I Am Not the Number on a Scale

I used to think that my worth lived in a number. That somehow, a lower weight meant a better me—more disciplined, more desirable, more acceptable. But that number never told the whole story. It never held the ache in my knees after carrying my children. It didn’t reflect the laughter in my belly or the resilience in my muscles. It had no idea how many times I got back up after being knocked down.

A scale can’t measure how fiercely I love or how deeply I’ve grown. It doesn’t see the early mornings I pulled myself together when life felt too heavy, or the strength it takes to choose nourishment over restriction. That number doesn’t know biology, or trauma, or genes. It doesn’t account for the complexity of hormones, metabolism, survival, or the way bodies adapt when we’ve lived through stress and scarcity.

I am movement—I stretch, walk, dance, rest.
I am memory—of every fight and every healing moment.
I am biology—bones and blood and breath, all doing their best.
I am will—the quiet force that says, “I choose life,” even when it’s hard.

No number will ever capture the totality of who I am. Because I’m not a statistic. I’m not a goal weight. I’m a full, living human being—capable of joy, worthy of love, and deserving of peace in my body.

The scale may reflect gravity. But it does not reflect me.

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