I didn’t plan to fall in love with movement while being pregnant.
If I’m honest, before pregnancy I believed fitness was something you either figured out early in life or ruined forever. I thought there was a small, unforgiving window in your twenties where you could build the “right” body, and if you missed it, your fate was sealed. That belief shaped everything I did. I trained hard, sometimes obsessively. I followed programs that promised results if I just stayed disciplined enough. I ate clean, skipped desserts at birthdays, and learned how to ignore hunger when it felt inconvenient.
I told myself that discomfort was normal. That hating your workouts was part of being committed. That pushing through exhaustion meant I was doing something right.
And still, my body didn’t change the way I thought it should. Not the way social media suggested it would. No dramatic transformation, no sudden confidence, no feeling of arrival. Just the quiet frustration of doing “everything right” and still feeling like I was failing.
Then life interrupted my plans.
I got pregnant.
Suddenly, all the rules I had been living by stopped making sense. The structure I relied on disappeared. My body changed in ways I couldn’t control, predict, or reverse with effort. And for the first time, forcing myself harder wasn’t an option.
When you’re pregnant, your body becomes public property in a way that’s difficult to describe unless you’ve lived it. Everyone has an opinion. One person tells you to rest constantly. Another warns you not to be lazy. Someone insists exercise is dangerous. Someone else swears that if you don’t “stay active,” you’ll regret it forever. All of this happens while your body is performing the most physically demanding task it will ever do: growing another human being.


