What If February Was All About Loving Your Body?

The beginning of the year often brings a wave of new goals, resets, and promises to “fix” everything—especially our bodies. Health can quickly feel like a checklist, and improvement is often framed as urgent and corrective, as if our bodies are problems to be solved rather than a support system. By February, that intensity can leave many of us exhausted, discouraged, or disconnected from our own bodies. Which is why we want to explore self-love.

Psychologist and behavioral science specialist Daria Zalivnova explains why this happens:

“The ”fixing” mindset frames the body as a problem to be solved – a project. This immediately creates an adversarial relationship: you are the vigilant manager, and your body is the unreliable employee that needs constant correction. Psychologically, this sets up a dynamic of distrust and surveillance. We stop listening to our body’s signals—hunger, fatigue, pleasure—and start policing them against external standards. The body becomes an ‘it,’ not a part of ‘me.’”

self love

During this time, many set goals that are unsustainable or rooted in self-criticism: eating less, training harder, being more disciplined. At the beginning of the year, the intensity may feel motivating, but as February rolls around, that same drive can feel draining, leaving us dysregulated and frustrated.

What if, instead of trying to change our bodies, February were all about loving our bodies as they are?

What “Loving Your Body Back” Really Means (And Where It Begins)

It’s not about appearance-based self-love or forcing positivity. It’s about rebuilding a sense of trust, safety, and communication with your body after months—or years—of pushing and criticizing yourself. It’s about shifting from control to care and communication. 

Instead of asking, “How can I make my body behave?” You start asking, “What does my body need to feel safe right now?”

Your nervous system plays a significant role in how you treat your body, and more specifically, how unsustainable goals are created. “Aggressive goals are born from a desire for immediate, total transformation,” Zalivnova says. “They backfire because they ignore key psychological principles. They rely on finite willpower, not sustainable systems. More critically, they trigger the nervous system’s threat response: perfection is unattainable, so the moment we inevitably slip, the brain interprets it as failure, flooding us with stress and shame. This often leads to the “what the hell” effect – abandoning all efforts because perfection is already ruined.”

What Happens When Your Body Doesn’t Feel Safe

A dysregulated nervous system may not always show physical symptoms, but when our bodies are in a constant state of fight-or-flight, it can take a toll on everything from digestion and sleep to mood and motivation.

Zalivnova notes examples of how nervous system dysregulation can show up in everyday functioning:

  • Eating patterns: Erratic hunger/fullness cues, intense cravings, binge-restrict cycles.
  • Energy levels: The “tired but wired” feeling – chronic fatigue paired with restless anxiety.
  • Motivation: Paralyzing burnout. The brain associates goals with threat, so avoidance sets in.
  • Emotions: Increased irritability, anxiety, and emotional fragility, as the system lacks resilience bandwidth.

You might struggle to stay consistent with habits, not because you lack willpower, but because your body is exhausted from being in survival mode.

Creating a sense of safety can help interrupt that cycle. And small, supportive actions can go a long way.

6 Ways to Start Loving Your Body Back

1. Eat in a way that signals reliability, not restriction.

Eating regular meals throughout the day with a balance of protein, carbohydrates, and fats can help stabilize blood sugar levels and reduce stress signals in the body. However, skipping meals or eating healthy because you “feel like you have to” can trigger the nervous system and make you feel like deprivation. Make sure that your body gets the nourishment it needs, but don’t forget to enjoy the foods you love, too.

2. Move your body for circulation, not punishment.

Daily movement doesn’t have to leave you feeling completely drained. Even simple activities like walking, lightweight strength training, gentle stretching, or yoga can support circulation and calm the nervous system, especially if you’ve been feeling run-down. When movement feels supportive instead of forced, your body is more likely to respond with energy and motivation rather than resistance.

3. Soften the way you speak to yourself.

Your internal dialogue matters more than you think. Constant “shoulds,” criticism, and guilt-based motivation keep the nervous system on edge. Instead, try replacing negative self-talk with something more neutral or supportive. Ask yourself,  “What would help me feel better right now?” Feeling safe often starts with supportive language.

4. Use warmth as a form of regulation.

The winter season can take a toll on our bodies, making it the perfect time for some extra self-care. Warm showers, cozy layers, heating pads, and warm beverages can all signal comfort and safety to the nervous system. These small sensory cues help your body relax, especially during the colder, darker months.

5. Rest without earning it.

Giving your body a break doesn’t need to be justified by the productivity in your day. Allowing yourself to lie down, slow your pace, or do less without turning it into “recovery for better performance” helps teach the body that it’s allowed to exist without constant output.

6. Touch your body with care, not evaluation.

Getting in tune with your body through touch is a great form of self-care. One way to do it, Zalivnova recommends, is to “Sit quietly, place a hand on your stomach, and take five breaths. Then ask inwardly: “What movement does my body want right now?” It might be a slow stretch, a walk, or stillness. Do that thing for 2-5 minutes.” You can also do small things like applying moisturizer, doing meditation, or placing a hand on your chest with breathwork to rebuild a sense of connection with yourself. The key is doing so without looking for flaws. A gentle, non-judgmental touch can calm the nervous system and make you feel grounded.

Loving your body back isn’t about lowering your standards; it’s about changing the foundation. When your nervous system feels supported, your body is better able to regulate appetite, energy, emotions, and stress. “The ‘resistance’ – the craving, the fatigue, the lack of motivation – is not failure,” Zalivnova says. “It is crucial feedback data from a system trying to keep you well. A craving might signal emotional need. Fatigue is a demand for rest. Learning to decode this feedback with curiosity, not judgment, is the secret to sustainable change. The path begins when you stop seeing your body as a problem to fix and start recognizing it as a wise being to converse with.”

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