There’s this lie we’re fed, over and over—that if you live in a bigger body, or a body that doesn’t match the beauty ideals of the moment, you should try to disappear. Dress to minimize. Sit in the back. Be quiet. Apologize with your posture. Wait until you’ve “fixed” yourself to show up fully.
But showing up exactly as you are—in photos, in relationships, in dreams, in movement—that’s not vanity. That’s radical courage.
It takes guts to walk into a room knowing people might judge you before you even speak. It takes strength to post a picture where your body is soft, or round, or aged, or scarred, and still say, “I deserve to be seen.” It takes clarity to choose joy in your body even when the world tells you to feel shame.
And here’s the truth: courage doesn’t always feel powerful. Sometimes it feels like a shaky breath before stepping outside. Sometimes it looks like crying in the dressing room, then buying the dress anyway. Sometimes it’s just choosing to eat lunch in public without explaining or apologizing.
You are not being “too much” by existing as you are. You are not selfish for taking up space. You are not vain for wanting to be seen, known, and celebrated.
You are brave. Just by showing up. Just by living visibly in the truth of your body. That’s enough. That’s powerful. That’s beautiful.