Here is the nuanced truth: You can be metabolically healthy at a higher weight (this is called "metabolically healthy obesity"). Conversely, you can be thin and incredibly unhealthy due to poor sleep, high stress, smoking, or a diet of processed foods.

Dinner and rest. You eat until you are pleasantly full. After dinner, you notice the urge to scroll through "thinspiration" on social media. You put the phone down and read a book instead. You go to bed at a reasonable hour because you respect your body’s need for repair. Addressing the Common Criticisms Critics will argue that a body positivity and wellness lifestyle is dangerous—that it ignores the health risks associated with higher weight.

But a radical shift is occurring. The rigid, thin-centric definition of health is crumbling, replaced by a more inclusive, compassionate, and sustainable model: the .

Lunch time. You pack a "colorful plate" not because you have to, but because you know roasted veggies and lean protein will prevent the 3:00 PM energy crash. Your coworker brings in donuts. You take one, enjoy every bite, and feel zero need to "compensate" at the gym.