Pink Truth Breaks My Heart

You know what honestly breaks my heart? That so many women find this site and get pulled deeper into negativity. I’m not saying everyone’s experience with Mary Kay is perfect. Nothing in life is! But this place is just a support group for bitterness. You say you’re helping others, but what you’re doing is feeding their doubt and disappointment.

Mary Kay gave me confidence I didn’t even know I had. It gave me friendships that go beyond business. It gave me something to believe in when I really needed it. I’ve had hard months, sure. I’ve questioned things. But I didn’t quit and I pushed through. That’s what it takes.

Not everyone is going to see success overnight. But that doesn’t mean the opportunity is a scam. It means you have to grow into it. And if you had stuck around long enough to do that, maybe you wouldn’t feel the need to tear down something that’s helped so many others thrive. I really hope you find something that lifts you up instead of just tearing things down.

4 COMMENTS

  1. “Not everyone is going to see success overnight. But that doesn’t mean the opportunity is a scam.”

    The simple fact that over 99% must lose money for the top 1% to turn a profit proves it is a scam.

    The simple fact that no downline can be profitable as a whole proves it is a scam.

    Just because someone is able to turn a profit does not make it legit. The fact is no upline can turn a profit without significant downlines losses. This proves it is a scam.

    These are the realities of pay-to-play endless-chain recruiting schemes like Mary Kay.

    Best to invest your time in a real world job, where all job participants, not just the top 1%, can make positive cash.

  2. Dear heartbroken,
    This site doesn’t tear down an opportunity, it tears down a predator. Wouldn’t you want to be a part of us who tear down predators?

    This business disguises itself as an opportunity. You are not being given an opportunity. You are the opportunity.

    I really wish you well, sincerely.

  3. “You say you’re helping others, but what you’re doing is feeding their doubt and disappointment.”

    Doubt and disappointment are perfectly reasonable emotions to have, especially when you’ve been promised the moon and haven’t even gotten a Moon Pie. Just because an emotion doesn’t feel nice, or you’ve been taught that it’s “negative”, doesn’t mean it’s invalid. In fact, it’s extra important to address those heavy feelings because they will affect your life in a way that security and contentment don’t.

    If the doubt and disappointment are there to be fed, they’re there for a reason, and the person owes it to themself to know why and what brought them on so they can make a decision about the way forward. Like whether to continue throwing money after a business model where far less than 1% of participants make a living wage.

  4. Telling someone they just need to “grow into” a situation that negatively affects their finances, marriage and mental health is gross.

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