Now carrying her first baby, Natasha Bure – Candace Cameron Bure’s daughter – has been posting glimpses online alongside partner Bradley Steven Perry. When photos of her growing belly appeared, some reactions turned harsh without warning. Her openness met resistance from corners she didn’t anticipate. People questioned why she’d display something so personal. Still, she kept sharing, unfazed by the noise around choices they don’t live.
Criticism From Social Media and Bure’s Response
Bure found herself flooded with private notes, most from women, upset about her choice to show off her growing bump. People who wrote in pushed for modesty – saying she should hide it under baggier clothes. Instead of praise, some demanded she stick to old ideas about how mothers-to-be ought to dress.
Surprise showed on her face when the backlash came. Only after talking about her pregnancy online did it hit her that some might take issue. Before that moment, the thought never crossed her mind.
On June 12, through a TikTok clip, Bure faced the backlash head-on – no shift in her actions was hinted at. Unbothered by harsh remarks, she stood firm. Showing off her pregnancy glow? That isn’t stopping anytime soon. Carrying life changes how a person sees herself – Bure said pride grew stronger through each month. This time matters more when every shift in shape means nurturing someone new. Not hiding felt right, like standing present for something real. What once seemed temporary now reads as quiet strength written across her skin.
Body Positivity Meets How You See Yourself
These days her view has changed – carrying a child lit a calm power she didn’t know lived inside. Not suddenly, but bit by bit, her body became less an enemy, more a companion. Where judgment used to echo, attention now rests. Old habits of questioning herself melted, replaced by gentle noticing. Without knocking, peace stepped in, fitting just right. Now she lets her clothes follow where her body leads. At first, hiding the bump meant wrestling zippers each morning.
Lately, comfort wins over old rules. Fabric that pulls? Forgotten. What fits today stands instead. Most days, her partner beams when he spots the curve of her belly. His voice lifts hers more than any comment ever could. Strangers tap out judgments on screens – he just holds her hand. What he sees? Something beautiful. Their quiet moments outweigh the noise. His nod means every time.
Looking Ahead
For now, Bure means to keep talking about her pregnancy online, since it does not last forever and feels worth savoring. People who do not like hearing about it? They have the option to look away. Out loud, she answered the comments aimed her way. Body confidence showed up in what she said next. Not everyone sees it this way, yet that did not shift her view. Her take? Carrying a child doesn’t need approval. Decisions about how she looks belong to her alone. Society leans one direction – she chose another. Stillness between lines spoke louder than rules ever could.
