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Positive Self-Image during
Pregnancy
Article
By Ann Douglas
Women tend to fall into
one of two camps during their
pregnancies, says midwife Mary Hunking,
those who feel very negatively, and those
who feel very positively.
"For
some women, it's just the changing
weight," says Hunking. "Many
young women in our culture have real
love-hate relationships with their
bodies. There's such a strong pressure in
our culture to be young and slim and
active and vital, and for some women,
when they're pregnant, that doesn't
happen. They're always tired, weight gets
put on, and they struggle with body
changes they don't really have any
control over. In a sense, there is a loss
of control.
"For
other women, it's a really positive
thing. They're the healthiest they've
ever been, they feel good about their
bodies, and the fact that their bodies
have life growing within them. Some women
talk about when they were pregnant being
the best time in their lives."
What's
Normal
It
is normal, says Hunking, for a woman's
self-image to fluctuate over the course
of her pregnancy. It is hard to feel
particularly healthy or vital while you
are bending over a toilet throwing up,
but you may feel entirely different about
your changing body by the time you've
moved into the second trimester, when you
may be awed by your baby's movements.
Then, once the breathlessness and
difficulty sleeping so characteristic of
the third trimester kick in, you may find
yourself feeling considerably less than
enthusiastic about the entire business of
being pregnant.
It
is during this final trimester when many
women start to feel negatively towards
their pregnant bodies, says author Carl
Jones in his book After the Baby is Born.
"Many expectant mothers see
themselves as misshapen, awkward, and
even ugly during the later prenatal
months."
The
Impact of Those Around You
For
Margaret Allan of Calgary, Alberta, it
was during her second pregnancy that she
experienced the most difficulty with her
body image. Her two sons, Gordon and
Andrew, were born 17 months apart, and
she recalls that the spacing of her two
pregnancies left her feeling "like I
was pregnant for two years." Gordon
was born six weeks prematurely, while
Andrew was a full-term baby, and, because
of the differences in her two
pregnancies, Allan remembers feeling much
larger and bulkier during the final weeks
of her second pregnancy: "The second
time I felt absolutely enormous!"
she exclaims. She feels that the support
and interest that her husband Drew took
in her pregnancies was instrumental in
allowing her to continue to feel good
about herself.
The
partner is not the only person who can
have a significant impact on a pregnant
woman's body image, however. Family and
friends also have a significant role to
play. "I think it's important for
women to have a lot of positive support
around pregnancy," says Hunking,
but, unfortunately, many pregnant women
are subjected to "very subtle
remarks that can be very
insensitive."
In
an attempt to counteract these
potentially hurtful remarks, many of
which focus on the pregnant woman's size,
Hunking and her midwifery partner, Kelly
Sexsmith, make a concerted effort to
reassure their clients that all babies
are carried differently. For example, a
woman pregnant with her first baby will
carry differently than a woman carrying
her fourth child, and a woman with a
large frame may carry differently than a
woman with a petite one.
When
Private is Public
Not
only do pregnant women find themselves
being subjected to insensitive remarks
about their size; they may feel that
their entire private lives have become
public property and that what matters to
everyone is not they themselves, but
rather their childbearing function.
Author
Sheila Kitzinger writes in The Experience
of Childbirth, "Suddenly [she] is
somebody different - an expectant mother
- a subject of interest and concern to
society - her life seems to be no longer
intimate and apart, but something anybody
can talk about. They even know when her
last period was, whether she is being
sick in the morning, and whether her
nipples are the "right"
shape." Trying to measure up to
everyone's expectations of the perfect
mother-to-be can have a devastating
effect on a woman's self-esteem.
About the Author:
Ann Douglas is one of North
America's leading pregnancy writers. Her
books include The Unofficial
Guide to Having a Baby ,Trying Again : A
Guide to Pregnancy After Miscarriage
Stillbirth and Infant Loss, and The Mother of All
Pregnancy Books: An All-Canadian Guide to
Conception, Birth and Everything
In-Between. Ann is frequently quoted
in the media on a range of
parenting-related topics, and has
appeared as a guest on a number of
television and radio shows.
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Copyright
© 2001 Ann Douglas, All Rights Reserved
Reprinted with Permission
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