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Here’s how to hold both without losing your sanity. Wellness culture often whispers: You’re good if you eat clean, lazy if you skip a workout. Body positivity counters: Your worth is not up for negotiation, regardless of your habits.

You can absolutely want to build strength, improve your sleep, or eat more vegetables—without declaring your current body unacceptable. The moment wellness turns into a battle against yourself, step back. The moment body positivity tells you not to grow or heal, question it. You don’t have to choose between loving your body as it is and caring for what it can become. The most radical act might be holding both: I am enough right now, and I am allowed to want better for myself—not because I’m broken, but because I’m alive.

So which is it? Do I accept my body as it is, or work to make it stronger, healthier, more capable?

Here’s a solid, balanced post exploring the intersection of body positivity and the wellness lifestyle, written to spark reflection rather than division. Can You Be Body Positive and Wellness-Oriented? Yes—But Here’s the Fine Print.

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