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Parents shape the way kids think about food and their bodies forever.
The proud mama says her newfound body acceptance is the "gift" her daughter gave her.
"Ever notice how smaller bodied public figures can eat whatever they want and somehow that's either ignored or seen as cute?!"
In a new interview with PEOPLE, the pop star gets brutally honest about how hard it is to love your body after baby.
I gained a deeper understanding of my body's limits and strengths, and I wouldn't change a thing.
"I can't believe that this was acceptable and that this was okay," she said on Kristen Bell's podcast.
But the soon-to-be mama of two says she's relinquishing control of those worries this time around.
And now Brittany Cartwright has something to say to everyone who shamed her.
"This picture isn't about feeling amazing in my body. It's a moment where I honored what my body DID for me vs. how it LOOKED for me."
This mom is sharing a valuable message about parenting and body acceptance on TikTok.
The actress says she had "an unhealthy perspective" of what her body would look like after giving birth.
The body-positive influencer and founder of Megababe has written Body Talk, out today.
For Witney Carson, embracing her postpartum body is about "progress not perfection."
"I can work really hard and I can be really fit and I'll still look like a woman who has three babies, and I always will."
What would happen if instead of participating in January's "new year, new you" rhetoric we resolved to let go of all of it?
The central message is one that every kid needs to hear: "All bodies are lovely no matter their size."
The Life After Birth project is changing the way we look at and talk about postpartum bodies.
"My stomach has lumps and bumps that didn't used to be there," shares Fedotowsky.