- Joined
- Jul 29, 2016
I’d ask if she knew about vitamin C supplements but knowing her she’d say she’s allergic to whatever they bind the pills with.More on the healthy diet that gives Victoria such good skin and hair.
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I’d ask if she knew about vitamin C supplements but knowing her she’d say she’s allergic to whatever they bind the pills with.More on the healthy diet that gives Victoria such good skin and hair.
Do these come from our favourite compounding pharmacy?I’d ask if she knew about vitamin C supplements
Oh man I have gotten in so much trouble pointing out this kind of thing to people.My favorite part is her "allergy" to citric acid, which is not an allergen. It is not possible to have an immune reaction to citric acid. She tells such big whoppers that anyone with even basic level understanding of human immune systems can know she's a bullshitter on sight.
Bro don't hate she is literally allergic to the Krebs Cycle.It is not possible to have an immune reaction to citric acid.
"Oh dang lady, your serum potassium is 2.8 and you have a potassium allergy. We gotta page the doc for Lokelma, get the rest of that shit outta you!""You cannot possibly be allergic to saline solution. It's essentially what your blood and organs are made of."
It'll be a race to see if she gets scurvy or beriberi first!I do want to see Scurvy Arc, though. Man, scurvy seems comparatively easy to munch into, and it could be visually compelling. She said all she has to eat is white rice...
It's that time again! If Vicky doesn't raise $1300 in five days, she says she'll be out on her ass yet again.
Bro don't hate she is literally allergic to the Krebs Cycle.
I do want to see Scurvy Arc, though. Man, scurvy seems comparatively easy to munch into, and it could be visually compelling. She said all she has to eat is white rice...
This is the same conclusion Hadley and the experts she talked to came up with. It's all about communicating fragility and illness to those around you so that they will pay attention to you. Hadley spoke about how it wasn't conscious for her, but being as thin as possible was a way to communicate how sick she was mentally - and she instinctually knew that no one listens to teen girls, but they DO pay attention to how they look. You can't grow up and go to college and get married and get a job if you're 86lbs and stuck in a locked ward.
Conversely, were you really "homeless for six months" when you could mysteriously afford long stays in expensive hotels?If you need $1300 worth of rent in five days from strangers on the Internet, were you ever really "housed"? Or did you just successfully scam someone into putting you up for a while?
A lot of rice sold in the USA is enriched with thiamin and a couple other nutrients (not vitamin C though) so alas beriberi is unlikely.It'll be a race to see if she gets scurvy or beriberi first!
On her reddit account she recently mentioned a medication called Diamox:
View attachment 6461213
So apparently this is a medication that is used to treat "glaucoma, epilepsy, acute mountain sickness, periodic paralysis, idiopathic intracranial hypertension (raised brain pressure of unclear cause), heart failure and to alkalinize urine." (from Wikipedia).
My first thought was "oh so maybe she does have one of the conditions she claims to have" but on second thought idk, she probably doctor shopped until she found someone to agree with her self diagnosis. Still, increased cranial tension does seem like it would be hard to fake because it's something you can objectively measure.
Looking at side effects, it is known to cause: numbness, ringing in the ears loss of appetite, vomiting, and sleepiness.
More interestingly, Diamox is contraindicated if you have adrenal insufficiency - didn't she claim to have this? Wikipedia also says it can interact with amphetamines, which she does take for ADHD.
Why are doctors prescribing her this cocktail of meds? Is nobody checking her meds for possible interactions? She's extremely sedentary, eats like shit, and is on a wild cocktail of medications. No wonder she feels like shit all the time, she is making herself ill by all means and methods available. Oh and yeah, the mask. She's breathing in her own funky exhalations and moisture all day too. Yum.
She could also very well be lying to some or all of them about what she's getting from other docs or online pharmacies.There's no way she is coordinating her care across multiple specialists, munchies always want a bunch of prescribers in case one well dries up.
That story is so fucking funny. She describes the “one aisle big enough for her being full of items” as if they were placed just to inconvenience her.about as inconspicuous as a giant beam of light to a moth.
"both gates locked and not able to get a wheelchair in" and "20 minutes before the store closed"
hey you stupid bitch, sounds like they were closing and didnt want to take in any more customers for the night. When the overhead say "attention customers 5 muns til closed" they mean get the fuck out.
The USA has a drug database as well, If she’s not getting controlled substances nobody will really care. I think doctors probably recognize her as a munchie but it’s easiest to just give her what she wants to get rid of her.My country has a national prescription database that all doctors have access to, so it's probably harder to be a munchie and/or drug seeker here. You can't get multiple benzo scripts for instance, because doctors check your prescriptions before adding more.
Edit to add my thoughts on poly-medications: at one point in my life I unfortunately needed some very aggressive and scary medications. They affected me so badly I needed other meds for the side effects. Then more meds for side effects of that medication, and so on. It was miserable. The experience came to mind when I realized just how many meds Viccy is taking. At some point you are creating a never ending cycle of side effects and more medications.
Same in my country. The doctor can also check whether you actually got the meds that they prescribed. Moreover you can't buy opioid and psych med prescriptions from thoseMy country has a national prescription database that all doctors have access to, so it's probably harder to be a munchie and/or drug seeker here.
She's never met a diagnosis she didn't love, and never gets a second opinion to say "no this isn't it," only to add more to the list.