6 MORE Truths about Pregnancy & Motherhood that Nobody Tells You: Guest Post from Homemaker Barbi
Danelle “Barbi” Ice is a problogger and the founder/editor of HomemakerBarbi.com, an online Home & How-To magazine with free resources specializing in homemaking, parenting, frugal living, and family life. If you liked this article, visit Homemaker Barbi!
New moms wonder about a lot of things as they experience pregnancy, from losing baby weight to pregnant body image. What you’re most curious about – the weird, funny questions and deep, dark feelings – are what we’re not afraid to talk about. If you missed yesterday’s 6 truths about pregnancy and motherhood, go read it first.
Below, we’re giving you 6 more truths you don’t have to wonder about anymore!
1. It’s okay to wear your maternity clothes before you need them just so people will know you’re pregnant. It’s completely normal to wish you were showing the day you find out the news! Before you start to show, you walk around feeling different and pregnant, but to the rest of the world you look exactly the same. If you’re excited for your new maternity clothes and really want people to know your news, by all means – pack away your pre-pregnancy clothes and go maternity now.
2. Pregnancy tees with funny sayings are A-OK! Celebrities are wearing them these days, even dads are wearing them. Shirts that have funny pictures and sayings about pregnancy are all the rage. 2chix.com has “Bun in the oven”, “What’s kickin?”, “It’s a girl”, “Pregzilla”, “You had me at epidural”, and the list goes on and on. More and more moms want to show off their pregnancies with baby bump t-shirts that advertise the joyous news. Will you get weird looks and comments from some childless people? Yes, but who cares! Enjoy your pregnancy any way you want to – these shirts are a definite “Do”!
3. Be balanced about baby talk or risk burning out others. While some husbands and relatives will be just as consumed with thinking about and talking about the baby as you are, keep a balance. The baby is in you, growing, moving, changing your habits, and with you everywhere you go, every minute. It’s natural that your thinking will be focused on baby-related talk much of the time.
Please keep this in mind: your husband, friends, and family members are excited about the baby too, but they still love the pre-pregnancy you as well. It doesn’t have to be baby talk 24/7! Every once in a while, it’s okay to call up girlfriends and chat about this week’s episode of Lost. Have a romantic dinner date with your hubby in which you talk about dreams, stories, and interests not centered on the baby. You can still be the woman he fell in love with, dreams about, and lusts after too – not shifted into the role of mommy and baby-maker 100% of the time!
4. Breastfeeding is not for every mom. If you can’t breastfeed, don’t feel guilty. If you don’t want to, don’t feel bad. Own your decision and do not listen to unsolicited recommendations from your friends or family. The decision to breastfeed or not is yours alone; it’s your body and only you have to feel comfortable with what you do.
5. Not every woman adjusts to motherhood quickly after her first baby is born. Some women shift into “mommy mode” during pregnancy. However, others may still not be used to their new role for several months after giving birth. Give it time and don’t feel bad if it doesn’t come to you naturally right away. Your new role is a major life change, and it will grow on you with time and experience, so don’t worry!
6. It is natural to be proud of your pregnant body one minute, and self-conscious the next. If you’re 7 months pregnant, feel as big as a house (I did), and uncomfortable, it’s hard to feel beautiful and attractive 100% of the time. Your thoughts may vary wildly, from proud and wanting to show off that baby bump to wishing for your skinny pre-pregnancy body back.
When I was pregnant, I could walk through a store feeling big and proud, until I saw a beautiful (non-pregnant) woman walk by, wearing a stylish (non-maternity) outfit. Instantly, I’d have a desperate longing for my regular body back, I’d feel large and un-pretty, and feel a little out of place.
While not enjoyable, this body image flip-flop is completely normal! Your body image in your mind is the picture of how you envision yourself. For most of us, that picture is how we’ve looked for most of our lives, not the way we look now that we’re pregnant. It can be hard for the brain to reconcile the discrepancy between those two images during pregnancy. Focus on the end result: a beautiful baby, an addition to your family, and your non-pregnant body back when it’s all said and done!
If you liked the 12 pregnancy truths, be sure to subscribe to Homemaker Barbi’s RSS feed and The Mom Crowd’s RSS feed for more articles about motherhood!
Photo courtesy of stock.exchange.
Share the fun: Email + Del.icio.us + Digg + Technorati

Pregnancy is an exciting time of change and anticipation, and many of us expecting mamas start reading every pregnancy book, magazine and website available! New moms want advice, knowledge, and the security of others’ experiences to know that what we’re feeling is normal, even if this isn’t your first baby.
know the kind: I pull out my baby food at restaurants and grind up steamed carrots (ordered with no seasoning, no butter, please!) while my friends look on with an incredulous look that says, “We knew you were weird, Kristi, but this…?”
In Chapter 15 Blackmer talks about the importance of letting Dads be Dads without interfering. If you are the primary caretaker of your children then you know the ins and outs of all the daily things in life (he likes mustard, NOT mayonaise…she takes a nap with the puppy but sleeps with the bear at bedtime…he’s been scared of Barney for weeks, why did you let him watch THAT?!…she naps at 12:30 not 1…) and when we leave our children with their daddies sometimes we have a tendency to communicate that they don’t know how to take care of their own children. It is true, sometimes they don’t but when we criticize and don’t let them doing things differently without freaking out can you blame them when they give up trying? Or get upset with us for telling them they are doing it wrong and then don’t give them a chance to figure it out themselves? This is not as hard for me as it used to be but I still struggle with it somtimes. She points out that every father and son need a chance to develop their own relationship (I know it is true for girls too but this post is about boys) and sometimes, as hard as it can be, we need to step aside and let them figure it out.
well. The holidays have passed, and Daddy will soon be home for his R&R. He gets to be home for 14 days and then back to war for another 7 months. 
