No. Glorification implies encouraging others to emulate something. Body positivity doesn't encourage anyone to become a certain size. It simply argues that people who are already in larger bodies deserve access to wellness without harassment. You cannot hate someone into health.
When you stop trying to shrink yourself, you create space for so much more: joy, community, strength, and genuine peace. You realize that you were never a "before" photo waiting to happen. You were always a whole person, worthy of care and compassion right now .
The most radical act of wellness you can perform today is to look in the mirror, and instead of cataloging flaws, say: I am here. I am worthy of feeling good. And I will pursue health not because I hate my body, but because I love who lives inside it.
This is a fair question. The answer is: individualized, compassionate, weight-neutral care. For a person with diabetes, a body-positive approach would focus on blood sugar management through joyful movement and satisfying food choices—not starvation. For a person with joint pain, it would focus on low-impact movement and pain management, not weight-loss ultimatums from a doctor.