"Mind ur f***ing business" - Lizzo blasts body-shamers after a joke about her appearance recently went viral 

2025 GQ Men Of The Year – Arrivals - Source: Getty
Lizzo attends the 2025 GQ Men of the Year event in Los Angeles. (Image via Getty/Stefanie Keenan)

Lizzo is pushing back on all the trolls who bodyshamed her recently.

The About Damn Time songstress took to Instagram on Thursday to voice her frustrations about the recent wave of bodyshaming she was subjected to online. Referring to a fat joke that went viral, she reminded her fans to be cautious of shaming others and what they do with their bodies.

Paired with a photo of herself in a bikini, the singer-songwriter wrote a scathing statement to all her critics:

"Today I saw a fat joke about me— in 2025—and it was viral. It was a dumb joke and they were just laughing at me because I’m fat…. Let me be a reminder to everyone to NEVER let anyone shame you for what you choose to do with your body. Because when you’re big they talk sh*t, when you’re small they talk sh*t. Your body will never be good enough for them because it’s not FOR them. It’s for you."

Lizzo continued,

"If I get a BBL mind ur business , if lose 100lbs mind ur business, if I gain every pound back and then some… mind ur f*cking business. Anyways.. my fat a** stays living with a paid off mortgage in yall b*tches heads. 🥱"

Lizzo's mental health and body transformation journey explored:

Lizzo's recent clapback comes just one week after she penned an essay on her Substack about her mental health catalysts that propelled her to transform her body and health.

"I wanted to change how I felt in my body," she wrote in a Nov. 23 post. "I had been holding onto so much since my father passed away in 2009. I had been holding onto relationships that were deeply abusive and toxic since 2011. I had been carrying the weight of supporting my family since 2016. I wanted to let-it-the-f--k go."

Lizzo asserted that she won't be abandoning her goals of advocating for women of all shapes and sizes.

"So here we are halfway through the decade, where extended sizes are being magically erased from websites," she wrote. "Plus sized models are no longer getting booked for modeling gigs. And all of our big girls are not-so big anymore. I am still a proud big girl. Objectively Big. Over 200 pounds. And | love myself as much as I've loved myself no matter what the scale says."

The Grammy-winning songstress also sparked health concerns back in October, when she was spotted at Vogue World 2025 after-party in L.A., flaunting her weight loss in a silver gown. Her boyfriend, Myke Wright, was by her side as they held hands and left the party.

Lizzo was previously hit with allegations that she lost weight with the help of Ozempic, which she has long refuted. Back in July, during a conversation with Women's Health Magazine, she said that she loves her body:

"I still think I'm big," she told the publication. "I'm still wearing plus-size clothing. I have the same rolls. I got the same belly, the same thighs - I think I'm just a smaller version. Body positivity has nothing to do with staying the same," she continued. "Body positivity is the radical act of daring to exist loudly and proudly in a society that told you you shouldn't exist."

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Edited by Jenel Treza Albuquerque