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How to Take Back Wellness From the Wellness Industry

There are many paths to well-being—you just have to look outside of what’s being marketed to you.

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Few markets have experienced the kind of explosion in popularity the wellness industry has enjoyed in the last few years. What started as a niche beat, occasionally popping up in the background, has snowballed into an integral component of people’s lives—and media diets.

I’ve been an editor in the wellness and beauty sphere for over a decade and have marveled at the term’s growing ubiquity. It connects with just about every lifestyle category—fitness, culture, dating, style, nutrition—and has even seeped into topics that once seemed completely disparate, from tech and activism to careers and education.

The tricky part? The wellness industry doesn’t always result in, well, actual wellness for the people it aims to serve. But it doesn’t have to be that way. The stories below offer different routes to our own definitions of wellness, ones we can seek out as we root out actual wellness from the industry that’s sprung up around it.

Image by Linka A Odom / Getty Images

Sam Escobar

Sam Escobar is Allure’s Site Director. Their writing has appeared in Esquire, MEL Magazine, The Observer, Business Insider, and Cosmopolitan, and they were named one of Brooklyn Magazine's "30 under 30." In the 10 years they’ve spent in the media world, they’ve held editorial roles at Good Housekeeping, Bustle, and The Gloss. In 2016, they co-edited Kill Your Darlings, Tweet Yr Drafts, a chapbook of casual love poetry. In their spare time, Sam can be found practicing calligraphy, petting cats, and staring into a telescope. You can follow them on Twitter, which they refuse to call “X,” as well as Instagram.

Image by Christine Hahn