Anonymous wrote:I didn’t lose mine. Until menopause that is. Once menopause hits you can be thin but you get saggy. [/quote
]
Tell that to J. LO and Liz Hurley...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forty five year old non-mom here. It's all gonna go south eventually anyway even if you dont have kids. May as well get a kid or two and have something to blame it on!
There’s a difference between moms and non-moms who age. Don’t be dense.
Can I have the vagina I had before a human being came out of it?
...yes? Childbirth doesn't destroy your vagina for life. That's a hateful, sexist myth.
No, it’s not. I have birth injuries including levator ani avulsion that ruined the integrity of my vagina. I tore along the inside of my vaginal walls during birth, into my perineum, my labia was partially torn off, and my levator ani pelvic floor muscles were torn from the bone. I now have pelvic organ prolapse of my uterus, rectum (rectocele) and bladder (cystocele). I also have vaginal laxity due to these injuries. This is my reality and my injuries are real. I’m glad for you if you escaped childbirth permanently unharmed but many women end up with injuries like mine, it’s just not acceptable to talk about them yet.
+1. My vagina is mostly the same but there is damage. And the other end is damaged even more. Some women need surgery after children. I am having issues 10 years later. No one talks about this and acts like there is no risk to childbirth. It can seriously permanently damage a woman’s body.
Anonymous wrote:You have to look at the other members of your biological family to know what happened to their bodies with the advent pregnancy. Seeing my mom and my sister naked I saw the destruction of pregnancy upon their bodies. Nooo wayyy would I ever become pregnant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:100% if you have more than one your body will suffer. Once you are holding the baby you really won't care.
I wish people would really stop this narrative. Yes, I still care...10 years later. No, my body will never be the same. Yes, it changed after the first and I will never get it back despite weight loss. Things fit differently. It sucks and there is no way around it. It is the price women pay and it makes me really annoyed when people just say "you won't care when you are holding the baby" because it dismisses a woman's feelings and once again makes her feel that she has to sacrifice everything--even her feelings--to have a baby. There is just no respect for women as independent beings.
OP...it is normal to feel this way. You may get close to your body back and you might not. A second is harder than a first but a first can still change your body permanently (my boobs are bigger forever..which I dont' like and clothes fit differently even after 1...after 2, it was worse). My oldest is 10. I still miss my prebaby body. These are normal feelings and you are not alone.
+1. No one would tell a woman undergoing chemo that it's shallow to miss having hair.
No one would tell a woman undergoing chemo that she chose to have cancer. Pregnancy is a choice.
It's not always. Something like half of the pregnancies in the US are unplanned. And even great birth control methods can fail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Umm, you baby proof the bathroom and have the toddler play next to the tub while you shower. Clear shower curtain so you can see them. When he was a bit smaller, pack n play.
Add in 2 more kids and let’s talk then.
You can 7 children. The answer is the same:
While they sleep
While your partner watches them
While they are safely contained
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I got my body back almost immediately without much effort. If you're younger, it helps.
I will add, OP -- a lot of this feels outside your control, but there are practical things you can do. Don't lift heavy things or do crunches/any ab exercise on your back. Don't give yourself permission to eat for two. Counterintuitively, don't rush back into exercise soon after birth; focus on healthy eating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:100% if you have more than one your body will suffer. Once you are holding the baby you really won't care.
I wish people would really stop this narrative. Yes, I still care...10 years later. No, my body will never be the same. Yes, it changed after the first and I will never get it back despite weight loss. Things fit differently. It sucks and there is no way around it. It is the price women pay and it makes me really annoyed when people just say "you won't care when you are holding the baby" because it dismisses a woman's feelings and once again makes her feel that she has to sacrifice everything--even her feelings--to have a baby. There is just no respect for women as independent beings.
OP...it is normal to feel this way. You may get close to your body back and you might not. A second is harder than a first but a first can still change your body permanently (my boobs are bigger forever..which I dont' like and clothes fit differently even after 1...after 2, it was worse). My oldest is 10. I still miss my prebaby body. These are normal feelings and you are not alone.
+1. No one would tell a woman undergoing chemo that it's shallow to miss having hair.
No one would tell a woman undergoing chemo that she chose to have cancer. Pregnancy is a choice.