wrong about their "obvious" assumptions about food, fat, and weight-loss? If you understand a problem, and are taking the proper steps to resolve it, the problem would go away. If you make assumptions about a problem - based on what you believe to be obvious observations - and your actions seem to only make matters worse, it is time to reevaluate what you think you know about the situation. In the case of America's futile efforts to win the "battle of the bulge," we have been operating on a false premise all along; food is not the enemy, our ideas about diet and nutrition are.

The idea that food doesn't make you fat is an easy one to shout-down because there's no profit in this approach; no drugs, no surgery, diet plans, gym memberships, or exercise equipment is necessary if we've got it all wrong. Those are the tools of our old way of looking at things; and those tools haven't solved the problem. It's easy for the corporations to turn around and blame their customers for being lazy, unmotivated, undisciplined, or just too stupid to do the right thing and lose the weight with the products and services that are made available to them - for a fee, of course. But this simply isn't true. In fact, the American public is very adept at "following orders" and "doing what they're told;" that's practically all we do in this country. One of the reasons we're overweight in the first place is because we let the television tell us what to eat and how to live. https://asrightasrain.co/lumaslim-review/