Lifestyle Health Celebrity Health Maren Morris on How Motherhood Made Her Love Her Body: It's Given Me 'So Much Confidence' "I definitely feel like being a mom has made me feel really powerful in my own body because look what we're capable of," Maren Morris tells PEOPLE By Georgia Slater Georgia Slater Georgia Slater is a staff editor on the Parents team at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2018. Her work has previously appeared in USA Today and Washington Life Magazine. People Editorial Guidelines and Brittany Talarico Brittany Talarico Brittany Talarico is PEOPLE's Deputy Style Director, where she oversees the brand's digital Style and Beauty coverage. This includes running lead on the Met Gala, which is among PEOPLE.com's top-trafficked red carpet events every year, interviewing the industry's top influencers (including all the Kardashian-Jenners), and breaking A-list celeb news (a New Jersey shore native, it is no surprise that her favorite interview ever was with Bruce Springsteen). Brittany is a style contributor to People Every Day Podcast and has represented the brand on national TV programs including Good Morning America and The CW's two TV specials on the British Royals. She joined PEOPLE from Cosmopolitan in 2013, where she was an Associate Editor. People Editorial Guidelines Published on May 3, 2021 03:13PM EDT Photo: SHEIN Together Fest 2021/Getty Maren Morris is feeling more confident than ever one year after giving birth to her baby boy. Ahead of her performance at retailer Shein's virtual charity-driven Together-Fest on May 2, the country singer, 31, spoke to PEOPLE about how being a mother has taught her to love herself in her own skin. The Grammy winner, who shares son Hayes Andrew with husband Ryan Hurd, explains that it wasn't easy at first to feel like herself after her body was "borrowed for nine plus months, plus postpartum." "I feel like it really took me a second to realize, 'Hey, I don't need to just snap back to how I looked before to feel sexy or powerful or myself even,' " she shares. Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Catherine Powell Maren Morris Says It 'Shouldn't Be the Goal' for Moms to 'Erase' Evidence of Having Baby from Body However, the artist says she feels the "most comfortable now, at this age, a year after having my kid, and just knowing that I raised another human." "I was the house, and I feel like that's given me so much confidence that I didn't have before when I was a size two," she reveals. "So I definitely feel like being a mom has made me feel really powerful in my own body because look what we're capable of." This isn't the first time the star has been vocal about the pressures women face to adhere to a "bounce back culture." "We're always extremely pressed to erase any evidence on our body that we had a child — that we housed a child for nine, 10 months — so I just realized how unhealthy that was for me and my workout journey to be like, 'I need to get back to where I was before,' " Morris told reporters inside the 2021 ACM Awards' virtual press room last month. Harper Smith RELATED VIDEO: Maren Morris on Her Post-Baby Style Evolution: 'I Can't Get Away with Not Wearing a Bra Anymore' "That's not really the goal — that shouldn't be the goal, to just sort of erase the fact that you had a kid," she added. Morris said she is "really proud of where [her] body is right now, even if it is several pounds heavier" than it was before she and Hurd welcomed son Hayes, their first child together, last March. "It's like, 'I did something that half the population can't do.' So I think that's pretty f---ing rad," she said. "That's kind of how I came to that epiphany and was like, 'I'm gonna share this.' " In early April, the GIRL artist posted a set of photos of herself — the first of her relaxing in a nude-colored underwear set in bed and the second of her working out in a different gray ensemble — and wrote that she is "never saying 'trying to get my body back' again." "No one took it, I didn't lose it like a set of keys. The pressure we put on mothers to 'snap back' is insurmountable and deeply troublesome," Morris shared. "You are and always were a f---ing badass. and yeah, I'm proud." Close