I dunno. At between $450 to $750/hour, and claiming it permanently destroys fat cells, my bullshit meter is pinging at max. I can't imagine permanently destroying fat cells is actually healthy, since all they do is shrink and grow as you gain or lose fat, not disappear. And the implication is that you can do cool sculpting and since it "destroys" fat cells you can keep doing whatever it is that got you that fat in the first place. Which sounds like wishful thinking or deceptive marketing.
But if it works for you and you can live with paying that much then more power to you I guess.
Meanwhile....the pursuit of leanness through work continues! One layer at a time. I saw a very noticeable drop when I started implementing a real, barbell heavy leg day. 5x5 squats, 5x5 deadlifts, and my normal 25x3 kettlebell swings. I've already adapted pretty well so tomorrow I'm going to up the weight (especially on deadlifts.) The amount of calories burned by working the entire lower half of the body is phenomenal, and man after deadlifts, I can feel everything. Not just my legs, back and butt. Shoulders, traps, biceps, triceps, even a little chest. Everything contributes to a deadlift and it's kind of a magical feeling to leave the gym after a full body workout that only took ~50 minutes. My workouts on upper body days just seem to be getting longer, and longer. I'm doing 9 to 10 exercises per session now, and pushing many of them to 4 sets. So my upper body days have gone from about an hour to an hour and 20 minutes, and I still end feeling like I could *probably* do more. I can now see how meat heads can spend an hour and a half to two hours in the gym doing 5x10 for 10 exercises. The longer you do it, the more your body adapts and the higher your work capacity becomes, but the more work you have to put in to reach that level of burn and soreness you got in your first year or two of lifting. If you asked me a year ago if I could manage this work capacity, I'd have been like "Fuck no, are you crazy?!?!" Now apparently I am crazy because it doesn't feel like an insane amount of work to be doing, it feels like "just the right amount."