Serious question time
So say you have someone who keeps trying to sell you health shakes and constantly talks about the benefits of said shakes on Facebook.
So far, the shakes help with:
- being overweight
- diabetes
- migraines
- fibromyalgia
EXCZEMAeczema
It, of course, helps with none of these (well, actually, it might help with the first two, but only because you’d be eating fewer calories and less sugar).
This is a person who should know better, but apparently doesn’t. It’s also someone I cannot be mean/horrible/a dick to, for various reasons. Part of the problem is likely that once you start selling something you have to publicly affirm your belief in it, but it’s getting absolutely ridiculous.
Thoughts?
13 notesShowHide
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girl-non-grata answered:
TBH, this pisses me off. It’s just more trivialization of Fibromyalgia. Constant nerve pain can’t be fixed with a protein shake.
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scholvin answered:
hide them. boom.
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inmi said:
Hide ‘em
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thulium said:
My 2nd cousin is doing the exact same thing. They opened a little shop somewhere. Everything he posts is a sales pitch or of the “Chase your dreams!” variety. Sounds like a cult. No thanks.
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fancycwabs answered:
Is there a chance the track will bend?
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ashamedtosay liked this
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ashamedtosay said:
Hide them.
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kimalah said:
Unsubscribe. It is a beautiful thing.
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smartgoat answered:
You can unsubscribe from people on Facebook, so that you’re still friends with them but you never see any of their posts.
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halfbakedidea answered:
upper left hand corner, unsubscribe from that person. Just don’t look. They’re too far gone.
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claviusrobinsky said:
Unfriendly, I’ve been doing this a lot lately and it’s glorious.
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karlfun answered:
tell ‘em you really just prefer veggies and whole foods and think they should check it out, too.
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jamiek posted this