Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I experienced it too, but it always makes me so, so sad when women feel flawed somehow for not being pre-pregnancy weight size soon after having a baby. I just wish it weren’t part of the conversation at all. It will take time OP, I know it’s so weird and disorienting having a new baby and having gone through childbirth. You’re beautiful.
I feel irritated when people feel “so so sad” about women wanting to feel like themselves again. It’s ok to want to lose the weight you gained. You can desire to fit into your thousands of dollars worth of clothes you have sitting in your closet without having an eating disorder.
I also don't think people understand how much large changes to your body mess with your brain and your sense of presence and identity. How weird and not yourself you can feel after giving birth and how much you feel.like your body isn't your own during this whole process. And just how much giving birth changes your muscles. After my c section I struggled to walk standing straight up for a couple weeks. Having your core strength suddenly gone really messes with how you move and feel. It's easy to accidentally hurt yourself doing the exact same stuff you did just fine a couple months ago.
We put all this pressure on moms to feel certain ways and be happy and it really messes with your brain. It's okay to struggle with this stuff, it's a LOT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I experienced it too, but it always makes me so, so sad when women feel flawed somehow for not being pre-pregnancy weight size soon after having a baby. I just wish it weren’t part of the conversation at all. It will take time OP, I know it’s so weird and disorienting having a new baby and having gone through childbirth. You’re beautiful.
I feel irritated when people feel “so so sad” about women wanting to feel like themselves again. It’s ok to want to lose the weight you gained. You can desire to fit into your thousands of dollars worth of clothes you have sitting in your closet without having an eating disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I experienced it too, but it always makes me so, so sad when women feel flawed somehow for not being pre-pregnancy weight size soon after having a baby. I just wish it weren’t part of the conversation at all. It will take time OP, I know it’s so weird and disorienting having a new baby and having gone through childbirth. You’re beautiful.
I feel irritated when people feel “so so sad” about women wanting to feel like themselves again. It’s ok to want to lose the weight you gained. You can desire to fit into your thousands of dollars worth of clothes you have sitting in your closet without having an eating disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I experienced it too, but it always makes me so, so sad when women feel flawed somehow for not being pre-pregnancy weight size soon after having a baby. I just wish it weren’t part of the conversation at all. It will take time OP, I know it’s so weird and disorienting having a new baby and having gone through childbirth. You’re beautiful.
I feel irritated when people feel “so so sad” about women wanting to feel like themselves again. It’s ok to want to lose the weight you gained. You can desire to fit into your thousands of dollars worth of clothes you have sitting in your closet without having an eating disorder.
Anonymous wrote:I experienced it too, but it always makes me so, so sad when women feel flawed somehow for not being pre-pregnancy weight size soon after having a baby. I just wish it weren’t part of the conversation at all. It will take time OP, I know it’s so weird and disorienting having a new baby and having gone through childbirth. You’re beautiful.
Anonymous wrote:I literally look 7-8 months pregnant, with a huge pregnancy belly still. I always had this "light at the end of the tunnel" mentality towards my pregnancy weight gain, like "at least it will be over soon and my body wont have a huge protruding stomach". But it's been several days and my belly is still massive... I am starting to really dread the idea of summer and going out and realizing that this weight gain may very well stick around (I dont want to diet hardcore until I'm done breastfeeding). I would love to hear from others who have been through it. I was always small before pregnancy and this has been very difficult emotionally.
Anonymous wrote:Totally normal. I wonder, though, why it was difficult emotionally to grow a baby. Seems like a normal process that is part of pregnancy.