Coffee Break: Rosetei Wrap Coat

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woman wears white, gray and green plaid wrap coat

I've recommended Ted Baker coats on here a lot — they are always so sleek, stylish, and just effortlessly cool. But I don't think I've ever seen a Ted Baker coat in a print. This white, green, and gray plaid feels really chic, but also classic. Love.

The coat was $575 but is now marked to $345 at Bloomingdale's and Ted Baker. Nordstrom still has it full price, but if you're so inclined you could probably message them and ask them to price match.

(Ooh: Bloomingdale's has a lot of Ted Baker coats on sale right now!)

Some of our favorite classic coats for work as of 2025 include J.Crew, Sam Edelman, Aritzia, L.L.Bean, Quince, and Cole Haan. On the splurgier side, do check out Mackage, Soia & Kyo, Eileen Fisher, Fleurette, and Cinzia Rocca. We've also rounded up our favorite washable winter coats!

Sales of note for 2/7/25:

  • Nordstrom – Winter Sale, up to 60% off! 7850 new markdowns for women
  • Ann Taylor – Extra 25% off your $175+ purchase — and $30 of full-price pants and denim
  • Banana Republic Factory – Up to 50% off everything + extra 15% off
  • Boden – 15% off new season styles
  • Eloquii – 60% off 100s of styles
  • J.Crew – Extra 50% off all sale styles
  • J.Crew Factory – 40% off everything including new arrivals + extra 20% off $125+
  • Rothy's – Final Few: Up to 40% off last-chance styles
  • Spanx – Lots of workwear on sale, some up to 70% off
  • Talbots – 40% off one item + free shipping on $150+

119 Comments

    1. I have two suggestions – one is the Benefit mascara (I don’t have the exact name at at the moment) I purchased a small sample size package at Sephora and it came with the benefit brow gel) It is very fan like and bold, and stays put. The second suggestion is a drugstore option by Revlon, in the red tube – this stays on all day. In the past, I’ve used Clinque, L’oreal, Dior, and Maybelline with various degrees of staying power as the formulations/ staying power change over time – that is to say, these two recommendations are my current favorites, but that may change one day!

    2. I feel like I created my own beauty hack years ago for this. Try the Estee Lauder Double Wear mascara. I use it on my bottom lashes only (and use something with more volume for the top lashes). This mascara NEVER transfers to my under eyes like other mascaras have.

    3. I have oily skin and always looked like a raccoon at the end of day until I discovered tubing mascara. L’Oréal Double Extend tubing mascara meets all my requirements – cheap, lasts, easily available in stores/drugstores and easy to remove. I rarely use the primer side of the mascara.

      1. Yes, tubing mascara. I used to use the double extend but liked the hourglass brush and formulation better. E.l.f. just released one called lash xtend and I’m trying it for the first time today and so far I like it. It’s a humid rainy day and there’s no smearing or smudging. And the brush is like the hourglass one.

    4. I love my Lancome hypnose, I even go do cardio with it and it doesn’t run

  1. Any good meal ideas for a pound of stew beef cubes and pasta? I could just make beef stew, but family is getting tired of it and it’s already in the fridge to cook tonight.

    1. Are you WFH? Slowcooker or instant pot for pulled beef with tomato and milk for Bolognese?

      Korean spices and rice instead of pasta?

  2. I have a kid who is in love with all things Chinese. We are not Chinese, but kiddo is taking language lessons and I recently took her to an Asian grocery store in our city to get medium grain rice and some real chopsticks. When we are in NYC next, she wants to go to Chinatown (our city is too small for one), but other than looking at restaurants and seeing what more authentic food looks like (vs our city, where our restaurants are take-out and she is eating dishes like fried rice, sesame chicken, and beef with broccoli), is there anything we should take her to or walk by? Middle-schooler. She can speak the language a bit but cannot read it, but has a book for practicing letters.

    1. In Chinatown, let her loose in one of the larger stores that sells all things Chinese cooking (dishes, cooking utensils, ingredients). She will dig it and might select a couple (usually relatively low-priced) options.

      Asia Society (upper east side).

        1. Yes. My favorite when I lived in NYC. I thought I read that it went totally online.

          Also, maybe kid could research different Chinese cuisines and use yelp to find an example of, maybe, three different kinds for the family to try while there?

      1. Agree with letting the kid lose in one of the general supply stores in Chinatown (I remember my grandmother taking me to them when she wanted a very specific soup ladle!) – I think the woks of life blog has a Chinatown guide that you may find useful.
        If you are planning a trip for next year, could try to time the NYC trip with Lunar New Year so your kid can see the lion dancers and other performers

    2. The Tenement Museum has a tour that focuses on the experience of two immigrant women, one of whom was from China (the other was a 19th-century German-Jewish immigrant). It is one of my favorite museums!

    3. Depending on her age and your ability to get her there (kids from all 50 states & abroad participate), check out Concordia Language Villages for 1 or 2 week summer language camps in addition to camps for high school credit. Chinese is just one of 15 languages they offer. Truly wonderful experience! concordialanguagevillages dot org

    4. MOCA in NYC is the Museum of Chinese in America. I haven’t visited, but they have interesting programs and exhibits she may be interested in. The Metropolitan Museum has a large Asian art collection if she’s interested in history and antiquities.

      If you’re adventurous, you may want to go to Flushing, Queens on your next trip to the city for a more authentic Chinatown experience. Manhattan’s Chinatown is shrinking, but Flushing is vibrant and growing. There are tons of online guides to the best Chinese restaurants in Flushing.

      1. Yes to Flushing! The different mall food courts are amazing and would be fun for a kid, and you could go to one of the mega-grocery stores, too.

        In Manhattan’s Chinatown, Yu and Me Books could be a fun non-food stop.

      2. One more thought: Lunar New Year starts Feb 10. Check to see if there are any events near you for that.

        1. See if there is a latern festival you can go see! The celebrations typically last longer than just one day or week, so there could be plenty of opportunities.

          Also go to a Chinese teahouse!

      3. There is also a Brooklyn Chinatown in Sunset Park, but Flushing is probably bigger/better.

    5. Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA)
      a Dim Sum experience would be so cool for her.

    6. The bronx zoo has the wild asia monorail, where you can see lots of animals from asia, including china.

    7. there is a MoCA in Chinatown. museum of chinese in america or something like that.

    8. When you say she is practicing Chinese, you mean Mandarin? Or Cantonese? Something else? It’s not the same, so it’s good for you to brush up.

      Cantonese (I guess you can short-hand Hong-Kong, the closest) is a different language to Mandarin (which you might assume for mainland China or Taiwan).

      Whatever she is learning, respect to the differences and an assumption she might very well be misunderstood is important.

      For food, China is so vast and varied that recommendations make no sense. But for home, maybe get a cookbook and cook with her? Get dvds with Hong Kong and mainland classics and watch them with her?

      1. It is Mandarin. And I know she’s not practicing letters, they are words. She is struggling with real chopsticks (after years of the tied-together ones I got that are for kids, maybe American kids). I started with food and then went to history, skipping the language entirely (which is a disadvantage). I can agree that day old medium-grain rice makes better fried rice at home than anything else we’ve tried.

  3. Any Honeylove reviews for small band size but large cup size (28 or 30 D+ looking at an XS or S)?

    1. I’m a 32E, and bought a S. I find that it technically fits me, and feels fine in the morning, but I find it uncomfortable in a way that I struggle to explain. Like it is clearly supposed to be super supportive, but the material, especially the straps, doesn’t have enough stretch, so the straps end up sort of loose while the rest is tight. I don’t actually need that much support though, so maybe that’s the issue, and it would work well for someone who needs more.

  4. random question for the hive today: what did you want to be at 5? at 18? what are you doing now — and if you could go back in time and tell yourself to do something else, what would it be and why?

    1. Artist and clinical psychologist. I’m now a lawyer, and I like my job well enough. But if I could go back, I would convince myself to focus on the art — maybe not for a career, but I wish I had kept it as a bigger part of my life in HS, college and early adulthood.

      1. At 5, I wanted to be a doctor, specifically an OB/GYN.
        At 18, I wanted to be a diplomat, preferrably at the UN.
        Now I’m a CPA and I love what I do, wouldn’t change it. But didn’t know anything at all about accounting until college, so I guess I would clue myself in earlier in life to the secret that accounting is awesome and perfect for the way my brain works!

      2. Also a Clinical Psychologist/Psychoanalyst. I wanted to be a teacher and feel like the work does indeed involve similar skills. On my first grade report card (which my mother saved) the teacher wrote that I was “quick to see patterns” which as a therapist cracks me up because there is a lot of pattern recognition in practicing, absolutely.

    2. 5 – veterinarian
      18 – international business woman, whatever that is
      21 – accountant at a Big Accounting Firm that collapsed during Enron
      22 – lawyer!
      25 – lawyer for 2 years until something better
      25.5 – anything besides lawyer, but didn’t leave for years
      33 – entrepreneur and haven’t looked back over a decade later

      Don’t stick around in a job you hate. But if you do, use those skills down the road to do something you actually like/works for your life.

      I never would have started purchasing businesses if I hadn’t been an M&A attorney, even though I hated it.

      It sounds cliche, but I would have considered work/life balance from the start and chosen something that worked better for having kids. Like a different type of law. I of course chose one of the worst ones for moms IMHO.

      1. Oh how I needed to ‘hear’ this today! Thank you all so much for sharing, especially this last post. And thanks to OP for asking! Gives me encouragement in my own career transition.

    3. At 5 I wanted to be a marine biologist (I wasn’t very original!). By 18, I was really conflicted. I wanted to be a lawyer and/or be an English professor, but I was getting a lot of parental pressure to be a science researcher or a doctor.

      I ended up going to law school, and I’m a practicing lawyer. It was bumpy, but in general it’s worked out well for me in the end (so far!), but it was a risky and not-great financial choice for the first 8 or so years of my career.

      If I could go back and talk to 18 or 22 year old me, I’m not sure that I’d have a lot of advice about where to end up or what to choose. I think I’d tell her to spend time thinking about what she actually likes to do, and where her natural talents are, and not worry so much about the pressure to have a “big fancy job.” I was so worried about ending up a disappointment that I never really asked myself what I thought would pay the bills and not make me miserable, and I ended up not getting a fancy job out of school, anyway.

    4. I never wanted to be anything (except for typical ridiculous kid things like a princess or ballerina). Truly,I never had a goal. I often wonder if that’s one of the reasons why it took me so many years to figure out a career.

      I have so many regrets and constantly wish I could do it all over again.

    5. At 5, a writer and a poet. At 18 I wanted an office job, I grew up in a very blue/pink collar area and only knew a few people who had office jobs. While in college I thought about law school, but honestly had no idea what lawyers actually did all day. I went to grad school for Public Administration but ended up with a career as a data analyst.

    6. At 5 I wanted to be a doctor and a farmer (not OR, I wanted to be BOTH). One of my friends is now an ER doctor and has a small farm lol.
      At 18 I wanted to be a social worker and continued with that plan through college. The college I went to did not have a social work program, but I figured I needed a graduate degree anyway so would get a liberal arts bachelors and then a masters in social work. As I finished college, I became more interested in law school. So instead of applying to social work graduate programs I applied to law school.
      In my last year of law school I did a public defender clinic and loved it. I have been a public defender for many years now. It feels like the most closely related to social work for lawyers and I also work with some amazing social workers.
      I love my job and don’t think I would want to do anything else.

    7. 5 – ballerina
      18 – modern dancer
      now- healthcare finance director

      I wouldn’t change a thing. I danced for about 10 years after college and it was hard but precious to me. And the training and discipline from dance has been foundational for me, even doing things completely unrelated to it.

    8. At 5 – a strong man. Like the type in Richard Scary with a dumb bell and a leopard skin toga and trunks. The fact that I was a tiny, skinny little girl did not dissuade me from this.

      At 18 – a campaign manager. The thread the other day about the self-righteous teenager reminded me fondly of my teenage years worshipping Lee Atwater and Alex P. Keaton. My lefty parents were very patient about it.

    9. 5: backhoe operator and lawyer. I loved those heavy construction kid videos blowing through concrete to make a train or a road! I planned to drive the backhoe on the weekends for fun!
      18:lawyer
      21 – 24: professor. Undergrad convinced me I loved academia. Started a PhD program, quickly realized that was not the case.
      25-40: nonprofit fundraiser, including almost a decade for legal aid. I still wish I’d went to law school!

    10. In elementary I wanted to be a doctor; by 18 I wanted to be a chemical engineer. I wound up hating engineering but loved chemistry so got 2 degrees in chemistry and then worked as a chemist for 7 years. But I got burned out on the lab & made a career switch. I wouldn’t go back and change my major, but I would change the path I took to get out of the lab, and I would have taken the time & $$$ to get some certifications back when I was single & childless, because now the idea of going back to school with a full time job and a family feels like more than I have energy for.

    11. 5 — had no concept of careers.
      18 — a spy or trashy fiction writer like VC Andrews or Jackie Collins

    12. I have no memories of when I was five or any specific age really, but mine ran from veterinarian to long-haul truck driver. I started as an accounting major, did like two weeks in compsci, then ended up in sports marketing. Worked in sports all through college and for three years afterwards until I decided I didn’t want to live on a paltry salary and live with roommates forever so threw a dart between grad school for counseling and law school. I am now a lawyer in the defense industry which I love. But I would never have imagined this is where I would be.

    13. When I was little (8 not 5), I wanted to be a princess, but with an eye toward being queen as an adult (like queen regnant, not queen consort; even at a young age, I knew the difference).

    14. 5 – astronaut
      12 – writer
      18 – astronomer/astronomy professor

      I did my undergrad in physics but realized quickly I had neither the ability nor the passion necessary to go to grad school in that area. I now have a job in communications that’s not particularly interesting but it pays the bills. I kind of wish I’d had the guts to pursue fiction writing or journalism when I moved away from space stuff. On the other hand, having steady money is nice and my career is easy and low stress and gives me a lot of time of time to be with my family and volunteer, which I really value.

      I’m planning to retire from my full time job when my only child is through college and financially independent (I’ll be 50, if all goes well) and I’m trying to figure out what I want to do for my next chapter. Some options I’m considering are:
      – trying to build a freelance travel writing career
      – becoming a travel advisor
      – opening a home-based bakery
      – going to flight school to become a commercial airline pilot

    15. 5 – mommy. I had no concept of career at this point beyond jobs perhaps I’d personally encountered like teacher or doctor. Someone once told me they’d been dreaming of being a law firm partner since they were 5. Like. Seriously?!
      18 – lawyer
      Now – lawyer, though not the kind I originally envisioned!

      1. Ha, yeah that’s an odd choice for a 5 year old, but maybe they had a much-loved relative in that job?

        My 5 year old has cycled between wanting to be a teacher, an occupational therapist and a pilot, all of which are occupations she’s had first hand encounters with, but she also emphatically wants to be a mommy. She knows she can do both though, which is awesome. I think I’d be a very happy SAHM and mostly stay in my job for the financial independence and extra income it provides, but my kid taking for granted that she can be a mom and work outside the home if she wants to is definitely a nice side effect.

    16. At 5: first female professional baseball player
      At 18: doctor or cancer scientist
      Now: lawyer, just made partner in my small law firm. I probably would go back to my 18 year old self and question the financial decision of taking on so much student loan debt for college. That pressure sort of forced me to look at careers where I thought I could earn enough $$ to pay them back, so I ended up in law. I am happy where I am today, but not sure my natural talents and skills are as aligned with my career as they could be. The way I think of it, if I were to become independently wealthy, would I continue to do what I do now? The answer to that is a firm no, but I am not sure what else I would be better suited to doing. I really like my firm and my partners, I like my clients (for the most part), my position allows me to live comfortably as a single woman in a VHCOL area, and I have pretty good work-life balance, so all in all, I feel like I can’t complain too much!

    17. At 5 I wanted to be an Avon lady. At 18 I wanted to be a dentist. I am neither but I have absolutely fallen into the correct career. I’m an actuary.

    18. 5- teacher
      18- scientist or doctor – went to college with the intent to major in bio or neuroscience and take the MCAT
      20- neuropsychologist or Nurse practitioner (still taking premed classes, disenchanted with the idea of Med school)
      22- neuropsychologist (was working in a lab)
      Ended up doing grad school for business after three years in a lab talked me out of neuropsych.

      Now at 45 I work in healthcare tech.

    19. 5 – I wanted to be a ballerina. Or Maria from the Sound of Music (handsome rich man, big house and running through fields is 100% a career)
      10-13 – I wanted to be an archeologist (I was pyramid and mummy obsessed)
      13-15 – I wanted to be a forensic archeologist (the murder mystery love affair was beginning)
      16 – I wanted to be an illustrator
      16-25 – Realized I was too practical to be a career artist and was enjoying accounting classes in high school. Realized I could do that for a job and that was that. Did bookkeeping jobs in HS and college.
      30 – spent post grad years doing public accounting for financial services client before switching to the industry side. 3ish years now in an financial analyst/accounting role in financial services/tech. Switching out of public has been the best decision I’ve made in recent years.

      I wouldn’t go back and change anything except maybe not take that AP Anatomy class.

      Dream or alternate life careers now would be: romance novel writer, taste tester or food critic, rich widow alone in her big old house, quant chocolate box village background character, professional couch tester, tablescape designer, floral designer, the person that designs book covers and the text design in books, and obviously chocolate critic.

  5. Any suggestions for resources on making a career change from healthcare (patient-facing job) to higher education (either student facing or office environment, not sure yet)? I’ve been in healthcare for 5-10 years and several life events have led me to be ready to explore another career area. I’m not sure about making permanent changes yet, but I would like to explore some options (part-time or temp. work) right now and am at a point with other aspects of my life that I actually can. I have adjusted my resume and written some cover letters, but overall, I feel stuck trying to transition my wording from industry-specific terminology and benchmarks for healthcare into info that individuals in higher education would relate to, care about, or find relevant. Previous attempts to change didn’t work out for several reasons. I worked in in a small role higher education some during college, and have family/friends who work there, so it’s not too unfamiliar to me….but I could use some advice on where to go next. You all have given good suggestions to others about their careers in previous thread discussions, and I think I would benefit from some outside-of-my-real-life perspectives. Thanks in advance.

    1. Are you looking for a job in healthcare in higher ed or some other kind of job? The student health center at my university always has openings for all kinds of different jobs (patient facing and not), but I don’t know much about them, other than having used the student health center frequently when I was a student myself.

    2. My advice would vary depending on which area of higher ed that you’re interested in. I can see a healthcare background translating well to research compliance and ethics. Beyond that, though, I think it will be a tough sell simply because the terminology and experience doesn’t directly translate and many positions at public universities, at least, have very specific requirements that must be met to even qualify for the first round of interviews.

      I would caution you that simply knowing people in higher ed and doing it for a short stint in college is not really a selling point; in fact, it would make me think you don’t know what you’re getting into, particularly with how much higher ed has changed in recent years.

    3. This is what I would suggest, but it is a multi-year plan. If it is possible, shift your healthcare job to one at a medical center affiliated with a University. From there, focus on positions internal to the affiliated university. Once you have crossed over and been in higher ed for 2+ years, other colleges and universities will be in play.

    4. What in higher ed? There’s student facing roles, admin roles, research roles…a friend is temping at a university right now, looking for permanent project management work. The temp agency placed her. Maybe worth reaching out to several to see how your skills may translate?

    5. I’ll echo the recommendation to start with jobs in student health and research/compliance, and will add career counseling or academic advising for pre-health students. There are also going to be admin jobs in nursing and medical schools that would likely appreciate your background. Getting into a medical center affiliated with a university could also be a helpful move, since that will open up more ways to connect with the university community…but the degree to which theses are siloed will vary, so that would be something to tease out before committing to anything.

      I’ve been in higher ed for almost fifteen years now (not sure when that happened, tbh!) and have been on my share of hiring committees by this point. I’m happy to look at your resume and cover letter if you post a burner email.

      1. OP here. I am open to a healthcare job in higher ed, at least initially, but am thinking more long term about switching to a non-healthcare job in higher ed. I agree this is a multi-year plan and want to execute this change thoughtfully. I do appreciate the suggestions to look at the health center or healthcare areas within the university and see wisdom in the suggestion to temp in different areas to learn about them, especially the changes in recent years as someone mentioned and since I was there as a student. I am considering/have more interest in the areas in student facing and admin areas rather than research. To the offer about the resume/cover letter review, I do not have a burner email, but thank you for your advice about looking at the advising/career counseling side. Thank you all for your thoughtful responses.

  6. I need new under eye concealer. Mid 30s, pale skin, very dark postpartum sleep circles. The ones I’ve tried cake in the cracks of my circles, so not only are my circles visible, I have ridiculous chunks. Any favorite?

        1. I’ve tried more expensive brands, hated them all, and keep coming back to this one.

      1. This. The pink-ish 160 “brightener”color makes you look glowy. Beige skin tone concealer always gives me that “fell asleep on the beach with sunglasses” look.

    1. I haven’t tried it yet, but on my to-buy list is the NARS radiant creamy concealer.
      I’ve also been using a Milani eye brightening cream. It is a peachy color to offset the darkness. Doesn’t completely cover them, but it helps.

    2. I’d recommend a good setting powder that is made for under eyes. That matters just as much as the concealer. I use the Pat McGrath Sublime Perfection Blurring Under Eye setting powder in light (the white one).

    3. Skinfood Salmon Dark Circle Concealer. It’s a miracle worker … color counteracts the dark, it’s thick but incredibly creamy and easy to blend and it kind of fills in and blurs lines and pores.

  7. My mom wants to get me a gift for starting a new job. She didn’t put a price on it, but I’m thinking in the $100-$200 range, preferably on the lower end. She already got me a watch I love when I started my last job. I don’t particularly need any additional jewelry. She got me a nice wallet for Christmas. I was thinking maybe a leather padfolio with my initials on it (eyeing one from Leatherology) but wanted to ask the hive for ideas.

      1. +1 if you and your mom are near enough to each other or have a visit soon. Otherwise, a piece of art?

    1. Any technology you would like? Ring light, good headphones? Or small piece of art for office?

    2. Any unique desk accessories? My mom gave me a granite card holder when I started a new job in person. I hadn’t seen one like that before, and I really loved it when I was in the office!

    3. I never use padfolios but ymmv. What my current MVPs are in this price point-

      Good webcam or ring light
      Cashmere desk wrap
      Sam Edelman loafers

  8. I think that coat looks like cheap fast fashion. It has that fuzzy look of polyester…and yes, its about 40% polyester. For almost $600?? Nope!

  9. Holy crap- a new study was just published where exactly ZERO cases of invasive cervical cancer were seen in women who’d been vaccinated for HPV at 12 or 13. Not every day that a perfect preventative comes around!

    (Palmer et al J National Cancer Inst, 2024)

  10. AITA for muting a good friend on social media because she’s sharing diet-driven food photos and before/after pics of herself? She has lost 70 lbs. and while I’m happy that she’s happy, I find it very triggering. In the period she has been losing weight, I have been struggling hard to maintain mine and my body image is a mess at the moment. It does not help that I know my friend lost weight with the help of an MLM program that she’s now a “health coach” for, and I find the whole thing pretty distasteful. While I love her, she has zero qualifications to be advising people about their health.

    1. nta. I would try to maintain a relationship with her outside of social media (if she’s able to do so w/out talking constantly about the MLM and triggering you).

    2. No, it’s fine to unfollow or mute. Some people need a lot of social support and reinforcement to manage weight. It sounds like that doesn’t benefit you. I would also struggle with the ethics of a MLM, but I’d love to have a coach not for medical advice but for accountability, commiseration, support, etc. so it’s not all bad.

    3. Are you asking because you’re genuinely trying to sort out if you should feel guilty, because she is saying something to you, or because you want permission?

      If it’s permission, granted. If it’s genuinely not knowing if it’s socially OK to do this, it is for me, but your situation depends on your friend group norms and how much you care about those norms. If it’s because she’s asking you what’s going on, you can decide how much info to give her about how her posts are affecting you.

      1. I feel guilty for hating a friend’s social media presence enough that I need to leave out for a bit and hope she doesn’t notice.

        1. Meh, this is the risk of joining an MLM. I muted a friend who started shilling essential oils. I check on her insta by searching for her and can then just tap-tap-tap like fast-forwarding thru the ads they are, while keeping up on real life.

        2. If you are just muting her, there’s no reason she’ll notice because she can’t see you’ve muted her. If she brings something up later, you can always say, “Oh I didn’t see that…” The algorithm doesn’t show us everything anyway.

    4. Mute away, that’s what it’s there for! (And she doesn’t need to know you muted the posts)

    5. It’s perfectly fine to mute people. If it’s the same MLM I think it is, those people hardly even eat real food. It’s very easy to crash diet to lose weight and much harder to keep that weight off. Many of those people gain that weight back. Not saying that will definitely happen to your friend, but it definitely could. I wouldn’t say that’s healthy behavior to coach others on either.

      1. We’re talking about the same one, I think. They eat one real meal a day and the rest is prepackaged frankenfood.

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