“”

Women's Health, Your Way

May 03, 2026

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

BODYTALK / Who Gets to be a 'Pilates Girlie'?

Who Gets to be a 'Pilates Girlie'?

Who Gets to be a 'Pilates Girlie'?

On the current season of Love is Blind, there’s a scene that has audiences heated. In it, a man on the show tells the woman he is engaged to that he’s not feeling their physical connection. His idea of a woman to whom he'd be attracted? Someone "who does f*cking pilates every day,” he says by way of explanation.

If you haven’t watched the clip, you should — it contains some necessary context. But audiences have held on to the pilates of it all, and it’s because…well, this isn’t the first time the exercise has been mentioned in this picture of idealized, aspirational womanhood.

And we need to unpack it. Because in the zeitgeist of 2026, referring to someone as a “pilates girlie” or a “pilates wife” doesn’t just refer to a woman who enjoys this particular form of exercise.

To some, pilates has come to represent a slice of wealthy, white, thin womanhood that's being glorified. There’s a “pilates girl aesthetic”, which is essentially a thin body dressed in pricey workout sets, sipping a matcha, and hopping into a luxury SUV after a session at a pilates studio...which is filled with other thin, wealthy, white women. 

This mythical idea of a “pilates wife” or a “pilates mom” has a whole chokehold on social media, and it feels like this image has very little to do with actually doing or enjoying pilates, and more to do with this extremely narrow standard of what a “hot high value” woman who "takes care of herself" should be. 

There’s so much wrapped up in this: Racism, classism, fatphobia, and more. We’ve all seen the commentary that people in larger bodies “shouldn’t” do pilates, or that a “pilates body” is a lean frame with visible abs, or that a man’s “ultimate goal” should be to make his wife a “pilates wife”. But at the end of the day pilates is just…an exercise. It doesn’t require you to look a certain way or live a certain lifestyle or represent a very specific segment of womanhood. 

More from BODYTALK

It’s hard to get on social media around this time of year and not come across content about getting your body "ready for summer”. I know I’m lucky in the... Read more
In 2024, influencer Valeria Lipovetsky shared that her life quality improved drastically when she stopped getting her nails regularly. Recently, finance guru Vivian Tu shouted out this video, saying she’s... Read more
A recent study found something surprising about young, healthy, non-smokers who have lung cancer — in short, people who don’t fit the typical profile of lung cancer patients.  The research,... Read more
In an era of skinnytok and ultra thin bodies, Hilary Duff is doing something different: She’s partnering with Ladder, a fitness company, and she’s speaking up about how she’s choosing... Read more
Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve heard about the long-running feud between Alex Cooper and Alix Earle.  If not, a 101: Alex Cooper is the founder of the... Read more
Last week, I was at a mom conference where I met several other women who have twins (in case you didn’t know — Rescripted was founded by two amazing twin... Read more
Emma Grede is an incredibly impressive woman. Let’s just get that out of the way. She’s a boss by any measure. And she’s getting really honest about something women have... Read more
By now, you've probably heard about some of the darkest corners of the internet — the ones where men converge to trade tips and boast about...well, I'm just going to... Read more
If you spend any time on the mom side of TikTok, you’ve probably heard a lot of Beyonce’s iconic line “strong enough to bear the children…then get back to business”... Read more
If you spend a lot of time on social media (it’s meee, hi!), you’ve probably heard of “fibermaxxing”, a wellness trend some creators are swearing by. Fibermaxxing is essentially a... Read more