by BERRY LIBERMAN
Vanity is a funny thing. It’s based on comparison and as we all should know by now, comparison is the death of happiness. I met a beautiful girl the other day whom I knew when I was a kid. She’s a sweet person, a mother of two beautiful children and has always been pretty – really pretty. We met at the market and I wanted to scream. She was unrecognisable. Since the last time I saw her she has had so much plastic surgery that she has erased any trace of herself – the girl she was is gone. A strange amalgam of beauty ideals has replaced her natural expressions. I wanted to cry, shake her and beg her. Looking at her face was looking at pain and self loathing – a culture that pushes us too far. The greatest tragedy is she has a daughter.
I also have a daughter and I also have scars – really, really bad ones. When I was pregnant around week 28 with my son, proudly flaunting my round belly on the beach, admiring its ever expanding size and the little kicks within, I noticed a weird red scratch on my bikini line. Turns out it was the beginning of some ripper stretch marks that hurtled their way up my belly and stopped somewhere around my rib cage. Nice. Really stylish.
Let’s just say the bikini thing is officially over.
So, I understand plastic surgery and the desire to ‘fix’ stuff. I breastfed two kids to 15 months each. More plastic surgery desire there. ‘Nough said! Some days I look in the mirror and I’m just a little pissed off… would anyone notice if I took three weeks off work? Went in for a little nip and tuck?! Then I am forced to think of my kids and not just my vanity. How will they view their partners or themselves if I present an image of perfection? Is that helpful to them? Is perfection helpful to anyone? What will my son expect of the women in his life – that they are an impossible idea of woman? How much therapy will that cost? Does my desire to be ‘beautiful’ override my responsibility to be real with my kids?
My husband and I often laugh about our changing appearances as we grow older together. Grey hairs, stretch marks, expanding and contracting belly lines. Then I am reminded of something we find hard to do.
As my children lie sleeping in their beds I am overwhelmed with gratitude. When I notice Dan’s beard slightly greying, I pray we get to be completely silver haired together. When my mum turned 60, she was just a little freaked out. “I’m only 40 in my head!” and then I reminded her. Every birthday is a privilege. My dad didn’t get past his 45th birthday.
There’s something we forget when we try and erase the years and the scars. We forget they are the markers of a life lived, of things learned, of love given and received, of loss, of laughter. How can I say to Willow that she’s enough if I don’t believe that I am? She’ll know I’m a fraud and most likely will feel that putting herself under general anaesthetic and letting someone put a knife to her face and body is quite normal. Necessary in fact.
I’d rather teach her the safer, saner, if somewhat harder lesson of gratitude. Of being enough. We fly outside of ourselves, unhinged by images that persist an ideal. There are days I’d rather not look at my scars but then I am reminded of my life and I am so very, truly grateful. Anyway, Jets make really nice full piece bathers.
The following images are from a project called BirthMarkings that explores post-birth bodies. Take a look.
More images can be accessed on their website here
This post was originally published on Dumbo Feather here and has been republished with full permission.
Berry is the publisher of Dumbo Feather. You can follow Berry on Twitter via @berryfeather.
Top Comments
I don't usually leave comments, to be exact I never do, however I felt compelled by the overwhelming feeling of happiness your words brought to me. I'm not a mother, but boy do I have some stretch marks and I can only imagine what I'll look like post baby one day. However, as we age and go through life's experiences, marks are only to be expected.
I recently turned 27, and as myself and those around me begin to "age" the discussion of not wanting to get older arises more and more often. A friend asked how it felt to be 27 now and I responded with, "I love it, I love every year of my life." She went on to say that I am one of the few people she knows that enjoy getting older and I was dismayed by that, one of the few...
I love getting older. I love the wisdom that experience brings, knowing that in another 10 years I will look back at my 30something self and laugh... and the next decade after that, and so forth. Every scar and stretch mark in life brings clarity and self awareness. I wouldn't trade those experiences or stretchmarks for anything. They make me who I am today.
There are times, after carrying and breast feeding 3 kids, that I joke about wanting a 'realignment' for my 40th. I don't want anything enhanced, just put back where it was at 23!
But I am only joking. I was pretty lucky as most of the physical evidence of my babies such as the stretch marks are in places that only my husband and gyno get anywhere near. Still there are always days that I long for that body I had.
Then I look at my babies (not that they are babies any more) and I am proud that I carried them, birthed them and feed them with this body. Men's bodies aren't nearly as clever as ours! And my husband loves me just the way I am so why shouldn't I love myself in the same way?