No More Shame: Embracing Your Post-Baby Body

The other day I had a conversation with a friend who had just had a baby two days earlier, and she wanted to know how I had lost all of my baby weight.  She had literally just come home from the hospital and was already allowing herself to feel shameful about her body.  It broke my heart to hear her express her feelings of unworthiness and insecurity, but it brought back the feelings that I experienced shortly after giving birth.

Immediately after my second son, Ben, was born, I felt insecure and ashamed of my body and the 70 pounds I had amassed during my pregnancy.  And even though this was not my first child and I knew that it would take a little while to get back to my pre-baby weight, I still came home from the hospital and ran straight for the scale, eager to see what I had lost after delivering my 10 pound baby.  Three pounds.  I had only lost three pounds after delivering my TEN POUND BABY, which meant I had gained even more weight in the hospital.

Just a few days before delivering Ben, here I am with our close family friend, Leslie. Notice that, while I am huge, I am smiling, posing, and feeling beautiful in my giant state.

Almost instantly I began to fat-shame myself.  I saw myself as disgusting and disfigured, and I felt frustrated that I had “let myself go.”  When I looked in the mirror, all I could see was that my stomach sagged about six inches past where it should be, and the right side of my stomach drooped an inch longer than that.  I saw stretch marks and puckered skin, and my entire stomach resembled a deflated balloon.

Soon after coming home, I found myself rushing to the bathroom whenever I had a minute to myself.  I would take a deep breath, close my eyes, and step on the scale.  Disappointed in the number, I would stare in the mirror and allow my insecurities to win the battle over my thoughts.  I’d like to say that these feelings didn’t last long.  But the truth is that these thoughts followed me for well over a year.  Why did I gain so much during my pregnancy?  I look disgusting.  I’m not beautiful.  I need surgery in order to ever feel good about myself again.

I love this picture, but it makes me sad. I refused to take part in Ben’s newborn photo shoot because I was ashamed of how I looked. This was five days after giving birth. Photo cred: Amanda Causey Photography

One day, however, I stumbled upon the Fourth Trimester Bodies Project.  This is a photo documentary project whose motto is “dedicated to embracing the beauty inherent in the changes brought to our bodies by motherhood, childbirth, and breastfeeding.”  How beautiful and empowering is that?  If you have some time, please browse this website and take a look at the many beautiful pictures of women posing with their children.  On the website is photo after photo of women holding their children while posing in nothing but a bra and underwear.  Some women’s bodies were fit and muscular, while many others were soft and stretched, but each body told the same story.  It housed a miracle.  Within it, life was created, nourished, and protected.  And once that precious baby (or babies) was born, that body produced everything that sweet baby needed for survival.

My body (and yours) is phenomenal, and it has done phenomenal things.  My stomach and breasts still sag a little, and my stretch marks are still scattered throughout.  But I am learning to love them, these echoes of what my body has done.  And even if the rest of the world tells me to hide it, shrink it, smooth it, and “fix” it, I will choose instead to relish in it.  I hope you will too.

We also LOVE this post from our sister site, Burlington VT Mom’s Blog, who did a very similar “Body After Baby” project that is definitely worth checking out.

Megan Wall
Megan is a wife and stay-at-home-mommy to Matthew and Benjamin. A Navy brat, she spent her childhood moving and traveling throughout the country. Her family finally settled down in Louisiana, and she has called Baton Rouge her home since she became an LSU Tiger in the fall of 1998. After earning her Bachelor’s degree in English Literature and her Master’s in Secondary Education, she and her husband, Kenny, were married in 2004. For nearly ten years, Megan taught literature on the middle and high school levels. She is passionate about reading and instilling the love of reading to children. After four years of struggling through infertility, they were ecstatic to enter the world of parenthood in 2010. A true lover of lunching with friends, pedicures, exercise, literature, and lattes, her latest interests include tractors, pirates, climbing, and superheroes.

1 COMMENT

  1. Great post, Meg! You’re so right! Our bodies are truly amazing and once we embrace the fact that God has granted us the precious gift of bringing life into the world…and sustaining that little life by our bodies alone for 6 months or more, it’s easier to embrace our new bodies. I’m just now coming to grips with the fact that no matter how hard I work out, I may never be the same weight I was in college, and even if I did get to that target weight, my body has produced two joyful children…and it will never look exactly the same again!

    Thanks for sharing.

    e

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