Lindsey

This web site has really opened my eyes to see what a blessing being able to carry and deliver a child really is. I want to share my story and pictures because I have to admit, I was very upset about my body after a few months went by after delivering my child in August of 04′. While pregnant I stayed very active and loved my pregnancy. I only gained 23 pounds, but after delivering I gained more weight. It was not hard for me to shed the pounds, but after nursing my daughter my breasts became, well, I don’t really have breasts any longer. I was very upset with this fact and started to feel like less of a woman, even though my husband told me that it wasn’t my breasts that made me the woman that I am. One day it just clicked with me: the fact that I nurtured my daughter while she was in my womb and that I was able to nuture her afterwards is why I am a woman and I need to be proud of that. I no longer cover up and I am very proud of my daughter and the changes my body went through for her.

In a bathing suit, something I thought I would never do again.
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Small belly, but smaller chest
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Rhonda

At age 17, I gave birth to a son I did not keep. At age 28, I became a midwife. At age 33, I gave birth at home to my daughter, Sara. At age 37 I gave birth at home to my daughter Josie.
I can tell you that only one mama in ten has a belly that is smooth and flat and looks like it’s never been pregnant. Being a midwife has helped me get over the tummy that never goes away… and here it is. That’s Josie, now 2.5, looking on.

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Nikkie

My name is Nikkie. I am 19 years old and just had a beautiful baby boy on March 29, 2006. I think the page on moms and their stretch marks is excellent. I sometimes get discourage by them but my husband always reminds me what miracle created them and I can’t help but smile!! :)

-Here’s me at 32 wks…
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-Here’s me at 37 wks…
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-Here’s me a little over 3 months post partum…
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-I would’ve only had the scar on my lower belly but since I had my navel peirced on top & bottom the wholes stretched and gave me more stretch marks…
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-Finally here’s the stretch marks from my navel peircings…
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Angela R.

Wow, i’m so inspired by your site! I’m so embarrased by my body because of the lumps and stretch marks. When I was pregnant, I didn’t get stretch marks until the 9th month and I just exploded, I got stretch marks all over the underbelly. I even had scabs on my hips because the skin stretched too much. You actually can see that on me on my photo. This is full body shots at 9 months, actually 39 weeks. You can see the scabs and stretch marks. I really felt like exploding, my hips hurt so incredibly bad and I ended up wearing my husband’s shirts. My maternity pants were starting not to fit.

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This is a fun photo of myself trying to peek over my belly and you can also see the stretch marks.

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NOW – this is the After photos 14 months PP:

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My body looks like it returned to normal but it didn’t. My boobs sag and is tiny because of 6 months of breastfeeding. I already had a belly before pregnancy to start with, it looks the same except it now has stretch marks and has a caved in middle which I find really strange. You can sort of see it in my belly shot. I weight more than what I used to. I’m trying for a 2nd right now and I’m really nervous about what would happen to my body afterwards. I think 2 kids is my limit and I hope at this point, I’ll be able to seriously exercise. I need abs, I never had abs!! Keep contributing pictures, we need to show that we’re strong and natural women. We don’t need to be one of those hollywood stars that end up thin few days after giving birth. That isn’t natural!

Angela R.

www.rasmussenclan.com

Interviewed!

Meredith O’Brien interviewed me the other day via e-mail and posted it here in her Club Mom blog. Read it here and click on over to her blog to say hello!

Q&A with Shape of a Mother Creator
I had the pleasure of corresponding via e-mail with the creator of the new web site, Shape of a Mother, which solicits women to submit their pregnant and postpartum photos. Some are snapshots of women sans clothing, so be forewarned if you’re at work. Others are images of women in semi-dressed poses.

What they all have in common is that no one on the site is a perfect, airbrushed celeb. The images are real. And the collection of these images is very powerful.

Bonnie, a married mom of a 4- and a 1-year-old from Southern California, started Shape of a Mother after having been a blogger for five years. She was kind enough to answer questions from the Parenting Pop Culture blogger (that’s me). Here’s an excerpt from our virtual conversation:

Parenting Pop Culture (PPC): What does your spouse think about the creation of this web site? Your family and friends?

Bonnie, creator of Shape of a Mother (married 5 1/2 years): [My husband] is very supportive of the site, but in all honesty, it’s not one of his passions. The web site is still really new — a week old — so I actually hadn’t gotten around to telling many people yet. Those who do know are incredibly supportive and thrilled about it.

PPC: Was there a specific incident that prompted you to take the plunge and just do it, create the web site?

Bonnie: I originally had the idea back in March I think, but sat on it for awhile until last week. There was a “discussion” on a local moms board where a woman made some comment about overweight people on the beach needing to cover up. It offended me to hear someone speak like that and it lit the fire under my bum to get this site up and running already.

PPC: When you had your children, were you surprised by how your own body changed? How so? What were wome of the biggest changes?

Bonnie: To a degree, yes. I had resigned myself to stretchmarks at an early age since puberty had created many on my thighs and breasts, but I had no idea the degree to which I’d get them. Not only am I a “zebra belly” but my calves and upper arms also grew stripes during my first pregnancy. The worst shock was the extra flap of skin I have now that didn’t go away no matter how much weight I lost.

PPC: How did you feel about those changes in your body?

Bonnie: I hated them. I was overweight before getting pregnant and ended up at 225 pounds after my daughter was born, so I thought I did it to myself. I thought it was my fault for that extra skin because I was overweight. I blamed myself. Now I know better. I’m sure being overweight didn’t help things, and I wish I hadn’t been for many reasons, but I see now that it might not have made any difference at all. I’m not okay with my body by any means, in fact it’s a lot easier to see other women’s pictures than my own, but I know I’m not alone and I try to remember than I’m more than just skin.

PPC: What messages do you think the American popular culture sends to pregnant and postpartum women regarding their bodies?

Bonnie: That we are all smooth and firm, and anything else is shameful.

PPC: What’s the impact of the celeb moms who appear on magazine covers scantily clothed, nary a slip of loose skin or stretchmark in sight, on regular moms?

Bonnie: I think we compare ourselves to these women and expect to be like them when we don’t know the whole story. We don’t know what camera angles or air brushing made them look better. We don’t know what kind of rigid training and scant diets they might be on in the pressure to look skinny right away again. I remember reading a quote from Gwyneth Paltrow (I don’t follow celeb stuff too much, but this stuck out to me) that she said she was more concerned with nursing her baby than losing weight to have the perfect body again right away. I really admired that. Of course the kicker there is that she LOOKS GREAT and whoever was pressuring her to lose weight is exactly the person who is hurting all these women.

PPC: Do you ever talk with fellow moms about the state of their physiques post-children? What kinds of things do you hear?

Bonnie: It inevitably comes up in conversation, but it’s rare to hear anything positive. On top of everything else, there is this idea that if you think you look good, you’re conceited, and no one wants to be that girl, so even if a woman has some pride in her body — perfect or not — she will not likely speak up about it.

PPC: Why is it important to you to have images of stretchmarked bellies with loose skin on a web site?

Bonnie: Because, in every instance when I’ve felt alone in my life, once I have been brave enough to speak up, I find I’m not alone at all. We all box ourselves in these little cubicles of shame, afraid to talk about things, but the fact is, we’re all afraid of the same things. There is always someone who shares your fears with you. And it’s incredibly cathartic to find you are not alone.

PPC: Do you worry that there will be backlash from people who find the images distasteful? What would you say to those people?

Bonnie: Nah. In this world, everybody hates something, so I imagine there will be someone who is uncomfortable with this site. I would say to them, “Look away. Peace.”

Babs

I don’t know if you’ll let me in, but sometimes women do ‘bounce back’, and I wanted to show that too…

36 weeks with #1
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Finding out I was pregnant with #2 (about 18 months postpartum). I bounced back much better with the natural birth…
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3-4 weeks postpartum after #2 (c/s)
I took this picture to try and express myself; my baby died shortly after birth.
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I liked the way my body changed after pregnancy and birth. I became fuller and looked more like a woman than I ever had. I like my breasts better, my hips, my stomach – all of it.

I’m now having #3.

(I wanted to reply to this and say that anyone is welcome to post pictures – I love diversity! Thank you so much for sharing!)

Follow-Up #1

Follow-Up #2

Follow-up #3

Dora

So I worked up the guts to post my flabby gut. This is what happens when you have two kids back to back (there’s 18 months between them) and aren’t very slim to begin with. Add in a greasy food craving for the entire second pregnancy, and no will power, AND quitting smoking, and this is the result.

Thank you for doing this. SOmetimes I forgot what “real” bellies look like.

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Anonymous

I’m so impressed by the honesty and dignity of this blog. I don’t post pictures online really, but I think the courage of these women to be proud or themselves is admirable. This is me 4 weeks pg and 3 years postpartum after my first was born. I had worked very hard to get a flat stomach back. The second two pictures are me now 9 months postpartum after baby #2. I’m still a working progress to get fit. I have been on some strict restrictions postpartum regarding exercise which are just now lifted. I hope to have abs again in the future :)