Exposed. Celebrating our “Mom Bodies”.

Learning to celebrate our Mom Bodies…

On October 18, 2010, I was 12 days into turning 58 years old.  At 58, women still feel body image things; it’s part of our culture, whether we like it or not.  Doing something about this cultural phenomenon is quite another thing that maybe, just maybe, we can do something about.

Can I blame the media bombardment, celebrity craze and trillion-dollar fitness industry for the obsession with body image? Maybe.  But sometimes it takes just one movement, or just one woman, to say things so clearly and so succinctly and so powerfully that minds may change and bodies will be celebrated – Mom Bodies, in particular.  This morning, I read a brilliant piece by Jessica at Keeping Mommy Sane, How I’m Trying to Love My Post-Kid Body.  Jessica (@sanemommy) had a cathartic moment or two that burst out into celebration of her post-kid body… and I remembered an Exposed movement that had begun to spread on Twitter and Facebook a couple of years ago.

I wrote my Exposed journey back in 2010 through my eyes and heart as a girl, a woman, a Mom, a Grandma; a journey that ends in celebration.  My wish is that Jessica’s words of loving her Mom Body spread like a wildfire of millions of photo-shopped images.  My wish is that women (and men) read how WE feel about our Mom Bodies and let the celebrations begin!

October 18, 2010 at 12:42 am
Exposed

I had seen the EXPOSED movement on Twitter… and it moved me with its depth and raw nakedness. I clicked into post after post after post, looking at photographs and “listening” to story after story after story. Journey after journey. Journeys with the temples that we are given, through genetics and environment, from the moment we are conceived… the height, the hue, the headstrongedness to carry and care for our temples, our bodies.

Then the real journey begins. None of us has control of this journey for many, many years… but our bodies are celebrated by those around us, those who care for us, in so many, many ways. People cheer and photograph us as we crawl with it. As we walk with it. As we talk from within it and feel, sense, and love with it. We are embraced and we embrace. We run and laugh and play with it. We eat with it and we grow with it. Our bodies are kind of other-worldly while we prepare to become one with it.

Ah. The journey becomes a oneness of body and mind. I remember the exact moment that I became one with my body and mind, and it was not a good one-ness. I was 11 years old, going on 12, and I was playing baseball with my brothers and a bunch of girls and boys in a big, open vacant lot in my little town in New Hampshire. I was a tomboy, but I was beginning to notice that girls and boys were different… you know, those intrinsic little nuances. Many of the boys could hit a baseball hard enough to break one of the many windows in the great big old hall… Centennial Hall… that bordered that vacant lot. The great fun was when a window was shattered by a long ball. We all scattered like little leaves in a hurricane… giggling at the deed. (Oh, if my own kids or grandkids ever did this…) I wanted to hit a ball hard enough and long enough to break one of those windows, to be one of the guys… but that never happened. Instead, playing a game of pick-up baseball in that field changed my life in a way that I never saw coming. One comment. One casual comment by a boy. A body comment.

I had just hit a ball as hard as I could. I was rounding first base. The boy said something like, “You could run faster if your legs weren’t fat.” These may not have been his exact words. But the “fat legs” words were there. I went home that day, studied my legs in a mirror, and decided that the boy was right. At that moment, my temple went from being fun and happy and exciting while carrying me around bases, sledding down a great big hill, playing on the jungle gym, pushing a hockey puck, riding my bike to Hampton Beach and leaping into the waves… or wearing those little white one-inch dressy Easter shoes… to something that brought self-consciousness and shame. FAT LEGS. Those 2 simple words defined me, and it was not a good one-ness of body and mind.

I stopped playing that day. Really, really playing.

Did I have “fat legs”? It didn’t matter. In the mind of that boy, I did. In my mind, I did. Yes, maybe I had stopped growing. And maybe the height I didn’t reach had settled into my legs. My thighs, to be exact. Puberty is a tough time for body image. Our minds are being bombarded with both external and internal stuff… then throw in the raging hormones. It can be a toxic mix. That’s when the temple is examined, critiqued and often self-criticized, one brick or one stone or one beam at a time. We are not the architects of our bodies… that has happened long, long ago, well before our journeys began. But what we must know, always know, is that we are the bricklayers and masons and carpenters. But I wouldn’t know this for quite some time.

But did I have fat legs? I had, and still have, strong thighs. I hated them. I grew into adolescence with Twiggy and Cher. I wanted long, skinny legs and long, straight hair. What I got were short legs with thunder thighs. A body that had stopped growing at 5’2″. And I had naturally curly hair. Ugh. It was the 60′s. So what did I do? I began, at age 12, to skip breakfast and the nutritious lunches that my Mom had packed for me. And I ironed my hair with a flat iron. Where had that tomboy with the enthusiasm to run, jump and play gone? She had disappeared into a hungry grump under all that burnt, singed hair in the journey of becoming a woman. It was a miserable time. But it was a time that I could recall for my own daughters when they were adolescents… to give them tools to build upon. It was a time that I will recall to my 2 beautiful 9-year old granddaughters, if they ever need it.

It is devastatingly sad when playing is replaced with… well, things in all of our lives that replace playing. It is sad for our bodies and our minds. And I know that it is the return to playing that has made all the difference in my life. I began running 2 years ago, at age 56. In 2 years, I have taken my playing to run 5ks, a 10k, a half marathon and a Half Ironman. Baby steps with a body that could hardly run 10 steps without total exhaustion. Re-teaching myself how to swim. Hopping on a bicycle and pedaling like there’s no tomorrow. Changing everything through play.

And watching my body change before my very eyes.

I now know how to eat. (I eat A LOT.) I know the great patience in learning. I’m never disappointed in myself. BECAUSE I AM PLAYING. AND THE BEST PART IS THAT I LOVE MY BODY AND THE JOURNEY IT TELLS. I love my naturally curly hair. I love my wrinkles. They remind me of my grandmothers, who I adored. I love my laugh lines… because I love to laugh. I love my neck, even though my granddaughter once told me that it’s “squishy” in there. I love my collar bones because they keep my head held high. I love my arms… they build muscle very easily… and they let me pick up my grandchildren very high and hold them and twirl them… and my arms let me push my 9 grandchildren “way up to the sky” on the swings. I love my breasts. I love that they fed my baby girl Janie ’til she was 3 years old. I loved that she named them! I love the scar on my lower left breast that told of good news. I love how I wrap them in pink… hot pink. I love my curves. My husband loves my curves, too. I love how my waist goes in and my hips go out. See ya, Twiggy. I love that my body carried my beautiful children, even though I gained 60 pounds for each one. I love that my tummy will never be 6-pack-ish. Or maybe it will! After all, I hold the tools… I just have to get out my invisible chisel. I LOVE MY THIGHS… once my greatest nemesis, now my best friends. These thighs take me on journeys I could once only imagine. These thighs took me on a 46-mile bike ride this afternoon. These thighs let me dance. These thighs may not fit into skinny jeans, but who the hell cares? These thighs are taking me to another Half Ironman in Clearwater, Florida in a bit over 3 weeks. I’m loving my glutes. They help me run faster. I cannot even believe I’m saying that I love my glutes. I love my calves. I LOVE high heels, as anyone who knows me knows… and I love my calves in high heels. I love that some boy once told me I have FAT LEGS. ‘Cuz that was then, and this is now.

Since being 11, almost 12 years old, I never, ever imagined loving my body. It took my return to play to re-build my body into the temple that so many people celebrated all those decades ago. It took being a grandma, maybe, to return to childhood and all the wonders that accompany it. It took some pain, some agony, some angst, and lots of time… but I am now in the very best shape of my entire life. I eat. I live. I love. I play.

I may never shatter one of those windows in Centennial Hall (well, I can’t anyway, because on a recent visit back to recount the places from my childhood, I saw that 2 homes had been built on that big vacant lot. And I would probably be arrested). But I will never stop trying to do anything I want to do. My journey within this temple of mine is just re-beginning. I now have all the tools, and yep… the ability to become one in body and mind from a perfect perspective.

I love the Exposed Movement for all its depth and raw nakedness.

*****************************************************************************************************

AND I love Jessica for her wisdom.

Maybe, just maybe, we can do something positive about body image.  Let’s begin with the Moms…

About Audrey

Audrey McClelland has been a digital influencer since 2005. She’s a mom of 5 and shares tips on her three favorite things: parenting, fashion and beauty. She’s also a Contemporary Romance Author.

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6 Comments

  1. 4.2.13
    Cheryl said:

    You’re awesome! Our bodies do tell a story … makes life more interesting!

  2. 4.2.13
    Calypso said:

    EXCELLENT READ.
    I love that your “return to play” allusion.

    This looks to becoming a movement of sorts.
    This is a post I filed in my ENCOURAGEMENT box:
    http://lisajobaker.com/2013/03/on-showing-your-waist-grace/

    I think you’ll like it.

  3. 4.2.13

    Beautiful piece. I don’t hide my scars, because it tells the story of who I am, what I’ve done and where I’ve been.

  4. 4.2.13

    Sharon, this is such a beautiful post. Thank you for sharing a piece of who you are …inside and out. You are beautiful. This and Jessica’s post serves as a reminder to all of us to embrace who we are and not succumb to the internal jail of other people’s judgements. I remember riding my bike to school one day in elementary school in Seabrook, Texas outside Houston. My mom had just given me a Rave perm the night before. This boy yelled, “Oh my God, she’s so ugly. Look at her hair!” That comment. Maybe not in those exact words, just as you recall the leg comment, stayed with me. For years. There I was, living in a sea of gorgeous Texas girls and I was a gawky, permed ugly duckling. Or was I? I may have seemed ugly to that boy on the outside. But I don’t think I am or ever have been an ugly person. And isn’t that all that really matters?

  5. 4.3.13
    mel said:

    What a beautiful post! Thanks so much for telling who you are as a person inside and out! Our bodies tell such a story!

  6. 4.3.13

    I loved when you did that! Such an awesome post!!! Great pic of you guys too!

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