About six months ago I was added to the TruVision Facebook page by a rep because I was interested in trying it. I bought the starter pack that my helpful rep suggested. I had gained a lot of baby weight and was excited to get back to my pre-pregnancy weight.
I took the pills and water like I was supposed to. Even though my rep swore I wouldn’t have to exercise to see results, I took long walks with my little one everyday. Nothing happened. After two long months of feeling jittery and slightly nauseous I still hadn’t lost more than 2 pounds. My rep said the side-effects were due to my body “detoxing” (for 2 months?).
I decided to do the research I should have done in the beginning. I feel so stupid now. I began to notice that whenever they post a weight loss picture on the Facebook page it is always a rep posting saying “wow look how much weight so-in-so lost!” When you comment under the picture asking if you can talk to the person in the picture and ask them some questions about their weight loss journey with the pills, a rep either ignores your comment, private messages you about how great it worked for them, or gets other reps to comment under your comment about the “great results” they are getting, and some of them post pictures of themselves. But these are all people who sell the pills!
Even when claim they are just a customer they aren’t. I know this because I went to several of their pages just to check and lo and behold all of them had TruVision associate under their profession. Many also had TruVision posts on their walls. It’s like they don’t realize people are smart enough to check these things. Then again, I just took my rep at her word and didn’t check until after buying the product. So I was pretty gullible.
No matter how much you ask, they will NOT let you talk to the original person in the actual photo! Only another associate. If this was a legit weight loss pill then they would have no problem letting you talk to the original people (whose photos they are probably stealing and who probably lost weight a different way). And those people would be on the page posting the photos themselves and raving about how awesome the pills are. But they aren’t.
I’m not saying it couldn’t maybe work for someone, but they are most likely using fake pictures and it is not the miracle drug they claim. Even if it did work, it would take time, exercise, diet, and by the time you factor all that in you could just lose weight on your own doing that without the pill. They have to sell the illusion that you can lose a ridiculous amount of weight in a short amount of time which just isn’t possible with a magic pill. So they try everything they can to distract you so you will forget about wanting to talk to the person in the photos and try to convince you to talk to a different person who they know will lie and not say anything negative so they can make a sale. I feel so stupid for falling for this and not researching it before I paid for a product that I can’t use.
Bottom Line: No, I would not recommend this to a friend