![]() So they’ve gained lots of weight and are publicly losing it in a healthy way to show you what real fitness is all about.Īnd here’s the reality of all those pictures you’re daydreaming over, according to a recent Instagram post that calls out “Fake Fitness Celebrities” for not giving the public the real deal:įitness is not about selfies in the gym mirror. ![]() Despite the fact that many of us fully believe that being healthy means having massive pecs and a core that could hold a monster truck, the couple - and parents of six - want to pull back the curtain and reveal that what you’re really buying into is not fitness, but an unattainable image that may be both unhealthy and dangerous. ![]() No one is more tired of this type of trickery than Sharny and Julius (the latter of whose facial expressions you may remember from this popular clip), an Australian power couple who take their fitness very seriously and want to make sure that no one on is falling for the lies that “their industry” is trying to sell you. Everyone’s trying to sell something, and if you’ve ever broken down in your cubicle because your life doesn’t look as good as the lives you see on Instagram, you know exactly how exhausting that can be. If it’s not your friend constantly posting Cheesecake Factory selfies with the hashtag #blessed all over them (which may be a little valid because it’s a good restaurant we would eat all our meals at if we could), it’s a celebrity doing a half-assed job of promoting some ridiculous diet tea they’ve never actually tried, or some painfully yoked Adonis showing off the amazing results the secret to which they could share with you if you just sign up for one of their weight-loss competitions. Listen, everyone on social media is a liar.
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