Ashley Graham Calls GLP-1 Trend ‘Smack in the Face’

Model Ashley Graham It has long been a pioneer in positive physical activity, although the GLP-1 trend has undoubtedly challenged the concept of rigid acceptance.
“It’s really disappointing,” Graham, 38, said Marie Claire in a profile published on Thursday, April 30. [and] everyone can be what they want to be. And now, it’s coming back in this crazy way that feels like it’s slapping women in the face who felt like they had a voice. “
Semaglutides and GLP-1s — including Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro — are often prescribed to adults struggling with weight-related conditions. Many celebrities have since started using questionable drugs to lose weight, however doctors have warned about this using weight loss medications.
“It’s with the times – and GLP-1 is the time,” Graham agreed. “I know there are and will be women who are considered great forever. This drug will not eliminate the entire population of women.”
For Graham, she plans to continue building a “community” of fit women.
“There are too many of them [plus size influencers and creators]. “They’re all over the place with their sizes and their sizes and the way they look and how they relate to each other,” the supermodel lamented in the store. Seeing that these girls, who were raised on social media at such a young age, are entering and have a platform to say to the new generation, ‘Be yourself, be what you want to be. If you have cellulite, who cares?'”
Graham is also still working on accepting her postpartum body. (Graham shares three sons with her husband, Justin Ervin.)
“I’m living in a different body and it was hard to get to know him,” he said of his newborn body. “I can’t say I can look in the mirror and be like, ‘I love you.’ That’s not for me. To say, ‘Wow, I made babies.’
She continued, “I was as fit as I could be in 2019 when I got pregnant. I’m still trying to get to that, but I had to get over the fact that I’m going to look like I’m in my late 20s, early 30s. She’s gone.”





