Scrolling through #BodyPositiveWellness reveals a pattern: the vast majority of "inclusive" influencers still have small waists, clear skin, and toned arms. They may be size 10 or 12 (rarely size 22+), and they almost never show the cellulite, loose skin, or mobility aids that real bodies have. The unspoken rule remains: You can be body positive, as long as you are striving toward a conventionally acceptable version of "well."
Wellness rarely stays neutral. "Clean eating," "detoxing," and "anti-inflammatory" quickly become code for moral superiority. If you choose to eat processed food or sugar, you aren't just making a different choice; you are failing the "wellness" test. Body positivity says all foods fit . Wellness culture whispers, but some foods are poison . Russianbare Young Nudist Uliana And Family Torrent Seedpeer
True body positivity includes bodies that cannot "optimize." A person with ME/CFS or POTS cannot do a 6 AM cold plunge or a green juice cleanse. Yet wellness culture’s obsession with biohacking and longevity often sidelines or pathologizes chronically ill bodies as "not trying hard enough." The Verdict: A Fragile, Useful Truce Rating: ⭐⭐⭐ (3/5) – Promising but perilous Wellness culture whispers, but some foods are poison
Follow individual advocates (e.g., Aubrey Gordon, Virgie Tovar) rather than branded "wellness" accounts. Read Anti-Diet by Christy Harrison. And if a wellness practice makes you feel more ashamed of your body than you were before— that is not wellness. That is diet culture in a crystal-infused disguise. Wellness culture whispers