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Both blocks of text also have the same types of other errors. Amber writes "...no longer have positive emotions towards taking next steps", and the dietician responds "... no longer have positive emotions surrounding next steps for surgery". Both forgot to add the word "the" before "next steps" in these sentences. It's unusual for two completely different people to make the same obvious error - even when responding to an email line by line. Also, this might just be me, but I also noticed a staggering lack of contractions in the dietician's response - as in, NONE (and I highly doubt that Commander Data from the USS Enterprise was her dietician). It just doesn't feel natural. I can't speak for others, but I do notice that if I'm trying to change by tone in my writing, or trying to sound more serious (especially discussing topics where I'm out of my element), contractions start to disappear from my writing.Of course their email is fake and Amber wrote it herself, they both say the same phrases.
Here's Amberlynn's
And here's the one she's faking is theirs using the exact same words:
They are just cheering her on from the singular sideline, that one big sideline, on the one side.View attachment 5189389View attachment 5189384
Anyone else realize Amber quit "weight less" surgery and not "weight loss" surgery?@Turd Fergusson - yep, quit before she could be fired... or before she'd have to lose any weight.
Here are the "emails" which look don't look like emails, but remarkably like DMs sent through Facebook between Amber and ... oh, I don't know... JADE perhaps?
View attachment 5188853View attachment 5188854
Oh, and a few more (that of course she won't show us).
Stupid Jade: you forgot to include the part where the dietician praises Amber for her YouTube following! Dummy!
She claims that she didn't really fail because she didn't set an end date (ex 30 days, 100 days) of this no takeout LIFESTYLE CHANGE. She's smiling and so pleased with her herself from the 'binge' (for lack of a better word). She even goes back to the crime scene to fondle the wrappers and relive the molment. In fact, Amber becomes out of breath carrying the wrappers 4 waddling shuffle steps from one end of the kitchen island to the other in order to toss them in the trash.
Interesting thing that I didn't catch in her last video. Amber NOW discloses that during last year's dangleen lung, the doctor wanted to prescribe diuretics due to some fluid collecting around her lung (but decided against it due to other health complications they could have caused). Hmmm, an enlarged heart (from being supder-duper-uber DEATHSTAR fat for her entire adult life), constant shortness of breath, grotesque swelling in her extremities, and now fluid around (in?) the lungs? ... Are we perhaps entering a CHF arc?
Er, that part is redacted in the proffered email. It says, "You may already have [the director's] email, but just in case, it is [redacted in the screenshot]. That doesn't seem odd for a small outfit where Amber [theoretically] already knows the staff.This email is fake. No office asks for "complaints" to a person with no name or number provided.
Customer Service and a Medical Clinic are very different. You have to be very careful in what you write to patients.Er, that part is redacted in the proffered email. It says, "You may already have [the director's] email, but just in case, it is [redacted in the screenshot]. That doesn't seem odd for a small outfit where Amber [theoretically] already knows the staff.
And I'm just going to say, after reading some comments - I have worked exclusively with some of the biggest companies in the US, and many of the responses to customers/ clients from customer service reps - even escalated reps (who have a lot more leeway) - are often far less professional than this. Even responses that went through a QA process before sending.
Not saying anything about whether these are true and honest screenshots, but the provided response from the provider does not ring any particular bells for me from the professionalism standpoint. They repeated the patient's words bc c&p and provided a version of "ok good luck; we're here if you need us." It's not maybe a perfect example of a response, but it's not a bad or unrealistic one, either.
Amber definitely wrote both emails, but I enjoy her trying to role play a medical office professional.Of course their email is fake and Amber wrote it herself, they both say the same phrases.
Here's Amberlynn's
And here's the one she's faking is theirs using the exact same words:
They are just cheering her on from the singular sideline, that one big sideline, on the one side.View attachment 5189389View attachment 5189384
Emails from staff in medical offices can certainly be sloppy and have typos but what they aren't is overwrought, lengthy and overly personal. Who has the time to type that shit out to one patient in a office for fatties in Kentucky? LMAO.Er, that part is redacted in the proffered email. It says, "You may already have [the director's] email, but just in case, it is [redacted in the screenshot]. That doesn't seem odd for a small outfit where Amber [theoretically] already knows the staff.
And I'm just going to say, after reading some comments - I have worked exclusively with some of the biggest companies in the US, and many of the responses to customers/ clients from customer service reps - even escalated reps (who have a lot more leeway) - are often far less professional than this. Even responses that went through a QA process before sending.
Not saying anything about whether these are true and honest screenshots, but the provided response from the provider does not ring any particular bells for me from the professionalism standpoint. They repeated the patient's words bc c&p and provided a version of "ok good luck; we're here if you need us." It's not maybe a perfect example of a response, but it's not a bad or unrealistic one, either.
She's absolutely over the moon with herself, retelling of the McDonald's like a horny frat boy retelling his mates of his latest conquest...I've never seen someone so giddy while admitting to a complete fail.
I've always found it weird that in 7 months we've only seen two weigh-ins. I bet this saga ended around 3 months ago.She's absolutely over the moon with herself, retelling of the McDonald's like a horny frat boy retelling his mates of his latest conquest...
This is not the face or behavior of someone who decided they were going to quit the weight loss surgery program because they wanted to strike out and lose the weight on their own...
View attachment 5190354
No, she quit before they could reject her, the fear of rejection is off her shoulders, and the terror of not being able to gorge herself is gone.
She didnt have a discussion with the doctor, or the therapist to quit weight loss surgery. She "quit" via email to the dieticians office just before an appointment. The dietician is the one that was doing the weight ins, and was where actual progress was being tracked. Not the therapist. The therapist was there to help her with the mental issues of constantly eating, but the proof she was putting in the work, and the person with the actual final say was the dietician and the scale. Amby canceled her appointment with the dietician because it was likely a crucial weigh in, she knew she's been gorging herself constantly...so she canceled and got McDonalds and all was right in AmberLyin Reid's world again.
Fair, though the customer service stuff I have had the pleasure of reading is in regulated industries and often dealt with regulatory and critical financial matters, so not "sorry you hate the Lego set; here's a coupon for 50 cents off your next $100 purchase" stuff. This stuff went through multiple levels of review, because it could present significant risk to screw up. And they were still often garbage, both in form and in substance.Customer Service and a Medical Clinic are very different. You have to be very careful in what you write to patients.
Agree. I was assuming that this kind of place would be more personalized, hoping to retain the connection and not churning out response to quitter letters daily, but I take your point!what they aren't is overwrought, lengthy and overly personal.
Lol. HR and brand people's templates/form libraries are some of the worst offenders, both grammatically and in terms of actual responsiveness. Embarrassingly bad at times.then they are actually letter perfect and precise because some H&R professional wrote them for the company to paste in basic form replies to patients.
After all, they WERE comparing her to their other patients and telling her how much better/ready she was than them. It was their pleasure to treat her.Hamber had been living in her grease bubble such a long time her narcissism went wild, she's delusional to the point that professionals would waste their expensive breath to say how proud they are, proud... ...proud... ...proud not of anyone, but her snd her only.