Monday, February 25, 2013

Body by Baby

Because Gisele and all her friends make it seem like stretchmarks don't happen, I started Body by Baby. Stretchmarks do happen. So does saggy skin. And saggy boobs. And that is ok. Because we are real women. Our bodies aren't perfect. But they didn't get this way on their own. They got this way because we are fucking awesome and CREATED A HUMAN IN THEM. What's a stretchmark or a muffin top when we actually made life?

This is what a real woman's belly looks like. This is what having beautiful babies does to a girl. And it is awesome:






This is Sarah from Nichols Nook. She is the mom of a 2-year-old little boy named Max and a 5-month-old little girl named Catherine.


Here is her story:
I so firmly believe that mama-bodies are beautiful, and that the media that's out there has given everyone the wrong impression about what healthy women actually LOOK like. Of course, everyone knows this, and everyone talks about it, but simply knowing and talking about the fact that celebrities don't look like real women and all of their pictures are airbrushed doesn't actually change anything. The world needs to SEE the differences for us to all start feeling better about ourselves. We can 'tsk' and wag our fingers all we damn want, but none of us are going to start feeling normal in our own tigress skins until we actually see with our own eyes that that liposuctioned lion on the magazine cover is surrounded--overwhelmed--by a sea of tigers.

I am a tigress. I am a mother. I have grown and birthed actual, unique human beings from inside of my body. Which is AMAZING, by the way, if you didn't already realize that. I get my stretch marks at 40 weeks, a crimson road map--directions for my life, 'Babies, 5 Miles', 'This Way To Motherhood And All That It Means'--from pubic bone to belly button, an impenetrable web. After birth, they fade into the background and turn silver and shimmer in the light, taking a vacation, waiting until the next 40-week mark when they will again explode into being like a sudden burst of life-affirming fireworks, stretching me and shaping me. (Isn't it astounding that the human skin can adapt itself to stretch as large as we could ever possibly need it to?) I can play dress-up with my belly: kneading it into bread dough, or a pillow for husbands or children, or the legs of that stone age Venus, or a butt with which to wryly moon the world and go, "Neener!"


You know what? I love my body! I feel STRONG. I feel HEALTHY. Do I want to lose those last 15 postpartum pounds? Sure, but I don't obsess about it. I feel like a WOMAN, not a girl, because I AM a woman. Girls look different than women do. It's a physiological fact, and for physiological reasons. Girls are lovely and pure and delicate and women are sturdy and powerful and the foundation of the earth and the wellspring of all the people on it. One is a dewy meadow in springtime: golden, inspiring, fresh, framed in photographs. The other is a robust field, rippling with harrow-stripes, abundant, ripe and overflowing with wheat, with milk, with succulent fruits, sustaining nations.

During my two pregnancies I was sick and thrilled and achy and felt like a goddess and a monster and I was terrified and I could not WAIT to be a mother, then a mother of two, and I was hot and hormonal and gained 55 lbs and my feet swelled and I ate gummy bears and steak and I loved every second. I can't wait to be pregnant again in the future when that time comes, and I mean that. When I was birthing my babies I legitimately thought I was going to die, both times, and after my son I felt like a failure (natural birth) and after my daughter I felt like an amazing warrior queen who could do ANYTHING (natural birth) and next time I am pretty sure I'm going to rock me an epidural like it's my job. I am 23 years old and I have a cystocele and permanent, often painful perineal scarring and I'm pretty sure I will pee every time I sneeze or jog for the rest of my life. It's cool.

I wear bikinis at the beach and you know what? No one gives me a second glance. If there's anything I've learned in my young life, it's that people don't think you're ugly. They aren't even looking at you. Life is so full of lifeness for everyone engaged in it that they couldn't care less if the lady with the babies has a pooch and some muffiny goodness going on. They are probably oblivious to the lady with the babies, and if they aren't, they are probably focusing on her babies, and if they aren't, they are probably not thinking about the pooch and stretchmarks at all, and if they aren't, they are probably admiring her "bravery", and if they aren't, then why care? Life is TOO SHORT to spend it freaking out about what strangers on the street are thinking, people. I know we hear that all the time, but it's for a reason. Listen to it. Embrace it.

Let's stop being afraid of that lone lioness on her painted magazine; let's unveil our stripes and roar with the masses of our neighbors. Let's stop pining after the barrenness in those dewy spring photographs and instead revel in our own abundance, the hard-earned, life-affirming fruitfulness of our rippling fields, striped in gold and umber. Let's smell the sweet breath of our babies and moon the world with our belly-butts and be soft pillows for the heads of our husbands, and buy things we love to wear in new sizes that actually fit us, and post pictures of our mommyness for the wide world to see. Let's celebrate this strange, full, often absurd, achingly bright and beautiful thing we call life, instead of hiding from it. Let's sing. Let's love. Let's drink beer. Let's have more babies, or make casseroles for new mamas having theirs, or grow old in grace and wisdom, shedding light and joy on everyone around us whether we have children or not.

We are women. Hear us roar.


Wow. Thanks, Sarah. You are the shit for sharing with us what we all hide from each other.

Body by Baby all started here, but you glorious bitches have kept it going. Feeling frisky? Send me your own Body by Baby portrait and I will share it with all six of my readers the world. Anonymously or not. Your choice. Email them to me at ilikebeerandbabies @ gmail . com (remove spaces).

19 comments:

  1. Wow. Just WOW! I liked that a lot.

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  2. I give her 100 high fives. All at once. That was so awesome that I really do want to wear my bikinis again.

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    1. I do. I let it all hang out. Long live the stretch mark!

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  3. High five! As I've been struggling to lose the last 5 lbs from my first, and contemplating a one piece, I think I can rock the bikini now!

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  4. That was great! Thanks for sharing Sarah! I am heading to the mirror now to see if I can make a butt with my post baby belly!

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  5. I'm still laughing over belly-butts.
    Such a great post! I hope I can have the same outlook if my next baby stretches me out. I'm one of the insanely lucky ones - I looked like I was smuggling a beach ball but not a single stretch mark.

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    1. I would like to know how many women went to the mirror and made belly butts after this...

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  6. That was amazing! I found myself shouting "YAH" and fist pumping the air more than once. Thank-you Sarah! Thank-you!
    Now, I'm off to make my own belly butt and giggle as it jiggles in all it's baby home glory! =)

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  7. Jess shared a link to this on her blog today. This chick is amazing:-) I'm going to go read all your other Body by Baby posts now!

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  8. This is such a great post. What an inspiration!

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I love hearing from you. It reinforces that writing this blog is not just a silly waste of my brain matter. If you leave a douche canoe comment, I will delete it. I am powerful like that.