That phrase is usually just clickbait baiting curiosity—it doesn’t actually tell you what “this” is, so it can refer to almost anything (cooking, cleaning, health, plants, etc.).
In reality, when posts say “most people do this wrong,” it’s often:
- oversimplifying something normal
- exaggerating a small tip
- or pushing a “secret trick” that isn’t necessary
🧠 How to read these posts safely
If you see:
- “So glad I saw this”
- “Most people do this wrong”
- “Doctors don’t want you to know”
👉 It usually means the content is designed for attention, not accuracy.
⚠️ What’s missing from that kind of claim
A real useful tip should always include:
- what exactly is being done wrong
- why it matters (with evidence)
- and what the correct method is
Without that, it’s just a hook.
🧭 Bottom line
That sentence alone doesn’t describe any real advice—it’s just a teaser line used in viral posts.
If you paste the full post or tell me what “this” refers to, I can break it down properly and tell you whether it’s true or misleading.
