another mother runner

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from the authors of Run Like a Mother and Train Like a Mother

 
 
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What A Mother Runner Looks Like

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So I’ve had this idea fermenting in my head for six months now: a photo essay titled What Does a Mother Runner Look Like? A collection of pictures that celebrates the bodies that have carried us through all kinds of miles. I want to show that kickass strong and stretch marks go together–and that, despite what the cover of Runner’s World may broadcast, all sizes and shapes of bodies can be and are runners.

I waffled for a long time, though, because I know how easily we women can fall into the how-great-is-her-body and how-much-does-mine-suck game? And I am not willing to promote those kind of sports. (Running? Yes. Jealousy? No.) So here’s my caveat: if you’re going to go into this post with a coveting attitude, covet just one thing: the fact that these women are so proud of their awesome, capable bodies, they’re willing to put them on display.

I recruited a couple of pals to kickstart the project, because nobody likes to be first to the party. Initially, I had a very rigid idea of what I thought would work (individuals only, sports bras, short or skirt, in front of plain backdrop, whole body, head cropped off) and then I realized being rigid doesn’t make anybody’s life–and especially mine–easy.

So some are group shots, some are alone, some mostly show bellies, others show full bodies, some are headless mother runners and others aren’t. As I work on being flexible, we want you–all of you, no matter how fit you feel, no matter how many little stretchy rivulets run along your abs, no matter if you’re currently channeling badass or not–to join in.

Over 130 mothers joined in. Check them out in part I and part II.

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8 Responses to What A Mother Runner Looks Like

  1. spacer Kelly Caiazzo says:
    January 20, 2015 at 1:15 pm

    I’ve come back to this post several times, and it always makes me cry. Not because I’ve learned that you can run marathons and still have extra skin hanging on around the midriff (although that doesn’t seem fair) but because of how many insanely accomplished mother runners there are. Clicking through the photos I see women who started running to beat post-partum depression, like I did. Women who have three children and have run ultras. Women who, with a smile, show the legs and bodies that are capable of taking them the distance, time and again. My body does more for me than it ever did before I had children, and seeing the group of women I belong to, this tribe of mother runners, I realize how much it has done and how proud I am to be part of this group. Thanks for initiating this project, and to all the women whose accomplishments make me tear up each time I load this page.

    Reply
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