
It wasn’t out of rebellion that I snubbed straps and cups
and clasps and lace and it had nothing to do with women’s rights:
I just never wore a bra.
It had something to do with whispers and flutters and freedom
and knowing that I was naked underneath,
feeling a weight that only I owned, that bounced
and made me proud,
loving the cold or a shot of tequila and feeling the shiver
end in my nipples, seeing its shape through my shirt,
catching contours through sunlit dresses,
see-through thin as cooing words.
Now I’m walking through racks of padded, underwire and sports,
sipping on a smoothie, filling my womb with berries and yoghurt
and remembering the sunflower seeds in my purse
and I’m thinking my god! it’s the size of an orange,
it’s got tear ducts, a heartbeat, fingernails and toes!
What do I know except for this:
my breasts are heavy and hard with growth
and soon they’ll squirt forth milk
and later like honey coloured pure lily
they’ll sweeten his tummy and tighten our grip
and what once was mine will now be ours
and this time I’ll really understand what it means to be proud,
no shivers or alcohol involved.
I’ll be a mother with breasts,
weighty with mornings, drooping with days, sagging with night-time feeds
and from this day forth, for the rest of my life,
I’ll need a little support.
“Children are not a job you can leave, or a country you can return from. No one can guarantee you a child who matches your imaginings. You will get what you’re given – and there’s no turning back.”*
After seven years of motherhood, I still grapple with the truth of this brutally honest fact. There’s no walking away when things get tough. There’s no resigning to look for another job, one that pays better or appreciates your worth. There’s usually no gratitude for all the sheer, dogged hard work you put in on a daily (and often nightly) basis. And sometimes there’s no one around to de-brief with when you’ve reached your limit and have resorted to screaming to make yourself heard!
* From The Divided Heart, Art and Motherhood by Rachel Power