Candace Cameron Bure details journey with…
Candace Cameron Bure is diving into her relationship with her physique.
On Tuesday, the actress, 49, dropped the most recent season of her “Candace Cameron Bure Podcast,” which focuses on “lifelong struggles with body image, disordered eating, and mental exhaustion,” alongside visitor Lisa Whittle.
During the first episode of Season 11, Bure revealed when her eating disorder began.
Candace Cameron Bure and Lisa Whittle on “The Candace Cameron Bure Podcast.” Candace Cameron Bure/YouTube
“I developed an eating disorder when I was 18,” the sitcom star shared. “It was binging and purging, like, I’m a bulimic. I still say I’m a bulimic because the thoughts, whether I’m doing that or not, never leave me. I still need the tools to say, ‘No, Candace, we’re not doing that.’”
Bure grew up in the highlight while starring on “Full House” for eight seasons from 1987 to 1995. After the collection ended, she moved to Montreal with her now-husband, Valeri Bure, to help his hockey profession. During that time, Bure began binging and purging.
The Great American Family CCO praised her associate of 29 years for being an “incredible support” system amid her struggles.
Candace Cameron Bure talks physique image on Season 11 of her podcast. Candace Cameron Bure/YouTube
“I feel like a broken record,” Bure confessed. “I’m 49 years old, and I’m, like, ‘Why do I think about this so much? Why does it even matter so much? It’s so ridiculous.’ And yet, I’m still thinking about it [and] we’re here talking about it.”
The “Ainsley McGregor Mysteries” star added, “I’m glad we’re talking about it, but I just wish, in general, that this was not a conversation that we all had to have.”
Bure admitted that she’s struggled with these points for a long time.
Candace Cameron poses for photographs while on “Full House.” Courtesy Everett Collection
“I’m reading everything I can. I want all the information,” she confessed. “There’s certainly been amazing things and tools that have helped me along the way, but there’s still nothing that has really changed my heart and soul on it. I still constantly think about it. It’s really vulnerable, but so many of us feel the same feelings.”
Growing up in Hollywood added an additional layer of stress for the podcast host, who landed the ABC show before she was even a teenager.
Bure instructed Whittle that she had at all times been hyperconscious of food beginning at a younger age.
John Stamos, Dave Coulier, Jodie Sweetin, Candace Cameron, Ashley/Mary-Kate Olsen, Bob Saget of “Full House.” ©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection
Candace Cameron Bure in 1990. Courtesy Everett Collection
“Everyone in my house was always on a diet,” she stated. “My mom was always on a diet. My sisters were always on a diet. I was always put on a diet.”
“It wasn’t like, ‘Oh, you have to lose weight.’ It’s just, ‘We’re gonna do this as preventative. We want to teach you how to be healthy and exercise,’” she recalled. “That completely shaped the viewpoint that I had about myself, and the feelings about my body, like, ‘Oh, I have to make decisions because there’s a fear that I could develop an eating disorder because I’m on TV.’”
She added, “Because that’s the pressure, and I don’t want to be too fat compared to other actors because then producers might tell me that I need to lose weight.”
Candace Cameron in the “Full House” episode “Shape Up” in 1990. ©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection
Candace Cameron Bure and the Olsen twins attend the Starlight Foundation Awards Gala in 1994. Getty Images
“My parents never wanted a producer to come up to me and say, like, ‘We need your child to lose weight,’ so let’s do everything preventative.”
In reality, Bure praised her dad and mom, Barbara and Robert Cameron, for doing “the best job in protecting me.”
Tracey Gold, who starred on “Growing Pains” with her older brother Kirk Cameron, developed an eating disorder, and she finally sought remedy.
Candace Cameron Bure at the ABC Affiliate Party on June 3, 1992. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
At that level, Bure’s dad and mom “were really afraid” for the younger actress.
“I had cheeks and I had thicker arms and I was, like, a normal 12-year-old, you know? I really was a normal 12-year-old, but I had a little bit more fat on me than other kids on TV,” Bure recalled. “They were just fearful that I would develop an eating disorder, just because of all of the pressures.”
However, it was those conversations that sparked Bure to focus on her physique and her relationship with food.
Candace Cameron Bure at the 2002 ESPY Awards. WireImage
Candace Cameron Bure attends the VSDA conference in 2004. Getty Images
“That very thing just shaped the way I looked at my body, which was like, ‘Oh, it’s not good enough the way it is right now,’” the star defined.
“That kind of started young,” she admitted, including that it continued “through my teenage years.”
In 2021, Bure, who shares youngsters Natasha, 26, Lev, 25, and Maksim, 23, with Val, detailed how people still come up to her and remark on her physique.
Candace Cameron Bure attends Cool Comedy Hot Cuisine Benefitting The Scleroderma Research Foundation in 2024. Getty Images
“It’s still today the most common comment that gets spoken to me is, like, ‘Wow, you’re so small! Wow, you’re thin!’ It was always … even as a child, like, ‘Wow, you’re a lot smaller in person than you look on TV. You’re so chubby on TV,’” she instructed Yahoo! Entertainment at the time.
“When you hear those things over and over again, and they become so repetitive, it can often become your identity to an extent, or it makes you perceive yourself in a way that you didn’t even think you were, because other people keep speaking that into you.”
Despite the skin noise, Bure stated she is doing “great.”
Candace Cameron Bure posts a trip photograph in July 2025. candacecbure/Instagram
“I think when you struggle with something like that, it never goes away, but you have the tools in place to know how to handle it when those temptations or urges arise … so that you don’t go back to old patterns. And I’m sure that’s gonna be the way it will be for the rest of my life.”
However, Bure is thrilled that in as we speak’s society, people are embracing all physique sizes.
“I’m so glad that the culture is different today,” she gushed.
Candace Cameron Bure and Val Bure. candacecbure/Instagram
Candace Cameron Bure and Val Bure hit the seashore on trip. candacecbure/Instagram
“One thing we’ve done a great job with is encouraging body confidence, body positivity and that all shapes and sizes are beautiful,” Bure continued.
“It makes raising a daughter — and sons — but a daughter, that much easier, because we have great role models and the message across the board from the media and magazines is very different than it was, you know, in ’80s and ’90s.”
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