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Abstract The 21st century has witnessed the concurrent rise of two powerful socio-cultural movements: Body Positivity, which advocates for the unconditional acceptance of all body types, and the Wellness Lifestyle, which emphasizes proactive health optimization through diet, exercise, and mindfulness. While seemingly complementary, these paradigms often exist in a state of friction. This paper argues that despite surface-level synergies, the wellness industry frequently reinforces the very weight-centric, moralistic frameworks that body positivity seeks to dismantle. However, through the emergence of "Intuitive Eating" and "Health at Every Size" (HAES), a genuine synthesis is possible. This research traces the genealogies of both movements, identifies points of ideological conflict, and proposes a critical framework for a post-dietetic, inclusive wellness model. 1. Introduction In 2023, a user on social media platform X (formerly Twitter) posted: "I love my body so I drink celery juice and do hot yoga at 5 AM." A reply countered: "That’s not body positivity; that’s wellness culture with a smiley face sticker." This exchange encapsulates the central tension of modern embodiment. Body positivity emerged from the fat liberation movements of the 1960s, demanding an end to weight-based discrimination. Wellness, conversely, emerged from a synthesis of New Age spirituality, Western fitness regimens, and biohacking—often prioritizing discipline, longevity, and aesthetic outcomes.

This paper will explore three core questions: (1) To what extent is the wellness lifestyle inherently antithetical to body positivity? (2) How do neoliberal ideologies of self-improvement co-opt body-positive rhetoric? (3) Can a genuinely inclusive wellness model exist without perpetuating bodily shame? 2.1 The Body Positivity Genealogy The modern body positivity movement traces its lineage to the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA) , founded in 1969 by Bill Fabrey. Unlike the 2010s Instagram version emphasizing "all bodies are beautiful," the original movement was political, not aesthetic. It targeted medical discrimination, employment bias, and the moral panic surrounding obesity. Nudist Wonderland Pictures