Stretching.
Ever since I hit puberty I’ve had these little indentations on my skin, right at the base of my spine. I used to run my fingers over them, unsure of what they were, intrigued by the texture of my skin there. I remember being on the beach and a boyfriend asking about them, but I just shrugged and said it’d been there forever. I never thought much of it until I got pregnant. Right around the seventh month of my pregnancy a little pink scar appeared, to the right of my belly button. A stretch mark. I cried. Over the next couple of months they fanned out covering most of my belly. They appeared like flames on my breasts. I noticed them appear on the tops of my thighs, and I even got a few behind my knees. I’m not overweight, I drank plenty of water and ate a very healthy diet, and I moisturized. Even so, I soon found myself with what felt like an entirely new body, one that I regretfully admit to have mourned in those first few months.
In those early days I scoured the internet for the secret to removing them all. I wished them away. I even took a mental inventory of my life, wondering what I had done to deserve them. I found websites dedicated to normalizing a mother’s body- because it is, in fact, normal. Some days it would help to see other mothers and I would feel inspired and confident, but other days it would depress me to think about it all so much. I’m self-conscious even admitting that I dedicated so much brain space to this, considering the beautiful new baby I had next to me that whole time. Over time, I started to think less about them. I worked on accepting them. I fell madly in love with my child and with motherhood, which only helped. My partner would run his fingers over them and tell me he loved how soft my belly was now. They faded and my belly shrunk, and I started to feel more like my old self. However, I still have days where I feel dissatisfied, despite my efforts to be totally accepting and to "own" them as evidence of my strength and growth.
Recently my daughter started giving "schmoozles". Some people call it "blowing a raspberry". Basically, she lifts my shirt, puts her mouth next to my skin, and blows air against me making a surprising noise. This makes her giggle like crazy. She’s learned to say the word "belly", and loves to point to her own and find other people’s bellies hiding under their shirts. I have to say though, she seems to like mine above any others. When we nurse, she often smiles and says "belly", pushing into it and giggling. She touches it softly when she’s falling asleep. She smooshes her face into it and looks at me with nothing but love and fun in her eyes. There’s no judgment. She loves my belly. I love that she loves it. It was her first home.
I effortlessly see other mothers as beautiful just as they are, although I’ve found that it’s something that I have to work at in myself. I think this is a reality for many women. I guess now I feel like I’m still mourning, but I’m not mourning my scars. I’m mourning the fact that we live in a culture that nurtures an unrealistic and superficial ideal, openly criticizing those that don’t fit into that criteria. It doesn’t help that we often compare and criticize each other, seeing other women as competition rather than part of a sisterhood. That’s not the world I want to live in, and I think that now more than ever I have a responsibility to help change it for the better. If not for myself, then certainly for my daughter. I don’t have the secret to acceptance and self-love. I will say, however, that I’m grateful for each of my scars. They help me to think about my life in a more honest, less shallow way. They free me up to believe in my true worth, and the worth of others. I’m only a better person because of them.
Latest posts by Gracie (see all)
- Let the world be fed - October 21, 2024
- The Encounter - April 19, 2024
- On Practice - February 23, 2024
<3! you are amazing, grace! i loved this, you should post it to some of the pregnant/mothering communities. seriously.
Haha, you think? I wouldn’t know where to post it. π
Also, it’s nice to see you posting lately.
You are incredible and I love you.
Right back atcha lady. I’m so thrilled I’ll see you in like 2 weeks!
You are an amazing woman with an inspired perspective on so much in this life. You’re also a great photographer and that photo is beautiful.
Oh, sister. I love you. I can only thank you for the hours you spend with me helping me hash out my thoughts. π
I’m glad you like that photo- with my crappy camera and it turned out just how I wanted it. I can’t wait to get a semi-professional camera!
yuo are so beatiful! I really needed to read this right now too. I constantly manipulate my thoughts about my belly. and i really believe that i dont care about having it- i just wish i could wear clothes that dont ride up over it but still fit in my arms and shoulders. that is a manipulated thought cause really i should feel nothing about showing a little mama belly…its beautiful! but thanks for reminding me….
ani has a great line about stretch marks telling a story too
You are so beautiful, too! Just so you know, I am ALWAYS inspired to love myself better when I’m with you. You are so honest and open and it really gives me energy to be a happier stronger woman. I hope you know that you do that! I’m glad I can share the mama belly with some of my friends- it feels like a happy mama team. I also really liked Ani’s new song Present/Infant, especially this part:
so i’m begining to see some problems
with the ongoing work of my mind
and i’ve got myself a new mantra
it says “don’t forget to have a good time”
don’t let the sellers of stuff
have power enough
to rob you of your grace
love is all over the place
there’s nothing wrong with your face
love is all over the place
there’s nothing wrong with your face
Love!
my I.Q.- ani difranco just the first half
when I was four years old
they tried to test my I.Q.
they showed me a picture
of 3 oranges and a pear
they said,
which one is different?
it does not belong
they taught me different is wrong
but when I was 13 years old
I woke up one morning
thighs covered in blood
like a war
like a warning
that I live in a breakable takeable body
an ever-increasingly valuable body
that a woman had come in the night to replace me
deface me
see,
my body is borrowed
yeah, I got it on loan
for the time in between my mom and some maggots
I don’t need anyone to hold me
I can hold my own
I got highways for stretchmarks
see where I’ve grown
I was never bothered by my stretch marks from puberty, aside from them itching for a year or so as they healed. But the ones I have right now that are brand new, red and irritated, and simply pointless. I don’t have mark of becoming a woman or a mother, just marks to remind myself how I’ve been avoiding eating healthy and paying for it. Kinda just makes me want to cry.
Aw- we all come in different bodies, and I think it’s a struggle for most women to feel happy about certain aspects. Stretch marks, for me, were just hard to deal with. I can say with complete confidence that you are beautiful, just how you are. I can also say that if you aren’t eating healthy than get to it! It’s been my discovery that the more you do it the more you WANT to, it all just falls in suit. π
i love that picture. vera saying “belly” is just adorable. thanks for this post.
Does Jonah love your mama belly? I bet he does. π
This is an excellent post. I’m still trying to figure out this new body of mine and all the changes that occurred so quickly.
I ended up with one stretch mark that came up the day before I went into labor. It looks like a little martini glass to one side of my belly button. I figure it’s Ben’s mark on me to show that he was here for 9 months.
It does happen so fast! So many changes in such a short time. I’m always excited to read your new posts. And a martini glass! That’s so fun. π
That is the most wonderful post! I too struggle with my appearance. I do have four small streatch marks on my lower belly after my 2nd was born, which isn’t bad but I do have streatch mark/ varicose vein lines from my hips down my back side to my calves. I think that is from the extra weight of pregnancy though I was careful to gain just the right amount I was on my feet constantly working. I don’t like the way I look, I am heavier now than ever in my life, even if I appeare thin still I have lumps and extra just about all over. I could soooo live with out that. I often find myself afraid that if I don’t look the same as I did at 20 no one will love me. This has more to do with feeling rejected by my husband and the worry that if I am even slightly unattractive then I am not valuable to him…it isn’t true but it is a haunting thought.
Trish
PS love the picture!
I think it’s tragic that women even think that their partners will look elsewhere because of the natural changes to their bodies. I don’t think you are alone in that thinking- I certainly wondered about how Jeff would feel about it all. I wish those thoughts had never entered my mind. I really think it’s important to keep encouraging and lifting each other up as women. π
I LOVE THIS POST! Truly inspiring.
π
You are a beautiful woman!!!
I love telling women they are beautiful. We don’t hear it enough, especially from each other.
Oh thank you, friend. You are just lovely. I hope we get to see each other sometime soon.
P.S.
If you don’t submit this post to The Birth Project, I will do it for you. π
Haha. After the first comment about posting this somewhere else I thought about it and just submitted it right then. π So funny.
oh my gosh.. this brought tears to my eyes. this was really really really beautiful! i’m sending it to my mother!
i love your livejournal!
That’s so sweet! You’ve got me thinking about your big family of women (ok, and a couple of guys…), all so beautiful and strong together. You guys are awesome. I love to read about your adventures, too!
belly
Hi Grace,
Your journal is beautiful. Very awesome. Thank you for sharing.
Peace,
Tab
Re: belly
Aw thanks! I hope to see you soon- we were only at the picnic today for a little while, and I didn’t see you, but maybe next time. π
How beautiful is this entry <3
i.love.you.
& you inspire me so.
thank you.
kate
I. LOVE. YOU.
We are going to have lots of fun on Friday! π
This is one of the nicest pictures I’ve ever seen… it’s just so sweet.
I love reading your thoughts on life. You’re a really deep person and I admire that π
Thank you! I always love your pictures- especially when you go home to see your parents in Ireland. You are such a talent. π
Amazing post as always, Grace. Love the picture. So beautiful.
At any rate, I’ve awarded you with the Honest Scrap award. π Go to my blog to check it out and share the love!
Aw, I’ve been awarded! Fun! I will share the love!
Awarded
hello lovely you have been awarded – check out my blog π
That is such a beautiful entry and beautiful photo!