What is body checking? And how to stop doing it.

Body image May 19, 2024 7 min read Zeynep Demirelli Sağ, MSc
Realistic Body Therapist

Let's talk about body checking: the compulsive need to examine your shape, your weight, and particular parts of your body. We all glance in the mirror now and then. Body checking is when that glancing tips over into something frequent, anxious, and hard to stop.

It can look like stepping on the scale every morning, taking photos of yourself from the same angles, pinching at your stomach or arms, scanning your reflection in shop windows as you walk down the street, or comparing one part of your body to how it looked yesterday. It isn't casual. It's a repetitive, often hidden habit, and it can have a real effect on your mental health.

Why we body check

Body checking is rarely about vanity, and it almost never starts with the body. Underneath it is usually a much older feeling: of being unseen, not quite good enough, or not safe. When an emotional need hasn't been met, for reassurance, for control, for the sense that we matter: the discomfort doesn't disappear. It looks for somewhere to go. For many people, it lands on the body.

Checking becomes a way to cope with that discomfort. It's a misguided attempt to soothe yourself, to reassure yourself that you're okay, that you're in control, that you know what's "wrong" and therefore what to "fix." If you grew up feeling you had to earn love or attention through how you looked or what you achieved, the body can become the place you go to feel momentarily validated.

Just like a band-aid over a deep wound, body checking doesn't heal what's underneath. It only quiets it for a moment.

The cycle it creates

Here's the painful part: checking rarely makes you feel better for long. Each time you check, it tends to go one of two ways.

Either way, the checking feeds itself. What started as a way to feel more in control ends up controlling you. The more you do it, the more trapped you feel, caught in a loop of monitoring and judging your own body.

How to begin stopping

You don't break this habit by white-knuckling your way through it or shaming yourself for doing it. You break it by getting curious about what it's really for. A few gentler starting points:

Body checking is, at its heart, an attempt to fill an emotional gap. Recognising that connection, that it's about unmet needs far more than it's about your body, is what makes it possible to start meeting those needs in ways that actually help.

This essay was first published on my newsletter. Read the original on Substack →

Zeynep Demirelli Sağ, MSc

Eating disorder & disordered-eating therapist in London and online. I work with the patterns underneath the eating, gently, and at the level where change holds.

Working with me

If body checking is taking up space in your life, you don't have to untangle it alone.

We can start with a free 15-minute call, no pressure, nothing to prepare. Just a chance to see how it feels to talk. In Turkish or English, online or in person in London.