Fashion In Motherhood: ‘Dressing Became A Tiny Act Of Maternal Rebellion’

Mother-of-five Clover Stroud reveals how, eventually, clothes helped her feel like herself again.

Dressing in motherhood

by Clover Stroud |
Updated on

Until i had children, I never imagined that a pair of jeans could stand between me and my sanity. I was 24 when I had my first child and, until then, jeans were just an item of clothing. Of course, there were good jeans and bad jeans, those that had the magical ability to make my legs appear a little longer or thinner than they really were, or jeans that made my bum sit a bit higher, rather than flattened it. But
the feelings these jeans gave me were not profound. They were not, as they were after having children, the sort of feelings that could help me maintain a sense of who I am.

People talk about how children change our identity. They bring with them love and deep joy, but also huge responsibility which, when mixed up with the exhaustion of broken nights, can quickly translate into worry, guilt, anxiety. It was only after I’d had my first child that I really understood the grave responsibility I now had not just to feed him, care for him and keep him alive, but also to be responsible for his emotional life. Creating a childhood that’s full of sunshine and delight, but also stable, meaningful and secure, is no small task.

No wonder, then, that motherhood is a place where parents lose themselves. And when I say parents, I mean women, really, because although I know there are men who put in the hours at the school gate, all the statistical evidence – and anecdotal, in the form of every single conversation I’ve ever had with other parents since I first became a mum 19 years ago – points to the fact that in most homes, women still do the lion’s share of the domestic work. Our own needs, our own desires, usually fall to the bottom of the list, somewhere beneath making time for parents evening and creating a costume for World Book Day.

Therefore, in a small, quietly powerful way, the clothes we dress ourselves in every morning can become a tiny act of rebellion against the tide of maternity which, unchecked, can drown us.

Clover Stroud
Clover Stroud ©Clover Stroud /Doubleday

Since I first had that first baby, at 24, I’ve had another four children, who are now 16, seven, five and three, the youngest born when I was 41. My experience of being a mother has tipped into three decades – my twenties, thirties and forties – and, when I look back at photographs of myself at this time, I can identify immediately what my emotional state was like back then, not by looking at the expression on my face – how fraught or happy or exhausted I look – but by what I’m wearing.

I know, for example, that the tight, clingy dresses I usually wore during my second trimester in each pregnancy were a sign that I was feeling good. Sexy, even. Fast-forward three months to that uncomfortable point at nine months, when pregnant was the last thing I wanted to be, and the voluminous dresses or shapeless, oversized shirts I wore were a clear signal I was ready for the alien to leave my body. I never wear voluminous dresses in my non-pregnant life, and so they remind me how unlike myself I often felt in late pregnancy, strangled by that sense of exhausted, relentless discomfort that comes from having a full-term baby curled up inside your stomach.

Slowly as my children have grown, I think I have re-emerged. I would not say I have anything as well organised as a uniform, but I know what works

It’s perhaps little wonder that motherhood can mess so absolutely with your psyche. Looking at images taken a few months later, cradling a five-month-old who has barely slept during much of that time, I often look absent and stunned, my clothes – an old tank top, ill-fitting khaki shorts,
a frayed jersey – merely an afterthought to the endlessly pressing business of caring for that infant in my arms.

As my babies moved into toddlerhood, wearing anything white became impossible. I wore anything I could grab, close to hand, before a kid escaped out of the door to tip himself down the stairs or insert a finger into a light socket. It was the age when I was most confused about my identity as a mother, the time when I was probably most likely to experiment with ill-chosen bobble hats, the wrong size duffel coat, or logo sweaters that shrunk as soon as they got anywhere near the washing machine. A year’s worth of broken nights had also led to a sense of bone-crunching exhaustion. Honestly,
I didn’t really care what I looked like.

Slowly, however, as my children have grown, I think I have re-emerged. I would not say I have anything as well organised as a uniform, but I know what works, both to look after my children in, and to help
me feel like me. As a writer, I work from home, which is where the jeans come in. Because my children still wipe their hands on my legs when they’re eating Nutella at breakfast, I favour something cheap (I swear by New Look black super-skinnies; I have about 15 pairs). Wear them with Nike Air Max and maybe a tiny hint of something leopard print or fluorescent, even in the flash of the inside of a jacket, or a cuff peeping out beneath an innocuous black bomber, and I feel confident, capable, as
if I can swoop from overseeing a Lego model to pitching a work project, without dropping a single plate.

Most importantly, after years of feeling like someone’s mum, now I feel like myself again.

‘My Wild And Sleepless Nights’ by Clover Stroud is out now

Gallery

Kate Middleton's pregnancy style: 15 times the Duchess of Cambridge rocked maternity chic

12th March 20151 of 15

12th March 2015

And she's back to the great British high street! Kate's £69 off-white Jojo Maman Bebe princess coat most certainly does look fit for one

13th November 20142 of 15

13th November 2014

Showing she can do gothic vamp just as well as sugary sweet, in this Diane Von Furstenberg lacy gown

18th February 20153 of 15

18th February 2015

We know you're under there, royal baby! Kate's airforce blue Max Mara coat hid her bump somewhat, but she looked as amazing as ever

13th March 20154 of 15

13th March 2015

She doesn't half like to co-ordinate (picking up any style tips from the Queen, eh Kate?). The Duchess' navy ensemble looked sooo stylish on her

27th March 20155 of 15

27th March 2015

At her last public appearance before being due to give birth, Kate recycled her favourite fuchsia Mulberry coat and a classic Mulbs clutch to match

11th March 20156 of 15

11th March 2015

Yet another high-street coat loved by the Duchess, we're obsessed by the quirkiness of this Hobbs dalmatian number

17th March 20157 of 15

17th March 2015

Going for top to toe brown in a chic Catherine Walker coat at the St. Patrick's Day Parade

18th March 20158 of 15

18th March 2015

Looking gorgeous in THAT £35 ASOS spotty maternity dress

25th November 20149 of 15

25th November 2014

This was when we had just found out! Eeeeek! Exciting! This scarlet red Katherine Hooker frock and beehive hairdo perfectly complemented each other

9th March 201510 of 15

9th March 2015

Relying on one of her favourite designers, Alexander McQueen, to tailor this pastel pink look, Kate's subtle nude and pink combo look effortlessly chic

15th January 201511 of 15

15th January 2015

Channelling retro maternity vibes in this sweet '60s Madderson mini with bright tweed trim

19th January 201512 of 15

19th January 2015

Baby blue for Kate in a Seraphine pastel number. A sign of things to come? Mind you, we have just seen pastel pink too. So let's discount that comment

9th December 201413 of 15

9th December 2014

Kate's midnight blue Jenny Packham sweetheart gown is absolutely stunning on the Duchess

7th December 201414 of 15

7th December 2014

Keeping her bump cosy in a chic tweed princess coat - her signature style

18th February 201515 of 15

18th February 2015

Looking so lovely in this Seraphine floral floaty frock. Again it's a total barg. In case we didn't mention it, WE HEART KATE

READ MORE: Everything You Should Know About Getting Dressed When You’re Pregnant, By A Woman Who Knows

READ MORE: Post-Pregnancy Dressing Is A Total Nightmare

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