
Candace Cameron Bure He’s been frank about the challenge of “many women struggle.”
During Tuesday’s episode “The Candace Cameron Bure Podcast” The 49-year-old “Full House” alumnus opened up about her personal battle with body image and explained how her faith helped her find a “completely new perspective” about how she views herself.
“I whipped my body,” emotional Bulle told podcast guests Ally Schnackie and daughter Natasha Bulle. “I spoke very strictly about it, so it makes sense.”

Candace Cameron Bure has been candid about her physical image struggle over the years. (Michael Talberg/Getty Images)
Recalling a dream she once had, Bre said that a certain biblical verse – number 22 – allowed her to see her body in another light.
“And God let my body speak, and my body said to me, “I am not the body carrying every day of your life? I am not your feet that allow you to walk?”

Bure, 49, has been struggling with body image, so she tells herself that she has been “very mean” for years. (Getty Images)
“And it was like this incredible revelation in my life,” she continued. “And the strangest story from the Bible, God told me how much I meant to his body. I’ve never seen it that way – that’s this amazing thing God has given me.”
Bure admitted that she now has a “completely different perspective.” I think about my body. ”
The actress took her to social media and shared clips of the episode.
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“I was so mean to myself… and looking back, it breaks my heart. Learning to speak kindly to my body was a journey. I’m not alone with this.
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The mother of three revealed that her faith helped her acquire a “completely new perspective” on herself and her body. (Marleen Moise/Getty Images)
This is not the first time that Bure has opened up about her struggle.
In 2016, the three moms detailed in- and out-of-ways how they developed their eating disorder years ago.
“I developed a great body image,” Bure said on a panel at #eatingRecoveryDay in New York City. According to people. “My parents were amazing and protected me from allowing the entertainment industry to shape me into something that they believe in the standards of perfect body image.”
“The change in what I had been working since I was five was that I was now a wife, soon a mother, living in a city where I had no family or friends around me, which made me lose my sense of who I was,” she said.
Bure said she spent many nights alone, so she said “it was very readily available whenever I wanted, and it was food for me.”

Bure developed an eating disorder many years ago, but was able to recover with the help of friends, family and faith. (Getty Images)
“It became a very destructive relationship and it really caught me off guard,” she said. “I feel embarrassed and burning with such guilt and shame, as if I would start purge.
She said her faith ultimately helped her recover. “That wasn’t about weight for me,” she said. I told people. “It was an emotional issue.”
Bure has always been proud to share Her Christian Faithand she watches others start doing the same thing.
“I feel like people are a little less afraid of being cancelled as they are now able to share their faith openly. [even] If they don’t agree with others,” she told Fox News Digital recently on the Movie Guide Awards red carpet.
“And so, I love seeing this in our country and I’m looking forward to it. I’m very hopeful.”
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