Your Body Is Talking. Are You Listening?
“Body positivity is realizing your body deserves kindness even on the days it refuses to fit into your jeans.”
Your Body Is Not the Problem
Somewhere along the way, many of us were taught that our bodies are projects to be fixed, managed, or subdued. Smaller. Quieter. Faster. Stronger. Prettier. More flexible. Less hungry. More disciplined.
But your body is not a rebellious toddler throwing tantrums for attention. It is a brilliant communicator with a long memory and a deep wisdom. Every ache, craving, burst of energy, and wave of exhaustion is information.
Listening to your body is not weakness. It is not laziness. It is not “giving up.” It is one of the most radical acts of self-respect you can practice in a culture that profits from you ignoring yourself.
My Yoga Mat Never Asked Me to Be Smaller
Let’s talk about the elephant on the yoga mat. Or in my case, the “large gal” learning to love yoga in a world that didn’t look like it was built for bodies like mine.
When I first stepped onto a yoga mat, I did not look like the magazine covers. I did not float effortlessly into poses. I did not bend like a willow branch in the breeze. What I did have was a body that showed up honestly.
Some days my body said, “We’re here, but we’re tired.”
Some days it said, “Today is about balance, not depth.”
Some days it said, “Child’s pose is the whole practice.”
Yoga never asked me to shrink. It asked me to listen. And that changed everything.
Listening Is a Skill, Not an Instinct
We like to think listening to our body should come naturally. But for many of us, it was trained out of us.
We learned to override hunger cues.
We learned to push through pain for productivity points.
We learned to ignore exhaustion because rest was “earned.”
Yoga gently hands those signals back to you. It asks questions instead of making demands. How does this feel? Can you breathe here? What happens if you back off instead of pushing forward?
Listening is not passive. It is active awareness. It is choosing curiosity over criticism.
Why I Sought Training for Every Body
As my own practice deepened, I realized something uncomfortable. Too many yoga spaces were unintentionally telling people that there was a “right” body for yoga. And if your body didn’t match the unspoken mold, you were expected to adapt silently or disappear.
That didn’t sit right with me.
So I pursued specialty training to learn how to teach yoga to ALL body types. Larger bodies. Stiffer bodies. Older bodies. Injured bodies. Nervous bodies. Bodies carrying trauma. Bodies that have been shamed, dismissed, or ignored by wellness culture.
Because everyone deserves to listen to their body without being told it’s wrong.
Modifications Are Not Failures
Let’s clear something up. Using blocks, straps, chairs, walls, or alternative poses is not “less than.” It is intelligence in action.
Your body changes daily. Hormones fluctuate. Stress lands in different places. Energy rises and falls. Listening means honoring the body you have today, not the one you had ten years ago or the one Instagram says you should have tomorrow.
In my classes, I don’t teach poses. I teach options. I teach choice. I teach autonomy. Because when students learn to trust themselves on the mat, they carry that trust into the rest of their lives.
The Ripple Effect of Body Trust
When you listen to your body, things start to shift beyond yoga.
You rest without guilt.
You eat without punishment.
You move because it feels good, not because you’re trying to fix something.
You stop outsourcing your worth to rules, trends, and external approval.
Listening builds a relationship. And like any good relationship, it requires patience, honesty, and sometimes uncomfortable truths.
Your Body Has Been Rooting for You All Along
Here’s the truth that wellness culture doesn’t always say out loud. Your body has never been the enemy. It has been carrying you through everything.
The stress.
The grief.
The pressure to perform.
The seasons where survival was the goal.
Listening doesn’t mean your body will suddenly be pain-free or perfect. It means you stop fighting it and start partnering with it. That partnership is where healing begins.
Let’s Chat
Before you scroll away, take a moment. Place one hand on your chest or your belly. Take a slow breath.
Ask yourself:
Where have I been ignoring my body lately?
What might it be asking for right now?
If you feel comfortable, share in the comments. What is one way you’re learning to listen to your body more compassionately? Your story might be exactly what someone else needs to hear today.



