Australian influencer who claimed 39getting sick is a choice39 is

Australian influencer who claimed 'getting sick is a choice' is under fire again for being 'out of touch' for 2024

A controversial Gold Coast influencer has come under fire again over a recent Instagram post.

Georgie Stevenson, founder of Nake Harvest Supplements and the Rise & Conquer podcast, took to the social media platform earlier this week to share her list of “Ins and Outs” for 2024 with her 404,000 followers.

While some of the goals she listed seemed achievable — including “setting intentions rather than specific goals,” “protecting my time,” and “reading fantasy books” — Georgie's post still caused a stir.

The influencer attracted backlash by listing “monthly trips” along with an island emoji, claiming it “changed my world in 2023.”

In the comments, Georgie's followers accused her of being out of touch given the current cost of living crisis in Australia and the financial realities of many of her fans.

Georgie Stevenson, founder of Nake Harvest Supplements and the Rise & Conquer podcast, shared her list of

Georgie Stevenson, founder of Nake Harvest Supplements and the Rise & Conquer podcast, shared her list of “Ins and Outs” for 2024 with her followers on Instagram earlier this week

“Monthly rides lmao,” one user pointed out.

Another questioned the logistics of such a destination, asking, “How did you start the monthly trips?” Were they big, small or both?'

Meanwhile, the post was also spotted by influencer watchdog account @keepingupwithaussieinfluencers, who re-shared the post on his Instagram story and wrote: “Georgie.. I would love to do a monthly trip too.”

In a later TikTok video, Georgie called the destination “allegedly controversial” before defending its inclusion on her list.

“These aren’t lavish European trips, this is literally a night out with my best friend, my husband, family trips, everything.”

Georgie's post was captioned: “Out with the old and in with the new.” I love this trend SM!'

While some of the goals she listed seemed achievable - including The influencer sparked criticism by listing “monthly trips.”

While some of the goals she listed seemed achievable – including “setting intentions rather than concrete goals,” “protecting my time” and “reading fantasy books” – Georgie's post still sparked controversy. The influencer sparked criticism by listing “monthly trips.”

In the comments, Georgie's followers accused her of being out of touch given the current cost of living crisis in Australia and the financial realities of many of her fans

In the comments, Georgie's followers accused her of being out of touch given the current cost of living crisis in Australia and the financial realities of many of her fans

“The New Year's mood is really different.” It's the perfect time to think about what works for you and what doesn't. What to expect from 2024 and what you need to do to get there,” she added.

“My pros and cons for 2024 reflect exactly what I expect from this year; Pleasure, intentionality, curiosity and to create space and give myself grace for what I’m navigating.”

It's not the first time in recent months that Georgie has come under fire.

In September 2023, the influencer sparked backlash after sharing a shocking theory on her health and wellness podcast Rise & Conquer.

Australian influencer and entrepreneur Georgie Stevenson faced backlash last year after sharing a conspiracy theory on her health and wellness podcast Rise & Conquer

Australian influencer and entrepreneur Georgie Stevenson faced backlash last year after sharing a conspiracy theory on her health and wellness podcast Rise & Conquer

In the now-deleted episode, Georgie and her producer Atiyya Batty discussed whether or not getting sick is “a choice.”

“She believes that getting sick is a choice… and your body is faced with the virus and your subconscious decides whether or not it wants to accept the upgrade,” Batty told Stevenson.

“Oh my God, I believe that one hundred percent!” Stevenson exclaimed.

In the now-deleted episode, Georgie and her producer Atiyya Batty (pictured) discussed whether or not getting sick is “Oh my God, I believe that one hundred percent!” Stevenson exclaimed

In the now-deleted episode, Georgie and her producer Atiyya Batty discussed whether or not getting sick is “a choice.”

Batty and Stevenson are featured on the cover of the podcast, which is one of the most popular health and fitness podcasts in Australia

Batty and Stevenson are featured on the cover of the podcast, which is one of the most popular health and fitness podcasts in Australia

'Do you? Okay good!' Batty replied.

The episode sparked a wave of backlash, with one listener writing: “Cool, you can tell that to my lupus.” What dangerous rhetoric. My God.'

Another commented: “Yeah because getting sick is an upgrade, two absolute idiots.” I'm also 100% sure I didn't opt ​​for an upgrade when I was “introduced” and “offered” COVID. “