Most of us didn't wake up one day and decide to feel bad about our bodies. It happened slowly through offhand comments, TV shows, social media feeds, well-meaning relatives, and a culture that has spent decades telling us our bodies are problems to be solved.
If you've ever looked in the mirror and felt a wave of disappointment, or found yourself mentally editing your body before you could feel comfortable in it, that's not a personal failing. That's the entirely predictable result of growing up in a world that profits from your insecurity.
The good news? Those messages can be unlearned. Not easily, and not all at once, but they can be.
Body image isn't really about your body. It's about your relationship with your body. How you see it, feel about it, and treat it. And that relationship is shaped by everything around you long before you have the tools to question it.
From a young age, most of us absorb messages about which bodies are valuable, attractive, and worthy of respect and which aren't. Diet culture, social media, the fashion industry, and even well-intentioned health messaging all reinforce a narrow, often unattainable ideal. When our bodies don't match that ideal, and most bodies never will, we're taught to see ourselves as the problem.
The result? A constant, exhausting inner critic. A body that never quite feels like home.
Diet culture is the set of beliefs that equates thinness with health, morality, and worthiness. It tells us that our bodies need to be controlled, shrunk, and disciplined and that if we just had enough willpower, we could achieve the "right" body.
The problem is that diet culture doesn't just fail us physically. The research on long-term dieting outcomes is sobering. It also does real psychological harm. It teaches us to distrust our bodies, to override hunger and fullness cues, to see eating as something to be managed rather than enjoyed, and to tie our self-worth to our appearance.
Challenging diet culture isn't about abandoning health. It's about separating your worth as a person from the size or shape of your body and recognizing that true wellbeing includes your mental and emotional relationship with yourself.
Self-acceptance gets misunderstood a lot. It doesn't mean you love every part of your body every day. It doesn't mean you never have hard moments in front of the mirror. It doesn't require you to feel beautiful all the time.
Self-acceptance means something quieter and more sustainable: deciding that your body deserves basic respect regardless of how it looks. That you are worthy of care, nourishment, and kindness not as a reward for achieving a certain appearance, but simply because you exist.
It's a practice, not a destination. And it usually involves two things: turning down the volume on external messages, and turning up the volume on your own inner experience.
Audit your inputs
What you consume shapes how you feel. Spend a week noticing how different social media accounts, books, or TV shows make you feel about your body. Unfollow, mute, or step away from anything that consistently leaves you feeling worse about yourself. This isn't avoidance, it is self-protection.
Diversify what you see
Our sense of "normal" is shaped by what we're exposed to. Actively seek out bodies of different sizes, ages, abilities, and shapes in the media you consume. The more variety you see, the less power any single narrow ideal holds.
Separate appearance from value
Begin to notice when you're tying your worth to how you look. When you catch yourself thinking "I'll feel better about myself when I lose weight" or "I'd be more confident if my body looked different." That's diet culture talking. Gently redirect: what do I actually value about myself that has nothing to do with appearance?
Practice body neutrality
Body positivity asks you to love your body. For many people, that's a big leap. Body neutrality offers a gentler on-ramp: simply acknowledging your body without strong judgment either way. Your body carries you through the world. It breathes, moves, feels. That's enough.
Talk to someone
Body image struggles run deep, often connecting to identity, trauma, relationships, and how we were raised. Working with a therapist can help you trace those roots, process the emotions attached to them, and build a genuinely different relationship with yourself over time.
Not after you lose weight. Not once you fix this or change that. In the body you have today.
That might sound impossible if you've spent years at war with your reflection. But it's not. With time, support, and a willingness to question the messages you've been handed, a more peaceful relationship with your body is absolutely possible.
You were never the problem. The standards were.
Hazyl is a RCC based in Vancouver, BC, specializing in eating disorder counselling, body image therapy, and trauma-informed care. She works with youth and adults across BC via online sessions and in person.
Ready to take a first step? Book a consultation — no referral needed.