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That is the truest form of body positivity: honoring your body by caring for it, not controlling it.
Thin people can be metabolically unhealthy. Larger people can be extremely fit. Wellness is about habits, not body size. When you truly believe this, you stop judging others’ bodies—and your own. This is the tricky part. Can you pursue weight loss and still be body positive?
But for many, this creates confusion: If I love my body as it is, does that mean I shouldn’t try to change it? If I want to get stronger, does that mean I hate how I look now? French Nudist Colony Junior Beauty Contest.mpg - Collection
When you stop attaching morality to food and exercise, you stop the shame cycle. And shame is the #1 killer of long-term wellness. Without shame, you can actually listen to your body. Diet culture demands perfection. Body positivity, when misunderstood, can sometimes reject all health talk as "diet culture."
Then came the movement, reminding us that all bodies are good bodies. It taught us that self-worth is not determined by waist size, and that you deserve respect and joy at any size. That is the truest form of body positivity:
The answer is no. True wellness and true body positivity are not enemies. In fact, they are best friends.
Health is neutral. It fluctuates. Your value as a human being is constant and unchanging. Wellness is about habits, not body size
Here is how to integrate both into a sustainable, joyful lifestyle. The old wellness model asked: What do I need to burn off? Body positivity asks: What do I need to feel good?
For years, we were told that wellness was a punishment. We exercised to "burn off" what we ate. We dieted to shrink ourselves. We chased a number on a scale, believing that smaller equaled healthier.