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Are We Judging Ozempians Too Harshly?

A few thoughts from a former personal trainer.

6 min readMay 22, 2025
Man chiseling off his weight.
Pic via Lean Alvesan and Alex Meireles (Creative Commons License)

Stephen had always been a bigger guy, ever since I met him in high school. I didn’t know it at the time, but he took enormous flak for at home, with his overbearing father telling him, “You are embarrassingly overweight.”

Stephen did a good job of hiding any insecurity he felt, and even found a way to parlay his size into an advantage on the football team. Unfortunately, his weight grew quite significantly after entering the workforce and having kids — to the point that I worried about his long-term health.

He struggled with little, everyday things. For example, when we got up to walk to my car, or do something trivial, I noticed him breathing hard, which is never a good sign.

Stephen left my home city of Tampa a few years ago to get a better job. He was back in town and I was waiting for him recently in a restaurant lobby (he greenlit me writing this article, albeit with a different name).

Suddenly, I saw a man working his way through the revolving door entrance and felt a slight recognition, but wasn’t sure.

“There’s no way that’s Stephen,” I thought. His face was completely different. The shape and fullness was gone. His cheeks were hollowed out, his jawline sharpened. Even…

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Sean Kernan
Sean Kernan

Written by Sean Kernan

All my articles are 100% human. No AI involved. Also, I'm a nommer. Submit to my publication Corporate Underbelly and I'll try to help you get boosted.

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