Barbie Ferreira.Photo: Matt Baron/ShutterstockBarbie Ferreirais frustrated with the current conversations around bodies and size.Much like her character onEuphoria, the model and actress, 25, is questioning the point of the body positivity movement and if it’s possible to find true happiness with your body. It’s all in line with what her character Kat experiences on the hit HBO show, where in the second season, she has a meltdown about all the pressure to love your body.“I feel like I had a lot of things come up emotionally because of the pandemic, and putting some of that into this season was therapeutic for me,” Ferreiratold WhoWhatWearin a new interview. “I hope other people [watching] can also feel the same way and release the pressure of being perfect and happy all the time. Because that just doesn’t exist.“And Ferreira, who had modeled for years beforejoining the cast of the high school drama, thinks the greater acceptance of bigger bodies that started as she first came up in the industry has since reverted back.“I think bigger bodies are not as ‘trendy’ as they used to be, which is really sad to me. But it’s more of a conversation of the fact that we all struggle with self-love, and I don’t think any young person has really figured it out yet,” she said.One of the ways Ferreira has seen this happen is with people applauding her for wearing clothes that are typically worn on thinner bodies, thinking that doing so is supporting the body positivity movement.“It’s not radical for me to be wearing a crop top,” she said. “[Comments like those are] just backhanded compliments. I’ve been doing this since I was 16. I’m 25.“Ferreira also finds that there’smore pressure on her to love her bodybecause of her size.“It’s so funny that people just assume that,” she said. “What — did I say that? I never said that. You guys just say that. You posted that onme.“RELATED VIDEO: Meet the Viral Influencers Sharing Body Positivity & Size Inclusivity to Their Young FansWhat Ferreira does think would help more people love themselves, is if clothing companies were more size-inclusive.“I have all the resources in the world to get something that fits, and it’s still extremely difficult,” she said. “So I feel for everyone who’s still trying to find things that fit them.““I could do a seminar on this,” she continued. “I always think about the fact that if these clothes came in my size, I would be out here doing even more.”

Barbie Ferreira.Photo: Matt Baron/Shutterstock

Barbie Ferreira Costume Institute Benefit celebrating the opening of In America: A Lexicon of Fashion, Arrivals, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA - 13 Sep 2021

Barbie Ferreirais frustrated with the current conversations around bodies and size.Much like her character onEuphoria, the model and actress, 25, is questioning the point of the body positivity movement and if it’s possible to find true happiness with your body. It’s all in line with what her character Kat experiences on the hit HBO show, where in the second season, she has a meltdown about all the pressure to love your body.“I feel like I had a lot of things come up emotionally because of the pandemic, and putting some of that into this season was therapeutic for me,” Ferreiratold WhoWhatWearin a new interview. “I hope other people [watching] can also feel the same way and release the pressure of being perfect and happy all the time. Because that just doesn’t exist.“And Ferreira, who had modeled for years beforejoining the cast of the high school drama, thinks the greater acceptance of bigger bodies that started as she first came up in the industry has since reverted back.“I think bigger bodies are not as ‘trendy’ as they used to be, which is really sad to me. But it’s more of a conversation of the fact that we all struggle with self-love, and I don’t think any young person has really figured it out yet,” she said.One of the ways Ferreira has seen this happen is with people applauding her for wearing clothes that are typically worn on thinner bodies, thinking that doing so is supporting the body positivity movement.“It’s not radical for me to be wearing a crop top,” she said. “[Comments like those are] just backhanded compliments. I’ve been doing this since I was 16. I’m 25.“Ferreira also finds that there’smore pressure on her to love her bodybecause of her size.“It’s so funny that people just assume that,” she said. “What — did I say that? I never said that. You guys just say that. You posted that onme.“RELATED VIDEO: Meet the Viral Influencers Sharing Body Positivity & Size Inclusivity to Their Young FansWhat Ferreira does think would help more people love themselves, is if clothing companies were more size-inclusive.“I have all the resources in the world to get something that fits, and it’s still extremely difficult,” she said. “So I feel for everyone who’s still trying to find things that fit them.““I could do a seminar on this,” she continued. “I always think about the fact that if these clothes came in my size, I would be out here doing even more.”

Barbie Ferreirais frustrated with the current conversations around bodies and size.

Much like her character onEuphoria, the model and actress, 25, is questioning the point of the body positivity movement and if it’s possible to find true happiness with your body. It’s all in line with what her character Kat experiences on the hit HBO show, where in the second season, she has a meltdown about all the pressure to love your body.

“I feel like I had a lot of things come up emotionally because of the pandemic, and putting some of that into this season was therapeutic for me,” Ferreiratold WhoWhatWearin a new interview. “I hope other people [watching] can also feel the same way and release the pressure of being perfect and happy all the time. Because that just doesn’t exist.”

And Ferreira, who had modeled for years beforejoining the cast of the high school drama, thinks the greater acceptance of bigger bodies that started as she first came up in the industry has since reverted back.

“I think bigger bodies are not as ‘trendy’ as they used to be, which is really sad to me. But it’s more of a conversation of the fact that we all struggle with self-love, and I don’t think any young person has really figured it out yet,” she said.

One of the ways Ferreira has seen this happen is with people applauding her for wearing clothes that are typically worn on thinner bodies, thinking that doing so is supporting the body positivity movement.

“It’s not radical for me to be wearing a crop top,” she said. “[Comments like those are] just backhanded compliments. I’ve been doing this since I was 16. I’m 25.”

Ferreira also finds that there’smore pressure on her to love her bodybecause of her size.

“It’s so funny that people just assume that,” she said. “What — did I say that? I never said that. You guys just say that. You posted that onme.”

RELATED VIDEO: Meet the Viral Influencers Sharing Body Positivity & Size Inclusivity to Their Young Fans

What Ferreira does think would help more people love themselves, is if clothing companies were more size-inclusive.

“I have all the resources in the world to get something that fits, and it’s still extremely difficult,” she said. “So I feel for everyone who’s still trying to find things that fit them.”

“I could do a seminar on this,” she continued. “I always think about the fact that if these clothes came in my size, I would be out here doing even more.”

source: people.com