Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2022-05-12T22:17:53Z | Updated: 2022-05-13T16:16:36Z SI Swimsuit Features First Model With Visible C-Section Scar, And The Reactions Are Mixed | HuffPost Life

SI Swimsuit Features First Model With Visible C-Section Scar, And The Reactions Are Mixed

Kelly Hughes is the first model in the magazine issue's 58-year history to pose showing her cesarean section scar.
|

In recent years, Sports Illustrated has made a concerted effort to expand the, shall we say, limited perception of female beauty highlighted in its annual Swimsuit issue.  

In 2016, the publication featured its first plus-size cover girl , Ashley Graham . In 2019, Halima Aden  became the first model to appear in the magazine wearing a hijab. And in 2020, Valentina Sampaio  became the first openly transgender model to appear in the issue. 

The latest first for the 58-year-old Swimsuit edition? A model proudly showing her visible cesarean section scar.

In SI Swimsuit 2022, model Kelly Hughes flashes a big grin and pulls down her bikini bottoms a smidge to reveal a C-section scar above her pelvic bone.

The photo feature was done in collaboration with pregnancy and postpartum brand Frida Mom , the first brand to partner with Sports Illustrated Swimsuit under its Pay With Change advertising platform .

In a statement , Frida Mom founder Chelsea Hirschhorn said the partnership provides a “valuable platform to disrupt the traditional narrative around women’s bodies — especially those they feature who are mothers.” 

In her Instagram post of the photo , Hughes, who delivered her son via cesarean three years ago, shared her complicated feelings about her C-section scar.

“I struggled with insecurities from my scar being that I’m a model and my incredibly difficult recovery but it wasn’t until I embraced my scar that I experienced the true power in it,” she wrote. 

Hughes isn’t alone in having mixed feelings about her C-section

According to the latest research from the World Health Organization, births by C-section continue to rise globally, now accounting for more than 1 in 5 (21%) of all childbirths . In the U.S., nearly a third of people who give birth now deliver babies via cesarean section.

Despite how common the procedure is, many people are left with guilt or shame after having a C-section , especially if their intention going in was to have a vaginal delivery.

As Sports Illustrated notes on its site , “the cultural misconception of labeling C-sections as ‘the easy way out’” doesn’t help matters. 

Then there’s the body shame many feel about their visible scars, even years later, said Carla Korn , a psychotherapist and body image expert in Westlake Village, California.

“So many women feel uncomfortable about their scars being on display and make attempts to hide them,” she told HuffPost.

Korn thinks seeing a C-section scar in Sports Illustrated “helps send the message to postpartum women that their scar is nothing to be ashamed of.”

Open Image Modal
Jane Khomi via Getty Images
In the U.S., nearly a third of people who give birth now deliver babies via cesarean section.

For male readers coming across the photo, Korn thinks the message conveyed is just as powerful. (Though if they’re familiar with the newer, more inclusive Swimsuit edition  “Woke Illustrated,”  as some have called it they probably won’t be too surprised to see it.)

“I think the photo shows that women’s bodies are uniquely capable and magical, especially in how we grow babies and give birth,” she said. “Our bodies’ diversity and perceived imperfections make them even more beautiful.”

Melissa Weinberg , a psychotherapist in private practice who specializes in the treatment of anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder, especially during pregnancy and in the postpartum period, loves that the magazine is normalizing postpartum bodies.

Still, she wishes the publication had pushed even further.

“It’s certainly a step in the right direction, but it’s hard to get too excited about photos that completely reinforce every other aspect of unhelpful and unachievable beauty ideals that makes most women, including postpartum women, feel like garbage,” she told HuffPost.

As nice as the photo is, it doesn’t do much to disrupt the norm of “thin white cis blond women” being revered for their beauty, she added. 

“Will this be the new standard of how postpartum bodies should look? Will a woman who in most ways looks nothing like this model, aside from their shared C-section scars, feel even worse about her postpartum body in comparison?” she asked. 

“These photos are really cool, but not enough,” she added. “We need more diversity and inclusivity.”

That being noted, Weinberg said it’s always refreshing to see C-sections normalized. 

“I hope that these photos send the message to anyone viewing them, men included, that C-sections and the marks they leave are unbelievably common and not something to be hidden, but celebrated, something as normal as freckles,” she said. “As a society we want to ignore the details glorious and gory of such a normal part of the human experience: childbirth.”

On social media, the glossy photo has elicited a range of emotions for women who have had C-sections themselves.

Some are happily surprised to see scars like theirs shown in the pages of Sports Illustrated. Others have noted that their scars aren’t quite as subtle as Hughes’ due to a “classic” vertical incision rather than a side-to-side “bikini cut,” or that they healed weirdly .

Amanda Kammarada , an artist and author who had two C-sections, in 2009 and 2012, was so happy to see the photos featured in a NowThis video, she tweeted it out to her followers. 

“It made me feel proud of my scar,” she told HuffPost. “Seeing that kind of representation in that type of magazine is a really big deal.”

If the picture chips away at the stigma associated with C-sections even slightly, Kammarada said she’s happy.

“There are some who say that a C-section isn’t really ‘giving birth,’” she said. “A woman’s body is incredible and there should be no shame in how you have your child.”

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Beautiful C-Section Birth Photos
(01 of18)
Open Image Modal
"Despite the fear and uncertainty flooding this mama as she is wheeled into an emergency C-section, she couldn't help but smile as she realizes shes about to meet her baby." (credit:Shea Michelle Long via Coastal Lifestyles Photography)
(02 of18)
Open Image Modal
"It truly breaks me when I hear that folks feel shame over their cesarean birth. When they internalize the message that their body failed or that they took 'an easy way out.' Cesarean birth isn't easy. It's not a failure. Cesarean birth requires bravery, courage, release, and strength ... just like every other birth experience.

I look at this image of this baby snuggled against his mother's body, just minutes after they'd been wheeled out of recovery from major surgery ... [and] I see a baby that looks completely content. I see a baby falling in love with his mother ... as she falls in love with him."
(credit:Monet Nicole: Birthing Stories)
(03 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This cesarean birth was in March 2020, just days before the hospitals shut out all doulas and birth photographers [because of COVID-19]. Her baby was in a breech position and a cesarean birth was scheduled." (credit:Dianne Hamre)
(04 of18)
Open Image Modal
"I think of this as a 'see-section.' This is an incredible use of technology, so mom can be involved in all aspects of her baby's birth and the first exam that she normally wouldn't be able to see." (credit:Cradled Creations, Jaydene Freund)
(05 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This mom had 20 blissful minutes of snuggles and eye contact before the nurses took her baby to be diapered, weighed and measured. Then the baby was immediately returned to mom so they could travel to the recovery room together." (credit:Cradled Creations, Jaydene Freund)
(06 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This is one of my favorite cesarean images. It reminds me of the resilience of partnership, and the need to adapt together." (credit:Chanda Williams)
(07 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This was the first cesarean I was allowed to photograph, and it was a beautiful, family-centered cesarean. That day I learned the beauty and love that can surround a surgical birth." (credit:Chanda Williams)
(08 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This is a shot I took as a mother was face-timing her husband, who was in the nursery while the baby was being observed." (credit:Doula Dianne, Dianne Hamre)
(09 of18)
Open Image Modal
"I had the honor of witnessing this beautiful C-section birth, where the parents were fully supported by their midwife team after discovering the baby was breech." (credit:Erin Shepley Photography)
(10 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This mama ended up with an emergency C-section, and neither the dad nor I were allowed into the OR. Since she was under general anesthetic, the baby was brought out to meet his daddy. It was the sweetest thing, and they snuggled and bonded until mama was awake and able to meet her son. This family was the sweetest, and both parents were so strong." (credit:Capturing Joy Birth Services, Joyanna Goslovich)
(11 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This image may be too much for some, but it is real life! It is messy and so is all birth, belly or vaginal." (credit:Lisa Olschewske Birth Photography)
(12 of18)
Open Image Modal
"There is a stereotype about C-section births, that it was a choice or that mamas 'cant hang.' I had my own baby in my living room, and I can tell you: C-section mamas have it a million times harder. They are unshakably brave." (credit:Naissance Photography, Tilly Goble)
(13 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This was a twin C-section birth because Baby A was breech. They had a long journey to parenthood, and these little guys were the reward after a grueling IVF process. It was the most joyous C-section I've ever attended an absolute birth party." (credit:Sarah Lewis Photography)
(14 of18)
Open Image Modal
"This beautiful mama was determined to have a VBAC [vaginal birth after cesarean], but despite all of her efforts, she had a cesarean birth." (credit:Little Leapling Photography, Tammy Karin)
(15 of18)
Open Image Modal
"After a long hard labor and an emergency C-section, this mom was finally holding her baby, looking into her partner's eyes, and realizing ... she did it." (credit:Shea Michelle Long via Coastal Lifestyles Photography)
(16 of18)
Open Image Modal
"It is so incredibly empowering to look back and see yourself [giving birth] and see how truly amazing your body is." (credit:Erin Shepley Photography)
(17 of18)
Open Image Modal
"The look of excitement after meeting your baby after seven years of trying, and a three-day long induction and cesarean birth." (credit:Jennifer Mason Photography)
(18 of18)
Open Image Modal
"Due to a unique set of circumstances, which included an extraordinarily large OR, this mom was able to have her partner, her mother and two birth photographers present with her during the birth and through recovery. She had such respect from each and every provider. It was a real testament to what family-centered cesareans can actually be like." (credit:Sarah Lewis Photography)

HuffPost Shoppings Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE