Site icon A Black Girl's Guide To Weight Loss

Q&A Wednesday: The Stretch Mark Question… Again

One of the most contentious comment spaces on my blog is the one where I talk about how I feel about my stretch marks, and what I plan to do about them. My response was “I don’t care,” and “nothing,” albeit expressed in a pretty defensive fashion.

This doesn’t go over particularly well in the comments, collected over the years. I mean, one woman even goes so far as calling me a bitch for thinking about them the way that I do, and, I mean… okay. But that doesn’t change the way I feel, and only solidifies the way I feel now: that stretch marks are served up as another way to encourage women to feel badly about their bodies and if you, as a woman, reject that idea, women will go out of their way to do what they can to try to make you feel bad. Because calling me a “bitch” was supposed to hurt.

I’m a PTA mom. I’ve been called worse, LOL.

However, I received a comment a few days ago that I needed to sit on a little bit.

I understand the irritation from the stretch mark question but, frankly, I think the article is a bit insensitive. I am 27 with no children. During and after college I gained a lot of weight from my bad eating habits and not realizing how inactive I’d become as an adult. Now that I’m losing the weight I want to be able to do some of the things I never thought to do when I had the body. For example, I’ve never worn a bikini. Ever! And I kind of feel like I never will. My stretch marks aren’t a beautiful testament of giving life, it’s a testament to my past laziness. I wish more than anything that my body didn’t punish me for life for my bad decisions. Its embarrassing to be relatively young but not get to look amazing in swimsuits like my friends. Yes, we get stretch marks and it’s a part of life but at a point I just want to live the carefree, no baby life without looking like I’ve had 3, ya know?

Over the past few months, I’ve tried to figure out what it is that people are ticked off by in this post. It’s not me trying to guide people through how to feel about their stretch marks, so much as it’s me saying—literally—that I don’t care about mine.

However, I want to add something. I understand why people feel some kind of way about their marks, and your comment elucidates that. It’s like they serve as a reminder and, because they are a reminder to you of your past…they feel like punishment. Because you were sedentary and because you didn’t know how that sedentary nature could impact your future, you feel like having these marks serve as a punishment.

Except, it’s entirely possible that you could’ve had those marks as an active, fit, lean body, too. You could’ve had stretch marks all across your shoulders, down your breasts, across your rear end, along your thighs, and – yes – all over your tummy. Stretch marks aren’t a punishment — they’re a fact of life, and because this isn’t reflected anywhere and because we don’t talk about it—unless we’re talking about how to get rid of them, women don’t trust it when they’re told that stretch marks are merely a fact of life. This isn’t enough—they still want the flawless skin, and deeply resent that they can’t have it.

But the women who sell this myth to us don’t even have that “flawless skin.”

There’s nothing that says you can’t wear a bikini *now*, other than the fact that you want to be able to wear a bikini and look the way you think you should look in it, which puts the problem squarely on your shoulders—you’d have to think about why you need to look that way altogether.

And, when I look at my post from that angle, even I have to admit that it’s insensitive. It belies the fact that there is a degree of unthinking that has to happen when you talk about stretch marks. Worse even, it implies that the reason why it’s okay for me to not care about stretch marks is because I looked the way I did in that photo. When in reality, even at my current size post-baby, I still shouldn’t care, and neither should you.

Let me talk around this for a moment.

Over the past few months, I’ve thought a lot about mortality and how people process their own. Everyone fears aging—no one wants to get old because getting old, in the popular imagination, is the closest step towards death.

So much of what we spend our days doing is about reminding ourselves that we’re not old, or trying to convince others that we’re younger than we are. We telegraph it with our makeup, with cosmetic surgery, and, yes, with our bodies. And this kind of aspirational thinking that yields towards youthful appearances is sold to us at every turn.

That’s a part of why weight loss is sold to us so hard. That’s also a part of why the ideal is the way it is—thin, wiry, awkward, prior to puberty when rapid growth in random parts of the body happens… the kind of growth that leads to stretch marks.

I don’t think it’s enough to tell people “it’s a part of life,” especially when the ideal of not having stretch marks is all about hiding how much life you’ve lived. I think of Selita Ebanks old comments a few years back:

“It’s all about creating the illusion of this amazing body on the runway,” says Selita Ebanks, who walked her first Armory show five years ago. “People don’t realize that there are about 20 layers of makeup on my butt alone.”

In addition to body makeup, which Ebanks estimates takes well over an hour to apply, the Angels prep in hair and makeup for three to five hours before hitting the runway, with an average of five people – hair stylists, makeup artists and manicurists, working on each of the 38 models. [source]

Even the women who’ve convinced us that this is the ideal and the dream and the fantasy have to acknowledge, at the end of the day, that they too have imperfections that ruin the fantasy. Perhaps, even, a stretch mark or two.

This is the fantasy we’re sold. This is where we get our aspirations from, because we like what those aspirations could tell others about ourselves… or what these things tell us about ourselves. Right here is where the unthinking begins.

As a black woman with dark-adjacent brown skin, I can recognize that the ideal of being fair-skinned is harmful to my ability to see my own value and beauty, and reject that.

As a woman with kinky hair halfway down my back, I can recognize that the ideal of having straight hair that creates a vortex every time I spin around doesn’t accommodate me, so I can reject that.

As a woman covered in stretch marks, I can… see where I’m going with this?

With un-thinking these things, also comes un-thinking the other ways this impacts our ability to love ourselves, our ability to set realistic and healthy goals for ourselves, and the way we treat ourselves as we embark on that journey. How do you appreciate what you see in the mirror, and the progress you are making, if you see it through a lens that expects an airbrush-smooth body? Do you deny yourself the right to appreciate the fact that you are closer to your goal because of your stretch marks? Do you hate looking in the mirror to acknowledge what you’ve achieved, because you’ll never look the way the models—according to Selita—don’t even look?

You shouldn’t.

We shouldn’t cling to beliefs and mentalities that steal our joy or our ability to achieve joy. As a brown-skinned woman, trying to adhere to a standard of beauty that prioritizes fair-skinned women over me and using that standard to value myself is harmful, and we can see that clearly. The same goes for adhering to a standard that says women who have accumulated stretch marks are beneath those who have not.

Don’t just take it from me—these #bgg2wlarmy members have been there, too:

I am a six foot, slim African woman who has always has stretch marks since I was 12! I have them behind my legs, my butt and a few on the side of my hip. I have never been grossly overweight. My stretch marks were caused by shooting up to my height so quickly as a young teen. I have lived with them and I am 34 years old without a child. I suffered much angst as a result and tried every cream imaginable but they simply didn’t work. I shunned short skirts and shorts as I was so ashamed of the tiger marks behind my legs. Then when I turned 30, my whole mind set changed. I started embracing my stretch marks, warts, my perceived faults and all. I stopped caring what other women thought (that’s right! WOMEN!!! They are the worst in pinpointing other women’s so called faults). I had people comment on how beautiful my legs were despite the fact that I still have stretch marks and even ask me why I never wore shorts and minis! It shocked me to be honest! I no longer care about them because they are part of me and they aren’t going any where. They aren’t a health risk so its the least of my worries. There are worse things to be worried about I say! Funny thing is that my ex boyfriend was really tall and had stretch marks all over his body too and had no issues with mine or his either!

[…]

I have been reflecting lately on what I have been through at that time. I guess I would also call my stretch marks battle scars. My past is always a testimony.

I have stretch marks and I rock them. As a mother of three, I think of them as my badge of honor. I’ve delivered three beautiful kids to this world and I am OK with that. I have workout videos that I post on the internet and I rock my shorts and bra top with my stretch marks in full view. I am not ashamed of them and by the way not all men hate stretch marks. Not mature ones anyway.

I’ve NEVER heard a man speak negatively about stretch marks, though. When you said that in your post I was shocked. I always say to myself and my friends “If I’m standing butt naked in front of my man/current lover or whoever and he sees my stretch marks and tells me to get dressed and leave then HE has a much more serious problem than I do!” #wheretheydothatat

[…]

I see harping over stretch marks and sagging skin as an acute form of self-sabotage. I’ve heard of individuals who aren’t willing to lose weight simply because their “stretch marks would look uglier,” or “loose skin is more disgusting than fat.” Both should seriously be minuscule concerns, in the grand scope of our HEALTH!

Also, I don’t think people give the miraculous healing capabilities of our bodies (coupled with the time component) enough credit. Yeah, I have some residual stretch marks, I’ve dealt with (still am) loose skin issues in the midst of weight loss – but I know, it’s not necessarily going to be the final outcome.

And if a mark here or there is permanent, that’s okay too. It’ll serve as a nice reminder of my progress in this journey!

I think that final comment is the entire jig in a nutshell. It’s hard to come out of the cycle of self-hatred and self-shame—be it our hair, our skin, our beauty. This is a form of self-sabotage. It’s not just sabotage for your weight loss goals, but sabotaging yourself from being a whole person who believes you are deserving of love and happiness. To let this go is to break the cycle, and to break the cycle is to finally be free.

I want to ask you about your experiences with your stretch marks, and how your thinking has evolved if it has done so. I’ve shared mine. What’s yours?

Exit mobile version