Look at the language. We no longer go on "diets"; we go on "resets." We don't restrict calories; we "fast for autophagy." We don't eliminate food groups; we "cut out inflammation." The vocabulary has changed, but the result—the relentless pursuit of a specific, lean, glowing aesthetic—remains disturbingly similar.
Real wellness does not require you to shrink—physically or metaphorically. Real wellness is not a number on a scale or a ring on your Oura. Real wellness is the ability to look in the mirror, tired and unshowered, and think, "You are enough." Nudist Teens Photos
Body positivity, at its core, is a justice movement. It was started by fat, queer, Black women to demand space in a world that wanted them to shrink. Wellness, as it stands today, is largely an aesthetic industry. One fights for survival; the other sells matcha. Does this mean we have to choose? Must we abandon green juice for greasy pizza in the name of self-acceptance? Absolutely not. Look at the language
But if you look closer, the relationship is complicated. In fact, it might be toxic. Real wellness is not a number on a