In an era dominated by curated Instagram feeds, AI-generated "perfect" bodies, and a multi-billion dollar diet industry built on insecurity, the concept of loving your body as it is can feel like an impossible dream. We are told that our stomachs should be flatter, our skin smoother, and our contours more symmetrical.

Reality: Walk through any nudist resort. You will see every body type except the airbrushed one. The "good body" myth is perpetuated by people who have never actually visited a naturist venue.

Anna has now been a naturist for eight years. She reports no longer owning a scale. She wears a swimsuit at textile beaches only to comply with local laws, but she feels like an anthropologist studying a strange tribe of clothing-wearers. "I see women at the public pool pulling at their bikini bottoms, sucking in their stomachs, miserable. I want to whisper to them: There’s another way." A common critique of the body positivity movement is that it has been co-opted by thin, white, able-bodied women posing nude to prove they are "brave." True body positivity is supposed to be for marginalized bodies—fat bodies, disabled bodies, scarred bodies.

Um website emjogo.pt