
Mum is left humbled by her drastic appearance change after having a baby & people don't believe it's the same woman
NO KIDDING
Did your face change during pregnancy? Scroll down and let us know
A MOTHER has left people's jaws on the floor after revealing how pregnancy changed her appearance.
Wariara, a first-time mother who recently gave birth to her daughter, shared a short clip online of how having her child 'humbled' her.
2
The mother welcomed her baby into the world earlier this year, but moments after the little one was born, the content creator was barely recognisable.
In a now viral clip, the savvy mum showed how she looked before and after falling pregnant with her second child, leaving many gobsmacked.
Not only have people been left stunned at Wariara's change in appearance, but many claimed they 'could not believe' their eyes.
At the start of the short video, Wariara confidently posed for the camera as she wore a blue crop top and black mini skirt.
Showing herself 'before having a baby', she wore her curly hair tied back and donned a full face of make-up, which included a neat eyeliner flick and lipstick.
But seconds later, Wariara gave her followers a close-up look at her after giving birth, as she admitted she is 'beyond humbled' by how her appearance has changed.
The girl mum wore a nursing bra and some baggy shorts as she cradled her newborn.
Wariara's skin was make-up free and her once slicked down curly hair was now not styled or brushed.
Her locks danced in numerous directions and Wariara blankly stared at the camera, showing off her natural skin.
The TikTok clip, which was posted under the username @ wariara38, has clearly left many open-mouthed, as it has quickly gone viral and racked up 7.3 million views in just four days.
'This is why I refuse to carry a baby without a house & a ring' people scream as woman shows how pregnancy 'humbled' her
Not only this, but it's also amassed 740,700 likes, 8,268 comments and 345,500 shares.
Social media users were gobsmacked by Wariara's change in appearance and many couldn't believe it was the same woman.
As well as this, others suggest she call the police and 'sue everyone involved.'
One person said: 'I cannot believe my eyes.'
Another begged: 'With kindness, please put a jump scare warning in next time.'
Whilst someone else joked: 'You may be eligible for compensation.'
Another user asked: 'Did you report this incident at the nearest police station?'
At the same time, another user gasped: 'Ain't no way that is you.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
22 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Love Island bombshell Gio's incredible body transformation and glow up before villa
FOUR sizzling new bombshells have shaken up the Love Island villa — and one has undergone a jaw-dropping body transformation before entering the ITV2 show. Single hunk Giorgio Russo has revealed his pre-show glow up and the before and after is unrecognisable. 5 Giorgio Russo has revealed his pre-show glow up and the before and after is unrecognisable Credit: tiktok/@giorgiousso__ 5 Gio took to TikTok to show off his incredible body transformation Credit: ITV 5 The accounts manager from Maidstone is big into his fitness just like his Lioness sis Alessia Credit: Instagram Gio, who is the brother of England and Arsenal star forward Alessia Russo, took to TikTok to show off his body transformation. In one of the app's popular trends, users share their glow ups using before and after pics along to Drake's hit song How Bout Now. The short clip shows multiple throwback pics of a young Gio sporting braces and looking worlds away from his current self — before cutting to recent snaps revealing his six pack. The half-Italian hunk has swapped teenage awkwardness for full-blown heartthrob status. With his sculpted physique and polished new look, it's clear he's been putting in serious graft ahead of villa life. Captioning the post, he penned: 'Thought I would jump on the TikTok hype #tiktoktraditions #glowup' The accounts manager from Maidstone is big into his fitness just like his Lioness sis Alessia. On his social media he shares many fitness related posts with his followers, which include running, surfing and working out. Gio is now ready to find love in Majorca and has landed in the villa alongside fellow bombshells Will Means, Poppy Harrison and Caprice Alexandra. Speaking about going on the show, he said: 'I'm excited, it's given me a really good opportunity to look at things from the outside so I know what I'm going in for." Love Islander 'gives away' he's faking relationship to stay in the villa Mentioning how sister Alessia feels about his upcoming villa stint, he said: 'She's really excited, she watches every year and reckons I can do well so she's excited to see how I get on.' Continuing, he disclosed what kind of person he's hoping to find the villa. He said: "My sister plays pro football, so being interested in sport, they don't have to know football or understand it, but if they can show some sort of interest because it is such a prominent thing in our family. "It would be hard if they hated it. "Other green flags are having a nice family, I'm sick of being the 7th wheel in my own family!" 5 The half-Italian hunk has swapped teenage awkwardness for full-blown heartthrob status Credit: Instagram


The Independent
31 minutes ago
- The Independent
Q&A: Pulitzer Prize winner Robin Givhan chronicles Virgil Abloh's rise to fashion fame
With his calm and cool demeanor, fashion disruptor and multi-hyphenate Virgil Abloh artfully challenged the fashion industry's traditions to leave his mark as a Black creative, despite his short-lived career. In the years since his 2021 death at just 41, his vision and image still linger. Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Robin Givhan sheds new light on how Abloh ascended the ranks of one of the top luxury fashion houses and captivated the masses with her latest book, 'Make It Ours: Crashing the Gates of Culture with Virgil Abloh.' In the book out Tuesday, Givhan documents Abloh's early life growing up as the son of Ghanaian immigrants in Rockford, Illinois, his days as graduate student studying architecture and his working relationship and friendship with Kanye West. Before taking the helm of Louis Vuitton as the house's first Black menswear creative director, Abloh threw himself into his creative pursuits including fine art, architecture, DJing and design. Abloh remixed his interests with his marketing genius and channeled it into fashion with streetwear labels like Been Trill and Pyrex Vision. These endeavors were the launchpad for his luxury streetwear label Off-White, known for its white diagonal lines, quotation marks, red zip ties and clean typeface. Off-White led to Abloh's collaboration with Ikea, where he designed a rug with 'KEEP OFF' in all-white letters and also with Nike where he deconstructed and reenvisioned 10 of Nike's famous shoe silhouettes. Throughout his ventures, Abloh built a following of sneakerheads and so-called hypebeasts who liked his posts, bought into his brands and showed up in droves outside his fashion shows. Social media made Abloh accessible to his fans and he tapped into that. Off-White had built a loyal following and some critics. Givhan, a Washington Post senior critic-at-large, openly admits that she was among the latter early on. Givhan said she was fascinated that Abloh's popularity was more than his fashion. 'For me, there was something of a disconnect really,' she said. 'That here was this person who had clearly had an enormous impact within the fashion industry and outside of the fashion industry, and yet it wasn't really about the clothing. It was about something else.' For her latest project, Givhan spoke with The Associated Press on how she approached each of Abloh's creative undertakings and his legacy during a period of heightened racial tension in America. This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity. AP: Tell me why you felt it was important to include the context of what was happening at the time Abloh was growing up as well as on his rise up through the fashion industry, with him ultimately ending up at Louis Vuitton. GIVHAN: Fashion doesn't just sort of happen in a vacuum. People are the product of their parents, their family, their environment, their timing, their interests, all of those things. I always like to see, what is swirling around people when they make certain decisions? What is sort of in the water that you're absorbing, that you are not even conscious that you're absorbing it. AP: Can you talk about the process of writing about all of his creative endeavors and how they shaped his career? GIVHAN: The skater culture — in part because it was such a sort of subculture that also had a very specific aesthetic and was such a deep part of the whole world of streetwear — and then the DJing part intrigued me because so much of his work as a designer seems to reflect a kind of DJ ethos, where you're not creating the melody and you're not creating the lyrics. You're taking these things that already exist and you're remixing them and you're responding to the crowd and the crowd is informing you. And so much of that, to me, could also be used to describe the way that he thought about fashion and the way that he designed. AP: What role would you say that Virgil has had in the fashion industry today? GIVHAN: He certainly raised the question within the industry of what is the role of the creative director? How much more expansive is that role? ... And I do think he has really forced the question of how are we defining luxury? Like what is a luxury brand? And is it something that is meant to sort of have this lasting impact? Is it supposed to be this beautifully crafted item? Or is it really just a way of thinking about value and beauty and desirability? And if it's those things, then really it becomes something that is quite sort of quite personal and can be quite based on the community in which you live. AP: How did he use social media to his advantage and to help catapult his career? GIVHAN: He really used social media as a way of connecting with people as opposed to just sort of using it as kind of a one-way broadcast. He was telling his side of things, but he was also listening to other people. He was listening to that feedback. That's also what made him this larger-than-life person for a lot of people, because not only was he this creative person who was in conversation with fans and contemporaries, but he was this creative person inside. He was this creative person at the very top of the fashion industry. For a lot of people, the idea that you could ostensibly have a conversation with someone at that level, and they would seemingly pull back the curtain and be transparent about things — that was really quite powerful. AP: You write about his relationship to Kanye in the book. Were you able to get any input from him on their relationship for the book? GIVHAN: Their individual ambitions, aesthetic ideas and curiosity kind of propelled them forward in separate directions. I did reach out to Kanye after a lot of the reporting because he obviously is this thread that is woven throughout the book. And, ultimately, he elected not to engage. But I was lucky enough to get access to an unpublished conversation that Virgil had had around, I think it was 2016-ish, where he talked at length about his working relationship with Kanye and sort of the differences between them and the similarities and the ways in which ... Kanye inspired him and sort of the jet fuel that he got from that relationship. More than anything, because Virgil's personality was in so many ways kind of the opposite of Kanye's, that for every door that Kanye was kind of pounding on, Virgil was able to politely sort of walk through. AP: Why do you think his legacy continues to persist? GIVHAN: For one, he had such an enormous output of work. I think there's a lot of it to consider. Also, sadly, because his career was cut so short that there is this sense of someone who sort of stops speaking mid-sentence. I've been thinking about how Virgil might have responded, how his creativity might have responded to this moment because so much shifted post-George Floyd that like this is another inflection point and it makes me wonder, 'OK, how would he have responded today?' And with the person who said, 'I'm not a rebel and I'm not a flame thrower,' would he have picked up some matches? I don't know.


Reuters
38 minutes ago
- Reuters
Eagles QB Jalen Hurts writes football-based children's book
June 23 - Super Bowl-winning quarterback Jalen Hurts is releasing a children's book next year. Hurts announced the new work on social media on Monday, posting a photo of the cover on X. It's called "Better Than a Touchdown" and is set to be released March 10. According to a synopsis of the book posted to "Better Than a Touchdown" is "an empowering story about friendship, the power of teamwork, and achieving goals together." The book was illustrated by Canadian artist Nneka Myers. Hurts, 26, is a two-time Pro Bowl selection. He led the Philadelphia Eagles to a 40-22 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LIX in February. --Field Level Media