ISBN-13: 9783565237043 / Angielski / Miękka / 192 str.
This book explores the contemporary wellness movement by examining what genuinely supports long-term health versus what becomes another form of anxious control disguised as self-care. It investigates the psychology behind preventive health practices, and what the focus on prevention reveals about our relationship with uncertainty, aging, and the fear of vulnerability that illness represents.Rather than celebrating wellness culture uncritically, this book reframes preventive health as a practice that requires discernment-recognizing the difference between honoring your body's needs and treating it as a project requiring constant surveillance. It examines how the pursuit of optimal health can become its own source of stress, the role of privilege in accessing preventive care, and why some bodies require more intervention than others despite doing everything "right." It explores the tension between taking responsibility for your health and accepting that some outcomes remain beyond control, between informed choices and wellness anxiety that never feels like enough.Through compassionate inquiry, the book navigates the overwhelm of conflicting health information, the guilt when you can't maintain ideal practices, and the challenge of distinguishing between genuine self-care and compulsive health optimization. It offers insight into recognizing when preventive measures serve your wellbeing versus when they feed fear of losing control, and what it means to care for your body without treating health as a moral achievement or failure as personal deficit.This is an invitation to approach wellness not as a revolution requiring perfection, but as a sustainable relationship with your body that includes rest, pleasure, and the acceptance that prevention has limits-and your worth isn't determined by your health outcomes.
Prevention doesn't mean you can control every outcome. It means you're doing what you can with what you know.