![]() "It was what I needed to hear, and that's what turned me around." "He did me the biggest favor of my life being blunt like that," she said. A surgeon said she was too heavy for him to repair the injury, and predicted that she would become a wheelchair-user in a year if she didn't lose weight. While caring for her mom, Migliaccio gained 200 lbs., and after a fall in her bathroom, she tore her ACL and meniscus in her right knee. Her highest weight of 349 lbs., though, came at "the lowest point in my life, when my mom passed away," she told PEOPLE. She started dieting at age 15, and for years afterward, the New Jerseyan, who has since been diagnosed with a binge eating disorder, would yo-yo back and forth - Migliaccio estimates she's lost and gained a significant amount of weight at least 12 times. "My whole life has changed."Ĭourtesy Linda Migliaccio Courtesy Grace HuangĮver since high school, Linda Migliaccio felt like she was "battling" her weight. ![]() "I tell people that before I felt like I had a mental cloud over my head. She's now a health coach, and helps people "get healthy." Over the next two and a half years, Hudson consistently lost weight, eventually dropping 187 lbs. Hudson started setting alarms for every 2½-3 hours to remind herself to eat healthy snacks, and swapped out the pizza for ones with cauliflower crust or made Taco Tuesdays with lettuce wraps instead of tortillas. They had tried getting her on board for years, and in January 2018, after Hudson finished college, she finally agreed to join the program. Meanwhile, her mom and grandma were both following the weight loss program Optavia and had dropped 80 and 75 lbs., respectively. I became super insecure and withdrawn, and I stopped going out with my friends." I love to ride horses - I have my entire life - and I couldn't anymore. I had PCOS and I was on the spectrum for pre-diabetes and high blood pressure. "I started having a lot of health issues," she told PEOPLE. ![]() And within about a year, she had gained 180 lbs. Along with gaining more independence, she was also "stressed, working multiple jobs, and I didn't know what I should be eating." That meant she was grabbing what was easy and convenient on a college budget - a ton of pizza and any food she could get during breaks from her waitressing job. TLC no longer advertises its raspberry lemonade tea as having 0.0 percent THC, and now includes a disclaimer saying people subject to drug testing should not take it.College was a major adjustment for Lexlee Hudson. TLC and some of the customers suing them will be meeting with a mediator in New York next month. Now they’re saying I have to go through some type of drug classes,” Montgomery said. But she failed the drug test before she could even start. Montgomery says she drank the tea for nearly five months to lose weight then got a new job as a truck driver earlier this month. We trusted them and obviously we got let down in some of these instances,” Fallon said.įallon said TLC stopped working with one of those manufacturers but some customers like Jennifer Montgomery say that’s not enough. We use third party manufacturers all over the world. “Did you know there could be trace amounts in that product?” Latos asked Fallon. The lab’s director said with repeated consumption, the THC could build up in a person’s system. But an independent lab found trace amounts of THC. That raspberry lemonade tea was marketed on the company’s website and on the label as having 0.0 percent THC. We are meeting in New York August 2 with a handful of them.”ĭozens of people claim using the company’s raspberry lemonade Iaso tea caused them to fail drug tests and lose their jobs. Like I said, we are in constant communication with them.
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