67 answers

"Looking Pregnant"

I am six months pregnant with our second child. Our first had just turned one and is really small for his age (only 17 pounds). I am not a plus size, but I am not a tiny person either. My pre-prego size is a 14. I have only gained about 15 pounds as I really watch what I eat and exercise everyday. Anyways, lately people have been saying "oh, your pregnant I had no idea", Or you don't even took pregnant. I try not to get offended, but it makes me feel awful. One lady at a soccer game last night said, oh I didn't think you could possibly be pregnant with such a little one. It is hard not to feel fat, as I hit the third trimester and have "helpful comments" like that.

I was wondering if any other moms have had this experience and what they have done.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Well, now that I am 6 weeks from delivery I really look pregnant. I just had to except the fact that people will say things without thinking and it only matters what My husband and I think! Plus we are going to have a wonderfully healthy little boy in just weeks!!!

Featured Answers

In todays day and age a lot of people ARE overweight, and so it IS hard to tell who's packing on the pounds and who is pregnant. I know I do not assume that a person is pregnant just because they are getting a pooch! Don't let it upset you too much. It could be worse! If people ask when you're due and you aren't....THAT is embarassing LOL. Been there. So, just remember that you are being healthy, and I don't think people mean to say things the way they come out. Well, ok, some people are like that, but not most. Have a great day.

1 mom found this helpful

I am a size zero and people said the Axact thing to me! Even when I was 7-8 mos pregnant! It bothered me too! I think they are trying to be nice.

I would worry more about being and keeping healthy than how I looked or what other people think.
D.

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I was also a size 14 prior to getting pregnant with my second child. I am due in a month. Everyone would say "oh, I didn't even know you were pregnant" or "wow, you aren't even showin yet".

I actually thought that was a really nice compliment because I always felt like I was getting bigger! I gues it is just how each person chooses to interpret the comment that makes the difference.

I choose to take it as a compliment because I was trying to be healthful and not gain too much weight in the beginning, and it obviously paid off (as other people pointed out).

5 moms found this helpful

I had the same thing happen to me when I was pregnant with my son. When I talked about having a baby some people actually thought I was adopting! and I was like 6 or 7 months pregnant! I hated that people commented on my body. Never in any other time of your life is it appropriate for people to talk about your body. If you were too big they would have something to say too. I learned from this to never comment on another pregnant women. I always just say "you look great!" and thats it. Dont take it to heart. People just dont know any better

4 moms found this helpful

As a woman who began to "look" perpetually pregnant in my late 40's, and who didn't begin to show when I was actually pregnant until well into my 6th month because I was really fit (ah, those were the days!), I dearly wish I had a problem like yours.

If we feel upset when other people tell us the truth (as they see it), it's almost always because of how we interpret it and how we feel about ourselves, not because any slight or emotional attack was intended. And even if other people intend to insult you, you still ultimately have the choice to be insulted, or not. Really! I have found that this works! (Well, I have had a few instances since this discovery where I simply could not stop hurting following a clear criticism, but I let the little stuff slide off with a shrug and a smile.)

These people are not criticizing you, they are just surprised, and their surprise blurts out before they think. We all do that sometimes, right? So why suffer over it? What if you chose to interpret it as a complement? Sounds like you are working hard to stay strong and healthy, and your efforts are paying off. Congratulations!

4 moms found this helpful

I think hormones tend to make us more sensitive during pregnancy and it sounds as though you were a bit sensitive about your weight before you got pregnant?

I also think some people might be giving you the "I had no idea you were pregnant" as a way to let you know how good they think you look. If you were a size 6 and only gained 10 to 15 pounds in the first six months, you'd probably hear the same kinds of things. (And it's a heckuva lot safer to claim you didn't think someone was pregnant than to mistakenly think someone IS pregnant!) And then there are others who just speak without thinking and without realizing/remembering how hypersensitive a pregnant lady can be!

I've had friends who've been asked about the due date for their baby . . . when they weren't pregnant. And this always devastated them. So, when I got pregnant and started to show (but before it was completely obvious that I was either pregnant OR had swallowed a balloon) and I had strangers ask me about the baby I went on a bit of a one woman sensitivity training campaign. I would get a surprised and sad look on my face and would say, "You think I'm PREGNANT?" The person would be left spluttering and I'd walk away.

4 moms found this helpful

Weight and body image can be devastating things. Toss in hormones or (gasp) some idiot actually telling you its hormones & it can get deadly.

I completely feel for you. I'm 6'1", have been a competitive athlete and have modeled. I had gained about 60lbs just prior to getting pregnant (ummmm....120-180, which on ME 165-185 is bikini weight...before that can we say dangerously underweight??). Well, my metabolism was shot, when I started eating healthily for the baby (1800-2200 kc per day, as recommended by my doc/nutritionist) I gained an average of 20 lbs per month. Yup. I weighed over 325lbs when my son was born. Super fun. :P

On the upside; at birth my son weighed 10, the placenta 23 (yikes), and I lost about 20 lbs in H20 weight in 48hrs...which totals out to nearly 50pounds. Wheeee! On the bright side, I came to a point in my mind when I was pregnant where I was willing to do/defend my son from anything. I was doing this for HIM, not me, SCREW what strangers thought. The BEST side? My son was healthy.

To brighten your day...here's a list of my favorite comments...and no, there are no unsolved murders hanging around out there:

"Well, at least you don't have man-hands."

"& I thought Jackie* turned into fat cow when SHE got pregnant."

"Are you sure you want to eat that?"

"Honey, have you thought about alcohol treatment? I mean, you've gained all this weight and your liver is getting huge."

::sigh:: PE-OPLE!! :) :) :)

Most people mean well, but even when they mean well it can be hard not to wring necks. I found it was easier once I was secure in what I was doing and why. If you're uncomfortable about peoples comments about your weight/pregnancy it could be very helpful to examine your own motives & expectations. Once you know them I've found them to be the best thing to "say back" either to the speaker or myself. For me one was "I'd really PREFER to be bikini skinny right now, but I have to eat healthy for my baby...and he's the one who are important right now." For a good friend of mine theirs was "I'm so excited about being pregnant I want everyone to know, but I forget they don't and I don't show much until I'm about to deliver!!" By telling people what YOU want/wish, you become more secure in yourself and THEY know better what to talk with you about...and can get out of the generic.

Last word outta me, for those you may want to kick in the head:

"Forgiveness is the art of giving up All Hope for a better past."

~Z.
*names have been changed to protect them from finding out their idiot husbands ever said that ;)

3 moms found this helpful

I've not had this experience but I knew a couple of woman who did and they reveled in not looking pregnant and were glad to not have to wear maternity clothes. That's back when they were ugly.

I wear between a 12 and a 16. My weight fluctuates by 10-15 lbs and even tho I carry the extra weight in my waist and abdomen no one has thought I was pregnant even during my child bearing years. Fifteen extra pounds are not noticeable on me.

I don't understand why you think commenting on you not looking pregnant is a negative remark. Or why you feel fat. Yes, you weigh 15 lbs more but that doesn't mean you're fat. I don't think of myself as fat even when I'm wearing my size 16 jeans. How we feel is within our control.

Have you tried making positive statements to yourself. They help me alot. An example would be I am beautiful! I love this body! I am going to have a beautiful baby which makes gaining weight a beautiful thing.

I have a friend whose ob/gyn sent her to stay with her mother to get fattened up while she was pregnant because she wasn't gaining enough weight. The standard is to gain between 25 and 35 lbs by the time one gives birth. If you don't gain enough weight you are taking nutrition away from the baby which can result in birth defects and mental retardation. Is your boy so small because he was quite small at birth? Premature birth does sometimes result in small babies. But then again premature birth can be caused by the mother's poor health.

If you want people to know that you're pregnant wear maternity clothes. smocks and such. I think that you're saying you feel awful when they don't realize you're pregnant or are you feeling awful because you think they think you're fat?

I don't understand why someone would say they didn't think you could be pregnant because your little one is small. Women have a second baby 9 months later.

I feel compelled to ask you a couple of questions tho. I feel concerned for the health of both you and your babies. I've been trained to recognize the possibility of health difficulties in children and pregnant women. I hope that you're seeing an obstetrician and a pediatrician regularly. By the charts, 17 lbs at 12 months could indicate a failure to thrive baby. There can be several causes for failure to thrive, some of which must be treated. A common cause is that the baby's system cannot utilize his food perhaps because of a lack of enzyme in their system.

If you've seen a pediatrician for a one year check up or within the last couple of months and (s)he said that your little one is healthy then forget what I've said about that.

Please, tho, work on improving your body image both of your own sake and the sake of your children. Children who have mothers with poor body image usually grow up with poor body image too. You know how uncomfortable that is.

I wish you the best. Please take my comments as coming from one who cares about you and your babies even tho I don't know you.

2 moms found this helpful

You have my sympathy. I was about 6 months along with my first when I finally started "looking pregnant," that is, my belly noticeably out front, but was carrying low so had expanded low early. I was living in Korea at the time, where tact about other people's bodies was not part of the culture, and one of my Korean friends said to me, "Oh good, you pregnant... I thought you just get fat!" A real morale builder, that one.

Look, if you've only gained about 15 pounds and you and your baby-under-construction are healthy, you're doing great. Try to ignore the bozos. I don't know why people think a pregnant woman's body or reproductive status have anything to do with them. If you feel you must respond, rather than sinking to their level, perhaps something along the lines of, "Yes, I'm pregnant, and I feel fabulous!" would work. If the bozo persists, maybe something like, "Wow. When did talking about someone else's body like that become appropriate?" would force them to get the hint.

You are growing a miracle inside of you. Don't let the turkeys get you down.

1 mom found this helpful

15 pounds is surely enough for you to notice a difference, and someone who knows your body well (hubby) would also notice a change. But, when you are fully clothed, 15 pounds extra is not enough for the most others to notice a change. The average person also does not pay attention to how big your tummy is or is not, so take it as a compliment that these people have not noticed the changes.

1 mom found this helpful

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