This Tuesday Ruby and I passed the 25 week mark. She's steadily kicking and about the size of a rutabaga (whatever the hell that means), and I'm, for lack of a better word, ballooning.
I assumed going into this pregnancy that I would gain a lot of weight. My family traditionally gets big while pregnant and I have a lifelong history with trying to keep my weight healthy. I have a history of obesity in my family that has been passed along to me. I've never been obese, and when I've been medically "overweight" (in high school and pre-pregnancy), it's been based on a ridiculous BMI system that's reflective of nothing that actually has to do with health. In fact, the only times in my life that I've ever been what most people would call "thin", I was incredibly active at my job (waiting tables 60 hours a week is hard work), didn't have a car (walking everywhere burns calories), and eating probably less than I should have (I was just too busy to stop and sit down for meals).
Left: Around 120-125 pounds while I was working as a waitress in college Right: The day I got married. Around 140-145 pounds and medically "overweight" |
So when I found out I was pregnant, something that Grant and I were SO excited about and have waited SO long to happen, I knew that the body I had beaten myself up about being too big and too soft and too round was about to get bigger and softer and rounder. But this time it was different. Maybe the overwhelming happiness of the news that we were going to be parents silenced any concerns. Probably. Maybe the fact that I was growing a child changed my perspective on what my body's purpose was--no longer a source of objectification to be poked and prodded and judged by anyone who so felt inclined, but a perfectly crafted machine capable of producing and fostering life itself. Probably. And even though I knew I was going to get bigger (most likely a lot bigger), I wasn't concerned about it.
Unlike most women, my first trimester went by swimmingly without a bit of morning sickness. Not having to ralph up food every two seconds meant that I was able to ensure that the baby and I got every bit of nutrition we needed. But just because I didn't have to see the food twice didn't mean that I wanted to see it once. I had a lot of food aversions for about the first 5 months of pregnancy. Most of the time they weren't if-you-put-that-food-in-front-of-my-face-I'll-vom aversions, it was just a general disinterest in food. I could usually finish the meals and snacks I needed to hit the calories and vitamins myself and the baby needed, but I didn't enjoy eating the way I always have. And the weirdest thing happened. For the first time since I can remember (like, for the past 20 years), I wasn't thinking about food constantly. If you've had a disordered relationship with food, you know what I mean. If you haven't, please let me explain. When I wake up, I think about what I want to eat. When I see a picture of food, I get fixated on it. My early afternoons are consumed by what I'm going to eat for lunch. My late afternoons are consumed by what I'm going to eat for dinner. My evenings are consumed by either thinking about a dessert I wish I could have or feeling guilty about a dessert I just ate. The compulsion to eat more or eat things that aren't healthy are ever-present. And that's the cycle: obsession-guilt-obsession-guilt. The cycle constantly plays in my head for the majority of my waking hours. And it's been like that for as long as I can remember.
So when that suddenly all went away, it was astounding. For the first time in my life I got to experience what it's like to have a "normal" relationship with food. Not thinking about it all the time was incredibly freeing. Lunch time rolled around and I knew I needed to eat to fuel by body, not quiet my mind. Making healthy choices were SO MUCH easier because there wasn't a nagging background track of eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, clouding my judgment. And when I wanted a brownie or an extra dinner roll I didn't feel guilty about it. I started this pregnancy heavier than I've ever been, but for those first months, I felt emotionally lighter than I've ever felt. Throughout my first trimester I only gained around 10 pounds, which was shocking to someone who assumed that I would just steadily gain more and more weight throughout.
18 weeks into my pregnancy and I was basically all bump |
Then I went to my last midwife appointment. At my midwives' office my first order of business while I wait for my appointment is to conduct a urine test and weigh myself. They have a scientific scale where I have to move the scales manually. This time I put the large weight on 100 pounds, just like I have since 5th grade. Then I begrudgingly put the next large weight at 50 pounds. This was my starting weight (151) for my pregnancy. Thirty-five pounds heavier than my lightest. Twenty-five more pounds than my working weight in college. Twenty pounds heavier than when I moved to New York. Ten more pounds than I weighed in high school or at my wedding. Then I ticked the smallest weight over to 160...165 (wait, what?) then 170... 171... (this is impossible)...172... 173... and finally landed at 175. I had gained 12 pounds in the past month. I was no longer just a belly. I wasn't even out of the second trimester and I'd already gained all of the weight that I was "supposed" to for the whole pregnancy. Turns out I hadn't dodged that gain-half-my-weight-during-pregnancy bullet.
Almost like a bag of bricks, it came back. That nagging, constant cycle: obsession-guilt-obsession-guilt. Throughout the first few months of my pregnancy I'd wondered if, after Ruby was born, my relationship with food would go back to how it had always been. I guess I was always prepared for that, but once you've finally felt what it feels like to be normal, to not have that nagging voice, its presence seems louder and more aggressive when it comes back. The week after that appointment was awful. Lots of crying. Lots of beating myself up. Lots of looking at my body in ways that I hadn't looked at it in months--ways that were fair to neither myself nor my child.
23 weeks along and I had gained 12 more pounds. |
I'm not saying that I had some kind of epiphanic realization that brought me automatic inner peace. I still look in the mirror and notice "flaws": I have bra rolls from back fat I've never had before, my thighs rub together when I walk down the hall, my double chin is in full effect. But when I see those things, and that feeling of inadequacy starts to bubble up, I look at my belly. My huge, only-gonna-get-bigger-and-get-stretch-marks-and-stretch-to-the-point-that-my-skin-will-never-recover belly. And then maybe I feel a little kick from what's underneath that belly. A baby... my baby. My daughter, who is strong and healthy and who I hope to raise into the kind of woman who knows that her body is so much more powerful than a number on a scale or whether it measures up to some silly standard of beauty. And most of the time that's enough to quiet the cycle and make me feel powerful all over again.
Rock on mama! Love you lots and can't wait to meet your lil soccer player!
*applause* Preach sistah!