Topic > Laziness: Taking the Lazy Way to Lose Weight

Everyone would like to have a magic pill that can make them lose weight. Eight score and 13 years ago, at the dawn of the diet craze, when Americans began to regard a lean, supple figure as the epitome of beauty and vitality, such a pill was either unheard of or a placebo. Exercise and a strict diet had been the only ways to achieve desired weight loss, at least until the invention of diet pills by doctors at Stanford University in the 1930s. Along with diet pills, an increasing amount of laziness-inducing innovations are being introduced into the markets of our increasingly sensitive population. To shorten further reading, which will help the reader prevent his eyes from becoming too lazy to continue reading, I will innovatively construct a new word that will embody a certain meaning. This word will be "lazitivityTM", which means the factor, level or amount of desired laziness related to a person, group or object (desire to be lazy). Innovations, especially those that produce quick results, often lead to a dangerous increase in a person's laziness, which by extension is harmful to their mental and physical state. The growing alternative options, provided by innovations, for each problem, have enabled a person to choose the simplest option as the solution. It should be kept in mind that what determines whether an innovation remains and whether it becomes a standard of everyday life depends on the consumers who use that innovation. What would convince consumers to continue using an innovation? One possible cause could be that the innovation makes a person's life more convenient. Laziness is often linked to a lack of motivation to work hard and so,......middle of paper......he. People like Mason believe that they can be as lazy as they want and that their country will take care of them, such as when he received gastric bypass surgery and has since lost a whopping 600 pounds, for which he plans to undergo liposuction to eliminate the excess. skin. Mason and the rest of the developed world rely too much on modern conveniences, which while they may give some of us a second chance, are coming ever closer to ruling our lives making all of our lives a life of laziness. Even the word laziness, despite being a grammatically accepted word in this peace, even for convenience, does not offer any benefit in society, rather it acts as a brake, because from now on, you will always ask yourself, is laziness a real word? You understand now how even the most similar innovations can prove to be a mental and even physical burden?