it's not walking per say, but the obsession with walking combined with editing their pics to look thinner and the very, ehm, 2000s ana aesthetics as well as some strange eating habits... for a lot of people suffering from ed constant movement becomes a tool to "control" their body, when i was pretty deep into mine, i used to pace in my room instead of sleep until i had 20k steps and had a break-down because i couldn't walk when i had covidWhat's the problem with walking? I like walking and (hope I) don't have an ED!
GET OUT, fatty!!!I had ricotta and peach on toast for lunch.
it's not walking per say, but the obsession with walking combined with editing their pics to look thinner and the very, ehm, 2000s ana aesthetics as well as some strange eating habits... for a lot of people suffering from ed constant movement becomes a tool to "control" their body, when i was pretty deep into mine, i used to pace in my room instead of sleep until i had 20k steps and had a break-down because i couldn't walk when i had covidbut you enjoying your walks isn't of any indication that you have an eating disorder dw
Then you'll love this articleSo this is the "long-form content" that she mentioned in her video (and never linked to). Glossier as a whole seems like a grift to me (overpriced drugstore make-up in Gen-Z packaging), but their success is thanks to good marketing. I don't see how anyone would see this scruffy nobody and think it's aspirational.
Then you'll love this article
How Glossier Sold Us Nothing
An interview with Marisa Meltzer, author of "Glossy: Ambition, Beauty, and the Inside Story of Emily Weiss’s Glossier."open.substack.com
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