Publication & voting
Conversely, the wellness industry relies on a “precarity narrative”—the fear that without constant optimization, one will fall ill. Crawford (1980) famously termed this “healthism,” where personal health becomes a super-value, masking structural determinants of health (poverty, food deserts, medical bias). In this framework, a person who does not exercise or eat “clean” is viewed as morally failing. This directly contradicts body positivity’s rejection of body-shaming as a motivational tool.
In reality, these installers were almost always .
Body Perceptions and Psychological Well-Being: A Review of the Impact of Social Media and Physical Measurements on Self-Esteem and Mental Health