Wake Up Call: Your Body Was Never the Problem with Body Liberation Advocate, Chrissy King
“Society has conditioned women to put all of our value, effort, and energy into being the smallest version of ourselves possible. Then we have to spend the second half of our lives trying to unlearn that.” – Chrissy King
Episode 110
This is your wake up call: your body was never the problem.
By midlife, so many women are exhausted—not just by life, but by decades of being told to manage, fix, discipline, and override our bodies. Wellness culture promised health and control. What it often delivered was shame, disconnection, and the quiet belief that rest, ease, and joy had to be earned.
Today’s conversation asks us to wake up to something different.
Chrissy King is a writer, educator, and body liberation advocate whose work exposes the harm baked into diet and fitness culture and offers a radically more honest path forward. One rooted in consent instead of control. Trust instead of punishment. Listening instead of fixing.
In this Wake Up Call episode, Chrissy opens our eyes to what happens when we stop treating our bodies like projects and start treating them like partners—especially in midlife, when our bodies are changing and asking us to pay attention. We unpack why rest is a biological need (not a reward), and how relearning how to listen can be a form of liberation.
This is a wake up call to the truth we’ve ignored: the body knows. It knows when something isn’t working. It knows when we’re depleted. It knows what it needs next. And when we learn to trust that wisdom—not just individually, but collectively—we don’t just heal our relationship with our bodies, we change the story entirely.
If your body has been tapping you on the shoulder, this episode is your invitation to listen.
Resources Mentioned in This Episode:
Awake: A Memoir by Jen Hatmaker
The Body Liberation Project: How Understanding Racism and Diet Culture Helps Cultivate Joy and Build Collective Freedom by Chrissy King
The Body is Not an Apology: The Power of Radical Self-Love by Sonya Renne Taylor
Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Dr. Sabrina Strings
White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism by Robin DiAngelo
We Were Never Meant to Have Universal Healthcare by Dr. Jessica Knurick
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If you’re not sure where to begin, I got you, friend. I’m always bringing you something new to enjoy.
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