On paper, I’m a nutrition consultant. But what you don’t know is that wellness used to control my life. It dictated what I ate, how I moved, and even how I measured my worth. Fast-forward a decade, and I’ve realized the very routines meant to keep us grounded can quietly become the problem. For years, I convinced myself I was disciplined. In reality, I was micromanaging my well-being to the point of exhaustion. My “discipline” was really just control in disguise. And slowly, it stripped away my joy. Part personal story, part cautionary tale, this piece is about how I finally found a version of wellness rooted in flexibility and ease.

Where It All Began
My health journey started innocently enough. In my early 20s, I discovered yoga sculpt (heated yoga with weights), and I went every day. At the same time, I was juggling heartbreak, college classes, a part-time job, and everything else that comes with being in a sorority. Adding fuel to the fire, I stumbled upon “healthy living” blogs. Steeped in diet culture, they told me gluten, dairy, and sugar were everything from inflammatory to toxic. So, naturally, I cut them out. Overnight, I began chasing the narrow version of wellness I saw online. From the outside, it looked like dedication. Inside, it was obsession.
The Label Trap
I’ve come a long way since then, but what still bothers me is how often we’re told we need a label to feel legitimate (allergies and medical conditions aside). Vegan. Paleo. Gluten-free. Dairy-free. Keto. Etc. But health isn’t a label. It’s a relationship you build with yourself. One that—ideally—is rooted in flexibility and bioindividuality.
At the end of the day, mastering wellness isn’t the goal. It’s to feel at home in your body. Because when you finally stop chasing trends and start choosing what actually feels good to you, that’s when real wellness begins.
Health isn’t a label. It’s a relationship you build with yourself.
When Wellness Starts to Feel Like a Job
It took me years to notice how the pursuit of health was quietly draining me. I’d feel guilty if I skipped a workout, anxious if I ate dessert, and frustrated if I couldn’t get my steps in. I thought structure meant success, but what I really craved was ease. Discipline has value (it builds consistency and confidence!), but when it becomes rigid, it stops serving us. True well-being doesn’t come from control. It comes from listening more and forcing less.
The Comparison Trap
Unfortunately, social media doesn’t make this easier. The internet is full of flawless morning routines, spotless fridges, and carefully curated “what I eat in a day” videos. It’s easy to think wellness should look like—tidy, predictable, perfect. But unless you acknowledge your unique needs and rhythms, those routines can become more of a burden than a benefit. In other words, wellness isn’t a one-size-fits-all formula. It’s a practice, and it has to evolve with you.
Learning to Loosen the Grip
So, how did I loosen my grip? I started asking myself these questions: Does this feel supportive or restrictive? Am I making this choice from trust or fear? Am I honoring my body, or pushing against it? Little by little, I began to let go. I started approaching exercise from a place of empowerment. Food became fuel to build muscle. Most importantly, I swapped “I have to” for “I get to.” And suddenly, wellness started to feel joyful again. Now, I approach my habits as a rhythm. Not a checklist. Remember, flexibility is health. Structure and spontaneity can coexist.
Reflection Prompts
If your current wellness routine feels too rigid, try asking:
- Am I choosing my routine from self-trust or from fear of not being enough?
- What would wellness look like if it came from curiosity, not control?
- Are my habits honoring my needs today, or someone else’s expectations?
Don’t underestimate how much clarity a few honest questions can bring.
Taking the time to ask yourself these questions is the first step in tuning in. When you slow down and listen, you start to notice what your body is trying to tell you (beyond the rules, routines, and “should’s”).
Our bodies are constantly speaking to us, but they need space to be heard. They tell us when we’re tired, hungry, overstimulated, or craving connection. But when we’re fixated on external plans, we drown out that wisdom. Rather than outsourcing your intuition to an influencer or “wellness expert,” remember that the best expert on your body is you.
What Wellness Looks Like for Me Now
These days, I still love my rituals, but I hold them lightly. I meal plan for convenience, not control. I move because it feels good, not to earn food or approval. I take tailored supplements that genuinely support my deficiencies, not because they’re trending. Most importantly, I allow myself to rest. To enjoy the pizza. To skip the HIIT class. To live my life without constantly grading my choices. And here’s the irony: I feel healthier now than I ever did when I was chasing perfection.
A Gentle Reminder
If your wellness routine has started to feel heavy, you’re not failing. Most of us have to unlearn the idea that health is earned through rigidity. You don’t need to earn your worth through discipline, and you don’t need a label to belong. Wellness should expand your life, not shrink it. So here’s your invitation: soften the rules. Add more joy. Trust your body. Let your routine evolve with you. Because the healthiest thing you can do might just be letting go.