Once unable to walk even a quarter mile, Lexi Reed has achieved a remarkable turnaround—reclaiming her health, surviving a rare and frightening disease, and now openly sharing evidence of how far she has come. Her recent posts deliver a clear message centered on self-love, resilience, and recovery.
In March 2025, Reed bravely shared a video of herself wearing a swimsuit—something she hadn’t felt able to do publicly in years.
Standing confidently before the camera, she marked a deeply personal milestone, stepping back into a part of life she once believed was lost to her. Just a few summers earlier, the thought of swimming felt completely out of reach.
At the time, Reed was fighting for her life—enduring a rare, intensely painful illness that robbed her of mobility and left her struggling through each day. Even before that, swimsuits were stressful, as she faced unwanted attention about her size and later, harsh judgment about her skin after losing more than 300 pounds.
Healing Beyond the Physical
Her post—firmly titled “Scars, Skin, Self Love & Swimsuits”—captured the scale of what she had overcome, not only in weight loss or physical recovery, but in taking back her right to live without hiding. In a caption filled with determination and self-belief, she wrote:
“This summer I’m taking my power back & i refuse to hide my body, take it for granted, or not wear the swimsuits [sic]!”
Life on the Sidelines
At 24, Reed weighed 485 pounds. She couldn’t walk a quarter mile without stopping. Stairs felt impossible. Entire categories of everyday fun—canoes, roller coasters, airplane seats—were off-limits because her size made them unsafe or simply unworkable.
The limitations weren’t only physical. They affected how she experienced life emotionally, too. She watched others move forward while she felt stuck. “I felt like a prisoner in my own body,” she said, describing how desperately she wanted freedom.