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I believe that inside many women’s minds, there is a constant state of self-surveillance.
A daily monitoring of the body, of food, of consequences.
I tend to notice it most clearly when I’m around people who don’t seem to carry it
(like men, for instance). Sometimes I look at my handsome partner while we’re having a simple, lovely dinner at home. I watch him eat because it feels good, no calculation, no mental note of what this might do to his body tomorrow.
That same dinner lands very differently in my mind.
I’m aware of what I’ve eaten that day,
of how bloated or light I might feel in the morning,
of how my body may respond.
And I envy him for that ease.
But I also know this isn’t a fair comparison: men and women carry different kinds of burdens. He must envy me for entirely different reasons.
The Body Under Scrutiny
For a long time, this self-surveillance exhausted me.
There were periods when I rebelled against it completely.
I tried to block it out —I ate whatever I wanted, as if it had no impact on my body or mind at all.
As if ignoring my inner signals was freedom.
But the body always caught up.
My rings felt tighter around my fingers, my legs felt heavy, my clothes uncomfortable, restrictive.
And I would catch myself, almost unconsciously, pinching and poking at my body in the mirror.
My beautiful body.
I'm tired of fighting myself.
I want to care for myself instead.
And I don’t want to live in a constant state of self-surveillance for the rest of my life.
I want to rest from it.
So instead of forcing myself to change (as if change required brutality), I’m choosing a different way now.
What if this intelligence we carry — this bodily intelligence — was never the enemy?
What if it was simply... whispering information?
Not telling us what is “wrong” or “bad,” but gently signaling what nourishes us and what weighs us down.
What if, instead of fighting ourselves, we started working with ourselves?
Working With The Body
If you struggle to believe this could work (because like many of us, you may have been conditioned to believe that health is something you must earn through hard work), stay with me.
Imagine booking a stay at a five-star luxury resort. Think of how you feel on day four of your vacation.
Think of what happens when your mind is no longer trapped in self-monitoring,
when your nervous system finally softens.
You're somewhere warm, sunny, spacious.
You allow yourself time off.
Decisions feel easy.
You’re tired, so you nap on the beach.
You’re hungry, so you order room service.
You feel like moving, so you take a walk at sunset.
You are suddenly attuned to your inner compass again.
That is the body’s intelligence.
And almost without exception, you return home feeling lighter.
Less bloated.
Less tense.
Not because you tried harder —
but because you trusted yourself.
And naturally, you want to maintain that state.
You crave the foods that made you feel good.
You move your body because it feels pleasurable.
This Is What I’ve Learned
What I’ve come to see is this: health and healing are not created through force, constant effort, or relentless self-monitoring. They are created through trust — trusting your inner compass, trusting your body’s ability to return to balance once it no longer feels watched.
And something else returns when we enter that state of trust —femininity.
What I call "her" comes back to life:
Your glow.
The softness of your walk.
The sparkle in your eyes.
Your radiance.
Your joy.
The soft, pulsing reminder of pleasure between your thighs.
Your senses awaken again, your love for beauty, the ecstasy of inhabiting a woman’s body.
And so
Let me ask you this, gently:
Where have you been trying to push your body instead of listening to it?
What would change if you stopped treating discipline as force?
Because health doesn’t come when we try harder.
It begins when the body no longer feels at war with itself.
It heals when we soften, and listen.
