The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

A woman who sold her swelling until she was hospitalized, retired and started selling sweat from her breasts - Walla! health

2022-06-15T10:27:24.305Z


Stephanie Matthews made about $ 200,000 from selling jars with her swelling. She has now started marketing bottles with sweat accumulating under her chest - and this venture is also crowned a success


A woman who sold her swelling until she was hospitalized, retired and started selling sweat from her breasts

Stephanie Matthews earned about $ 200,000 from selling jars full of her puffs.

Until she was hospitalized when she tried to meet demand and loaded her stomach with beans and protein-rich smoothies.

She has now started marketing bottles with sweat that collects under her chest - and this venture is also crowned a success in the meantime

Not to be missed

15/06/2022

Wednesday, 15 June 2022, 00:11 Updated: 13:08

  • Share on Facebook

  • Share on WhatsApp

  • Share on Twitter

  • Share on Email

  • Share on general

  • Comments

    Comments

Stephanie Matthew has moved from selling farts in a jar to selling breast sweat in a tube (stepankamatto)

The woman who made headlines after selling jars of her fragrant puffs and was forced to stop marketing the desired product due to health issues - is not giving up.

Instead she began marketing a new and seemingly safer "revolutionary" product: bottles filled with sweat accumulating under her breasts.

We're not kidding.



Stephanie Matthews has an exceptional resume that would not be accepted in any self-respecting business.

After becoming a reality star when she appeared on the show “90 Days to Get Engaged,” she began engaging in a lucrative and seemingly effortless profession: selling jars full of her puffs to her fans online.



The puffs of Stephanie, a resident of Connecticut, USA, were in great demand on the Unfiltrd adult site back in November 2021, when she charged $ 1,000 for a high-quality, fragrant nodule jar. To

raise a sum of about $ 200,000 just from her bloated sales. At one point the demand was so great that she filled 97 jars for two days.



She added to her daily menu foods that would help her release. Yogurt (preferably less sugar), some hard-boiled eggs, "she said in a video she shared on Instagram, adding:" While I was waiting for these puffs to form, I loved reading.

I'm very smart, I really like reading. "

And in contrast

A singer was hospitalized because she was ashamed to fart next to her boyfriend

To the full article

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Stephanie Matto (@stepankamatto)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Stephanie Matto (@stepankamatto)

Then the problems started ...

If you think this is the easiest job in the world, you are probably wrong.

We would suggest you check, but pity the jars because it is doubtful if your bloating will have any demand.

For those of her it was quite a bit as we mentioned, and unfortunately, her career was almost tragically cut short when her new lifestyle led her to the hospital earlier this year with a fear of a heart attack.



The business (which is important to clarify - including only releasing swelling to the jar and shipping) was successful in the first few weeks, however as orders continued to flow, she realized she would have to change her eating habits to continue filling jars.

To keep pace and aggravate the swelling odor, she told Jam Press that she added to her daily menu a plate of beans and no small amounts of protein shakes.

This is what a day in her life looks like:

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Stephanie Matto (@stepankamatto)

More in "Do Not Miss":

  • A woman claims she is having an orgasm without contact - and research confirms this

  • The vegan who drinks his urine daily: "I look a decade younger. It also cured my depression."

  • Is Bee Cure Laser right for you?

    This way you will know who the device is suitable for and who is not

And a year in her life:

@stepankamatto This is my story? ❤️?

# Totinos425 #singlelife # 90dayfiance ♬ original sound - Sad_account

This mix, although it certainly helped her bank account, affected her gut less well - and within two months of starting the project she had to give it up due to health issues.

Stephanie said she was hospitalized while trying to keep up with the sky-high demand: "I remember that day I consumed about three protein shakes and a huge bowl of black bean soup," she said. "It was pretty hard for me to breathe and every time I tried to breathe, I felt a pinch around my heart."



Stephanie feared she might have had a heart attack and went to the hospital accompanied by her friend.

Fortunately this was not the case: "It became clear to me that what I was experiencing was not a stroke or a heart attack, but very intense gas pains," she revealed.

"I was advised to change my eating habits and take a gas-suppressing drug, which actually puts an end to my business."

The new product: teat sweat

Stephanie did not raise her hands.

She began selling her swelling in NFTs and started a "new business" with a similar clientele: selling bottles of sweat collected under her breasts for $ 500 a bottle.

She began to collect her sweat while sitting in the sun, this time taking safety measures so that she would not be hospitalized again.

That is, she takes care to drink so as not to dry out and apply sunscreen so that it does not burn in the sun.

Since then she continues to make thousands of dollars a day from selling sweat.



In a number of recently released ticketing videos, the 31-year-old entrepreneur spoke openly about her new product.

"All you need is bottles, sunscreen and sit outside like a tree for hours!"

She said in one video, in which she is seen pointing to the sun and then standing outside with a small container pressed to her chest.

Within a week of starting the venture, it had sold more than 50 jars, she told Insider.

"It's not an easy job, but no one said it would be," she told the news.com.au venture, "I like to call myself a human maple tree when the tit sweats my fruit."

She added: "The time it takes to fill a bottle with sweat varies and depends on several scientific factors, mainly the heat, the movement and how dehydrated I am."

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Stephanie Matto (@stepankamatto)

And this is what it looks like:

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Stephanie Matto (@stepankamatto)

Reactions to Stephanie's business model were mixed: while her fans encouraged her for the creativity she displayed, others criticized her inability to work in "normal work."

However, she does not seem to have a problem with criticism: "I feel like the universe likes to judge us for weird ways to make money," she said, "but if my chest sweat is a new side income, I'm here for it. It's going to be a hot summer and boobs Mine are sweating so let's fill bottles and sell it if we're already here. "

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Stephanie Matto (@stepankamatto)

@stepankamatto It was the best of times, it was the best of times.

#FrunktheBeat #LENOVOJUSTBEYOU # 10MillionAdoptions ♬ Not me starting a TikTok trend purrrrr - Preston is over party?

Aside from over-tanning and the potential for dehydration, Stephanie recently told her 300,000 followers on Instagram that a bear appeared in her backyard and "closed the business for the week."

She recounted: "I was in my backyard, by the pool, filling orders for my sweat jars when a bear suddenly appeared! So crazy!".



"I'm a pretty creative and innovative person," Stephanie told Insider, which also runs a subscription platform for people 18 and older, similar to OnlyFans.

"I'm constantly asked for my videos to train and sweat. There's no reason I should not make money from it!"

Mifal Hapayis works to promote culture and art in Israel.

Let's meet >>

  • health

  • news

Tags

  • Sweat

  • Farts

  • swelling

Source: walla

All life articles on 2022-06-15

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.