Wednesday 16 November 2011

Body confidence and the lesser-known benefits of monogamy

I've written before about how I liked what pregnancy did to my body. That's really only part of the story: I liked it until the ninth month, and then I was too big to do much, and I got stretch marks.

I thought maybe that I had escaped, but then, only a few weeks away from my due date, they grew like a climbing vine up to my bellybutton. I didn't care that I had put on weight in pregnancy - weight can be lost - but stretch marks are permanent. I was upset, but I pulled myself together and decided that as long as they stayed below my bellybutton, I'd be okay with them.

Of course, they spread above my bellybutton. At 41 weeks pregnant, I had an angry red crack of lighting spreading up from my knickers.

Where polyamory comes into this is with potential new partners, or even current occasional lovers. If Gaius and I were monogamous, I wouldn't need to worry about what anyone else thought of me naked: his would be the only opinion that mattered. And as far as he is concerned, the fact that I carried and birthed his daughter can only make me more beautiful. If our relationship was sexually exclusive, I wouldn't have had any of these wobbles.

And even if Gaius, Jemmy and I were poly-fidelitous, my body troubles would be gone. Jemmy has an exceptionally catholic taste in women (physically, at least) and even if that weren't true, he has always made me feel beautiful for more than just my body. So it wasn't his admiration waning that troubled me either.

The reason for my (rather uncharacteristic) worries was that my two current partners are not "it" for me. New lovers are an unknown quantity. Will they be secretly turned off by my soft, wrinkled belly? Disappointed by my sagging breasts? These are fears that just wouldn't bother me if I were monogamous.

A few days before I actually gave birth, I am ashamed to admit, I obsessed a little bit about all this. After my friend Lori blogged about body confidence, I mentioned that I was dealing with it, and she and another friend were so sweet to me, that I cried. I am pretty sure now that I was actually in early labour at the time, which might explain my emotional knife-edge, but still. Their kind words were very reassuring.

What they told me was something I was trying to convince myself of at the time: our bodies change, but we shouldn't see changes as losing attractiveness, but as the mark of the things we have survived and achieved. They talked about the beauty of laughter-lines, and the story that scars can tell. They were, of course, right. Two months after Small was born, I looked down at my soft, wrinkled belly with its network of scars, thought "fuck it", and bought a bikini.

I still think that there is a chance that new lovers might find my body less appealing than they would have done before the baby. And while that is not ideal, it is okay. Between my lined belly and my lower, softer breasts, I have completely nourished two people for well over a year. My daughter is happy, healthy and thriving because of my body, and these changes will be a permanent reminder of this. I look down at my belly, with its network of scars and think "there was a baby in there", and that is miraculous and wonderful to me. If people can't see that when they look at me, then fuck 'em. I know that my body is amazing.

9 comments:

  1. Bodies are really very amazing things, and anyone who judges them purely on the way they look is missing out on a lot. The difference in feel between soft and firm parts of ourselves are wonderful to explore by touch, and confidence is far far more attractive than anything physical.

    Also... I still remember the utter joy I felt on reading that you'd bought a bikini :-)

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  2. I don't think monogamous women get off scott-free, as their partner's tastes may change with time. However I still loved this post. I have similar thoughts about scars showing what you've survived. I especially liked the final line: "I know that my body is amazing." Too right!

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  3. Battle scars. It's marks of power and achievement, which are pretty amazing things to carry with you for ever. As I think I said at the time, I am really looking forward to finding out what my face and body will be in a few decades.

    Sometimes we can know something intellectually ourselves, but it takes other people to confirm it before we can actually believe it. Yet another reason that support networks of wonderful people are (literally) life-saving. The give and take of support is a magical thing. (this is code for: just you wait til I start calling on you for similar support!)

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  4. Oh yes, very true - I should have been more clear that monogamous women still have body confidence/image troubles! I just know that *I* wouldn't have worried had I only my husband's opinion to concern myself with. But I do think this is one real benefit of monogamy - polyamory means you are vulnerable with more people, and that can be more emotionally risky. A risk I'm very happy to keep taking, of course!

    And Lori: I am still the only mother at baby swimming lessons who wears anything other than a black one piece. I couldn't get one of those to fit me, so I'm not going to to wear one just to cover up!

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  5. I feel this. I now have so much admiration for my body and what it did ('Look! I made THIS!') that, if anything, my body confidence has improved. Yeah, stretch marks aren't culturally attractive here, but elsewhere in the world, they are celebrated, and soft breasts are seen as so much more attractive as they indicate maturity, fertility and womanly-ness. It took me a while (and certainly not helped by the ex's attitude) but the confidence did return. I now celebrate my body, wobbly bits and marks and all.

    Kay x

    Regarding lovers- it's a cliche but if your lover isn't comfortable with your body presentation right now, it's prudent to a) point out that they shall be saggy in due course and b) fuck off out of there.

    My darling friend reminded me, as I approached my due date and was indulging in some emo- moaning, that scars all tell a story. And, what a story.

    "catholic" -

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  6. Bloody iPhone. It was supposed to finish; "catholic"- . You're very fortunate to have such wonderful people in your lives.

    Funkdup_k x

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  7. I totally hear you. I haven't had any babies, but I have some hang-ups about bits of me, and in past monogamous relationships I've really enjoyed the stability and safety and comfort of knowing that those bits were totally ok as far as anyone who was going to see them was concerned. I enjoyed it like a comfy old sweater. Now I'm in a non-monogamous relationship I get to deal with the angst of wondering whether new partners will like bits of me, and it's weird and uncomfortable. But it's uncomfortable like a fabulous new suit.

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  8. Stretch marks turn silvery and fade, so the angry red lines won't be around forever. Think of it almost like gilding - your body is so awesome that you are being inlaid with precious metals, all in honour of the life you made.

    I used to have similar feelings, but only for my surgery scar - not for the stretch marks. But anyone who knows you, and is lucky enough to date you, will know that you have a child and will appreciate your body even more for that. There's a reason the acronym MILF exists! xx

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