Your body was never the problem.
This landmark book by activist and poet Sonya Renee Taylor makes the case that body shame isn’t a personal flaw - it’s a social and political tool used to control us. Radical self-love is the antidote, and this fully updated second edition gives you both the understanding and the practice to build it.
What’s inside:
- A clear distinction between radical self-love, body positivity, and self-esteem - and why the difference matters
- The roots of body shame: how media, capitalism, and systems of oppression manufacture self-hatred across race, size, gender, disability, and more
- A four-pillar practice framework for moving from shame into sustained self-love
Unapologetic agreements
- tools for extending radical self-love into relationships and communities- New in the second edition: expanded “freedom frameworks” for fighting systemic body terrorism at organizational and societal levels
Who this is for: Anyone who has ever felt their body was “too much” or “not enough” - and especially readers who feel unseen in mainstream wellness conversations, including fat, disabled, Black, and queer communities.
What changes: Readers consistently describe this book as the moment shame stopped feeling like their fault. It’s the rare self-love book that is also a social justice framework.
If you’re ready to stop apologizing for the body you’re in, this is your next read.