Diet Culture Is Not Truth—It’s a Business That Profits Off Insecurity

For years, I thought I just didn’t have enough willpower. That if I could just stick to the plan, the cleanse, the 30-day “fix,” I’d finally be enough. But the truth is, diet culture was never meant to make me feel good—it was designed to keep me chasing a version of myself that was never real to begin with.

Diet culture isn’t about health. It’s not about truth. It’s an industry built on making people feel broken, then selling them the “solution.” It survives by convincing us that hunger is weakness, that softness is shameful, that our bodies are projects needing constant work. And every time we “fail” another plan, the blame falls on us—not on the system that was never meant to work.

The natural world doesn’t shame bodies for changing, growing, or aging. Nature thrives in variety. There’s no “ideal” tree shape, no “perfect” bird weight. Bodies adapt. They carry stories. They hold memory. My body is no less worthy because it doesn’t fit a beauty standard written by corporations with products to sell.

When I started seeing diet culture for what it is—a money-making machine feeding off fear—I stopped blaming myself. I started listening to my body instead of punishing it. I started feeding it, not starving it. I started asking, “What feels good? What gives me strength? What helps me live?”

That shift didn’t just change how I eat. It changed how I live.

Because I’m not here to shrink. I’m here to exist fully, in every season, every size, every stage. That’s not rebellion. That’s freedom.

Scroll to Top