When is it too late to wear a postpartum belly band?

I don’t know if you’ve ever watched the Olympic weightlifting. Some gigantic eastern European beef-cake performing feats of super-human strength. If you pay attention and look past the facial impersonation of a birthing mother, one thing you’ll notice is that regardless of the weight range – from Man Mountain through to Mr. Chicken-Mc-Nugget, they all wear a belt. Not a single other piece of protective equipment. Other than an occasional strap… just a belly band.

Despite all that training, it has been deemed a necessity for someone who is carrying more than a regular load. I don’t know what would happen to a weightlifter who didn’t know about a weightlifter’s belt, but I imagine things could get ugly.

In a small way, I identify with the need for this belly band. Because, as a new mum, I was also carrying an additional bundle, but I did it without a belly band.

Should I Need A Belly Band?

The simple fact is that there is only so much that you’re body’s natural ‘belt’ can hold.

When you’re carrying a pre-walking infant, the problem isn’t just your little bundle’s weight. The baby itself is probably only weighing a few kgs. What makes it damaging to your body, is the twisting, leaning, reaching, and contracting-type activities, with that small weight compounding the pressure on the small axis of your lower back.

So, imagine that intense little environment in your lower spine. In peak health, it’s easy to understand why people slip disks, present with hernias and all manner of conditions.

But then… consider a new mum.

The Truth is?

After birth, abdominal muscles do their very best to recover from the recent (dare I say…) trauma. I say they try to recover, but let’s face it, unless you’re employing; a wet nurse, a nanny, a cook, and a cleaner, I’m guessing you’re getting very little rehab time.


It may not sound like a big deal, but lifting baby (approx 4 kilos), tucked into his capsule (another 4 kg), into the middle seat (the safest spot!) of my hatch-back (low to the ground), was a BIG deal for even my husband, who is twice my size and had not recently had his abdominal muscles shredded through pregnancy. So, the four-six times I did this a day, my poor little skeleton was getting a hammering.

And so it was, you would probably understand, that by the time my third child was delivered and eventually walking, my physical strength was barely enough to lift the weight of my legs out of bed each morning.

The back and neck pain was the source of chronic headaches and there just didn’t seem to be a straightforward solution to my damaged stomach muscles.

At the 12-month mark, I had forked out an unfortunate amount of dosh to my two new ‘besties’ – the physiotherapist and remedial masseuse, I said enough was enough and took myself to a reconstructive surgeon to talk through the benefits of Diastasis abdominal surgery.

He enlightened me with the sordid details and told me how; he would make an incision along my pelvic area (from hip to hip), and then perform another incision, all the way up from my pelvis to my belly button. He would then, sew (yes sew!), my Abdominus rectus muscles back together, which at the time, had separated so profoundly during pregnancy and directly afterward, that I could almost fit my fist through the top of my rib cage. To do this, he explained, he would then need to unhinge my belly button and create a new one.

Even though I had choices at this meeting, I did not feel the need to deliberate. I had to do it. My abdominal muscles would never again brace naturally, as I had already been told by several medical professionals.

It Works On Me!

Four weeks later, I had the surgery. It went well and the recovery time was not a surprise, but was LONG. I felt resentful that I was infirm and weak. As I missed playing with my kids and hanging out with them, I felt annoyed. A lot of pain and discomfort would continue for many weeks to come.

During my post-maternity recovery, I was measured for my very own large white, unbreathable, rigid band. I will be wearing this for the next eight weeks. I (inwardly) rolled my eyes at the irony of knowing that if I had worn a band through pregnancy and the post-natal period, I wouldn’t be in this space at all.

After eight weeks and several thousand dollars, I felt much better and my future strength looked bright.

Feel free to learn from or ignore the lessons that I learned, but don’t argue with Big Boris the Bulgarian. Wrap a belly band around that midsection before you take that gold medal lift.

Related articles → Getting your shape back with a Postnatal Belly Band

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