- Nutrition By Carrie - https://get-fit-in-2026.live/span%3E -

What if trying to lose weight feels easier than body acceptance?

Why can it sometimes feel easier to just keep trying to lose weight than it is to accept your body as it is? Even when you know that years of dieting did little more than take up your time, money and energy, leaving you with a very fraught and conflicted relationship with food and worse body image than you had when you first tried to lose weight?

The desire to lose weight doesn’t just happen when you are actively dieting, or between diets and looking for the next “sure thing.” You can be exploring, even practicing, intuitive eating and size acceptance, and still want to lose weight.

This desire can be a constant, fairly quiet companion, or it can rise up out of seemingly nowhere with a vengeance. Possible triggers include:

The struggle is real

Refusing to adhere — or try to adhere — to the thin ideal as closely as possible can feel challenging. Refusing to comply — or try to comply — with the societal narrative that being healthy is dependent on reaching or maintaining a certain weight can feel even harder. Because even if you can’t change your body “enough,” the fact that you’re trying can help you feel aligned with the dominant culture.

So if you feel like trying to adhere, trying to comply, even though you know it hasn’t worked before and don’t really expect it to work again, there’s not something wrong with you. If you feel like you’re swimming upstream against the tide of dieters and articles touting the “miracle” of new weight loss medications, those feelings are real.

And if, as I mentioned earlier, you are a member of a marginalized group, then you are already moving through life visibly not adhering to our cultural norms (white, cisgender, heterosexual, able-bodied, neurotypical, and presenting in a way that signals sufficient income and education). Adding being fat to the mix may feel like standing out too much. It may not even feel safe. That sucks, and I’m sorry that we aren’t more respecting of diversity in this world.

But is it possible to survive and thrive in your here-and-now body? Can you move through life talking care of your body in ways that feel good without trying to change its size or appearance? Yes and yes. While it’s still a minority of people, more and more people are choosing to liberate themselves from rigid body standards, and are making peace with the fact that this path isn’t easy, and that big feelings will continue to arise.

Choosing the liberatory path

Going against the dominant narrative about body size is easier if you have people in your life — either in real life or online — who are on a similar journey of pushing back against unrealistic societal expectations about physical appearance and what it means to be “healthy.”

It doesn’t have to be a lot of people, often having just a few people who’ve got your back and who you can talk to about the tough stuff can inoculate you against the desire to jump back into the weight loss pool. Other things that can help:

A semi-short reading list

The Mindful Path to Self-Compassion: Freeing Yourself from Destructive Thoughts and Emotions [2]” by Christopher Germer

The Mindful Self-Compassion Workbook: A Proven Way to Accept Yourself, Build Inner Strength, and Thrive [3]” by Kristen Neff and Christopher Germer

The Happiness Trap: How to Stop Struggling and Start Living [4]” by Russ Harris

Reclaiming Body Trust: A Path to Healing & Liberation [5]” by Hilary Kinavey and Dana Sturtevant

More Than A Body: Your Body Is an Instrument, Not an Ornament [6]” by Lindsay and Lexie Kite

What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat [7]” by Aubrey Gordon

You Just Need to Lose Weight (and 19 Other Myths About Fat People [8]” by Aubrey Gordon

Landwhale: On Turning Insults Into Nicknames, Why Body Image Is Hard, and How Diets Can Kiss My Ass [9]” by Jes Baker

Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia [10]” by Sabrina Strings

Belly of the Beast: The Politics of Anti-Fatness as Anti-Blackness [11]” by Da’Shaun L. Harrison

The Body Is Not an Apology: The Power of Radical Self-Love [12]” by Sonya Renee Taylor

Your Body Is Not an Apology Workbook: Tools for Living Radical Self-Love [13]” by Sonya Renee Taylor

The Body Liberation Project: How Understanding Racism and Diet Culture Helps Cultivate Joy and Build Collective Freedom [14]” by Chrissy King

It’s Always Been Ours: Rewriting the Story of Black Women’s Bodies [15]” by Jessica Wilson

Fat Girls in Black Bodies: Creating Communities of Our Own [16]” by Joy Cox

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Disclaimer: All information provided here is of a general nature and is furnished only for educational purposes. This information is not to be taken as medical or other health advice pertaining to an individual’s specific health or medical condition. You agree that the use of this information is at your own risk.

Hi, I’m Carrie Dennett [17], MPH, RDN, a weight-inclusive registered dietitian, nutrition therapist and body image counselor. I offer compassionate, individualized care for adults of all ages, shapes, sizes and genders who want to break free from eating disorders, disordered eating or chronic dieting [18]. If you need to learn how to manage IBS symptoms [19] with food, or improve your nutrition and lifestyle habits [20] to help manage a current health concern or simply support your overall health and well-being, I help people with that, too.

Need 1-on-1 help for your nutrition, eating, or body image concerns? Schedule a free 20-minute Discovery Call [21] to talk about how I can help you and explore if we’re a good fit! I’m in-network with Regence BCBS, FirstChoice Health and Providence Health Plan, and can bill Blue Cross and/or Blue Shield insurances in many states. If I don’t take your insurance, I can help you seek reimbursement on your own. To learn more, explore my insurance and services areas page [22].

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