People who want to pursue health without self-punishment, and who appreciate mindfulness over metrics.
Another issue is accessibility: many wellness solutions (organic food, boutique gyms, therapy) remain expensive, while body positivity is free in theory but often marketed toward privileged demographics.
Those recovering from eating disorders without professional support, or anyone seeking purely weight-neutral spaces (many wellness brands still struggle with this).
At first glance, body positivity and wellness seem like natural allies. One champions self-acceptance at any size; the other promotes healthy habits. But in practice, their relationship is more nuanced—and worth examining critically.
The friction comes when wellness culture quietly reintroduces diet mentality. Terms like “clean eating,” “detox,” or “optimizing your body” can trigger old patterns, even under a body-positive banner. Some wellness spaces still equate health with thinness or muscle tone, subtly undermining the core message that all bodies deserve respect regardless of their habits or shape.
⭐ – A necessary evolution, but not without growing pains.