The Borneo Post

Cardi B the latest celebrity to get real about motherhood

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CARDI B is at the height of her career, but earlier this month she hit the pause button to give birth to a daughter she shares with fellow rapper Offset.

Still, the “Invasion of Privacy” rapper had planned to hit the road with Bruno Mars this fall for the remainder of his 24K Magic World Tour. On Thursday night, she released a statement announcing she was bowing out.

“I thought that after giving birth to my daughter that six weeks would be enough time for me to recover mentally and physically,” she wrote on Instagram. “I also thought that I’d be able to bring her with me on tour, but I think I underestim­ated this whole mommy thing.”

She added: “Not only am I just not ready physically, I’m not ready to leave my baby behind since the doctors explained it’s not healthy

I thought after giving birth to my daughter that six weeks would be enough time for me to recover mentally and physically. I also thought that I’d be able to bring her with me on tour, but I think I underestim­ated this whole mommy thing. Not only am I just not ready physically, I’m not ready to leave my baby behind since the doctors explained it’s not healthy for her to be on the road. I hope you guys understand that this decision has been the hardest to make but I have to do what’s best for myself and my baby! — Cardi B, singer

for her to be on the road. I hope you guys understand that this decision has been the hardest to make but I have to do what’s best for myself and my baby!”

Cardi is just the latest celebrity to open up about her expectatio­ns of motherhood and confrontin­g the reality of the situation.

It’s worth noting that plenty of mothers in America have no choice but to return to their jobs very soon after giving birth. Nearly a quarter of employed moms return to their jobs within two weeks of giving birth, according to a 2015 report by non-profit magazine In These Times, which analysed Department of Labor data. Still, because of the wealth and fame that gives celebritie­s the best products, health care and nannies (or even nannies at all), it’s easy to think famous women are also super-humans with perfect pregnancie­s, troublefre­e deliveries and easy entries back to their jobs. But even Serena Williams, one of the world’s greatest athletes, faced life-threatenin­g complicati­ons during labour. Williams opened up about the scary moment, and even filmed an HBO docuseries about her pregnancy and return to tennis. Her experience also highlighte­d the fact that black women are more likely than white women to suffer from life-threatenin­g childbirth complicati­ons; Williams told the BBC that “doctors aren’t listening to us, just to be quite frank.”

“I was in a really fortunate situation where I know my body well, and I am who I am, and I told the doctor: ‘I don’t feel right. Something’s wrong.’ She immediatel­y listened,” Williams said.

“She was great. I had a wonderful, wonderful doctor. Unfortunat­ely a lot of AfricanAme­ricans and black people don’t have the same experience that I’ve had.”

Williams has also opened up about other challenges of being a working mother, including missing her baby’s first steps. Many other working moms could relate.

We’re in a moment of celebrity where fans love to see their favourite stars get real and authentic, and being a tad rougharoun­d-the-edges just adds to the charm. Cardi B is the perfect encapsulat­ion of this; much of her stardom has been driven by her adept approach to social media.

But even more private superstars have also taken time off and returned to the spotlight well after giving birth. Beyonce, who gave birth to twins in June 2017, performed in April at Coachella. “I am so happy to be here. I was supposed to perform at Coachella before, but I ended up getting pregnant, thank God,” she told the crowd. “This is a very important performanc­e for me tonight. I’m happy to be back on stage.”

Beyonce then explained how she came up with the entire show, and revealed that even for her, she had “worked very hard” to put the “Beychella” show together: “I had time to dream and dream and dream with two beautiful souls in my belly, and I dreamt up this performanc­e” she said. “And this is more than I ever dreamt of it being.” Whitney Port (of “The Hills” fame) had a YouTube series called “I love my baby, but I hate my pregnancy” chroniclin­g how she was dealing with being pregnant.

Previously, she thought pregnancy was “this exciting, beautiful, wonderful, magical thing, until I experience­d my own, and it wasn’t all of that,” Port told “Today” in 2017 . “I was feeling all these negative feelings. I thought, ‘What’s wrong with me?’ Why aren’t I more excited? Why aren’t I owning this?’” — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Cardi B not ready to leave baby behind, so she’s bowing out of a road tour with Bruno Mars.
Cardi B not ready to leave baby behind, so she’s bowing out of a road tour with Bruno Mars.

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