Thursday, 23 January 2014

The Truth About Your Body After Baby


      You are what you eat…

      …But what if you don’t eat anything?

      I stumbled onto a twin mom’s page on Instagram the other day (I browse them rather often) and beneath a picture of her bulging twin belly, she had written up a long comment about how she couldn’t wait to get back into shape after her boys were born. Of course, I understood that! I may have only carried my twin daughters to 27 weeks, but I was measuring 40 and had certainly reached a point where I felt like I couldn’t possibly get any bigger. In all honesty, when I hit 26 weeks I was pretty frightened by the size and rate my stomach was growing at; I can’t imagine what I would have looked like if I’d carried them to full term! …I probably could have just rolled myself to the hospital for delivery.

      But as for the twin mom I was cyber-stalking, what I didn’t understand were her intended methods. She wrote about how she had developed a post-partum food plan that consisted almost exclusively of juicing, and making extreme cuts to her daily caloric intake. She said she was sure the key to post-partum weight loss was diet, and she was planning on highly restricting hers to get back to her pre-baby size, for which she received comments like: you go girl!” and “you can do it! You’re so inspiring!” Among others.

      And I have to say, the whole thing made me very uncomfortable. Unfortunately, the worst part of it all was that hers is NOT the first post I’ve seen that encouraged and received encouragement about unhealthy dieting behaviour. In the age of the selfie, where “likes” are their own form of currency, it seems that everyone is obsessed with their social media image, and more and more are resorting to unnatural methods to achieve one that will garner them approval. And one of the worst culprits is the post-partum mom, posting transformation pictures and constantly competing with her peers to be the one back into pre-baby clothes the fastest. Now, don’t get me wrong: I’m ALL FOR seeing weight-loss transformations. I even don’t mind the Instagram fitness pages. As annoying as they often are, they’re usually people who have decided to get fit and share their enthusiasm with the world; in the middle of a real obesity epidemic this is behaviour we should support (despite how irksome all their gym “check-ins” can be). My issue therefore isn’t with post-partum fitness, but rather the enormous pressure mothers feel to be a certain size within a relatively short time after they’ve delivered.

      When I was pregnant with my twins, I received my fair share of body comments. Things like “wow, you’re going to be as big as a house!” Along with guidance about how I could prevent weight gain. In fact, I received more advice about my size than I actually did about being a mother; it seemed as though the whole world was much more interested in how large I was going to get and whether or not my belly would torpedo. Even when I felt enormous I still received remarks along the lines of: “Oh, you’ve still got a long way to go. You’re going to get huge.”

      Understandably, it all left a bad taste in my mouth; I didn’t like the idea that how much weight I gained while growing TWO babies was more relevant than my impending motherhood. And it seemed like most moms that I talked to had little-to-no real advice for getting into shape the right way after the girls were born; even my twin baby book said breastfeeding and “chasing after two babies” would make the weight drop quickly. In my search for answers I discovered that there seemed to be a phobia of honesty: the fear that if we acknowledge that losing baby weight is difficult we would be seen as a less competent mother or person in the eyes of our peers. It’s an idea that started with celebrities putting their post-baby bodies on magazine covers, and has gradually bled into the veins of normal societies, building a feeling of inadequacy in most mothers even before their children are born.

      As a twin mom, I’ve definitely battled my own demons in terms of post-partum weight loss. Even though I didn’t gain much in terms of weight, pregnancy really warps your body in ways you can’t imagine. Since delivering my girls, I’ve had many MANY days where I looked in the mirror and said “that’s it! I give up!” Fortunately I’ve learned that time does heal most things, and that in combination with hard work has taken my body to a level of fitness that is superior to what it was even before I became pregnant.  

      And I guess that’s what I really want to be honest about: I’ve worked REALLY REALLY hard to get where I am. I don’t eat a lot of junk (though homemade cookies and muffins are my weakness) I don’t skip workouts even when I’m tired, and I push myself past my limits when I’m doing them. It’s taken me 6 long months to get where I am, and even though I’m in great shape I’m still nowhere near where I want to be. And usually I’m okay with that; babies take a toll on the body, especially two, and I’ve had to remind myself heavily to relax and not be such a severe critic. But in this harsh world where how fast you drop the baby weight seems to go hand-in-hand with your value as an individual, I don’t want to be the person who perpetuates the awful lie of “the pounds just dropped off!” Or “breast-feeding is better than a diet!”  Because:

1.       It makes moms who don't see those results feel like their pregnancy or post-baby body is something to be ashamed of.

2.       If getting back to your pre-baby shape afterwards was as simple as breastfeeding (or chasing after an immobile baby?) we wouldn’t be talking about this at all.

3.       All of this body anxiety bullshit steals the joy of motherhood by putting incredible pressure on women to lose the belly first and foremost, rather than slow down and enjoy the experience.

      Thankfully, I never gave in to juicing or dieting to lose baby weight; I definitely had my “fat” days (a lot of them) where I thought about it, but I was lucky enough to have a sane voice in the back of my head (and a very supportive husband) that turned me away from that extreme, unhealthy path. I chose instead to work my ass off, literally, and while it’s been a longer road than a dieters, in doing so I have been able to not only enjoy my babies, but also find value in myself that has nothing to do with the numbers on a scale. And that’s what I want to scream from the rooftops: if you want to exercise and get into rockin’ shape after having a baby, good for you! Building physical strength will help with those long nights (and your sanity!) and will set a good example for your children in the long run. But if you don’t feel like you have the time, or the energy, that’s okay too; there’s nothing wrong with simply relaxing in your free moments. You just created life! Ultimately, it's better to do nothing than to resort to serious diet restriction.

      But whatever you do, don’t let those “look how skinny I am now, AND I’m a mom” pictures make you feel like a fat shit bag, and push you to do something extreme or unhealthy; I am struck with a certainty that anyone who starves to shrink copes with deep unhappiness, and that’s not something you want to put on yourself or your family. It may be the slow road, but health is always the happy road, and women need to wake up and realize that we deserve that.

      Despite what all the magazine covers, and Instagram posts, and Facebook photo updates say, here’s the real truth: you are allowed to love yourself for something other than your pant size.

No comments:

Post a Comment