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From bullied teen to NFL royalty: Kylie Kelce's unfiltered truth about body shaming and modern motherhood

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Kylie Kelce has always stood out—literally and figuratively. Before becoming a recognizable face on NFL sidelines and in media circles, she was just a young girl navigating childhood in a body she didn’t fully understand. Today, she’s a wife, mother of four, and co-host of the Not Gonna Lie podcast , but it’s her authenticity that continues to inspire fans of all ages. In a recent Instagram reel shared by Hello Sunshine, Kylie got candid about her past struggles with self-confidence and how sports, specifically field hockey, transformed the way she saw herself.

Growing up tall and insecure, Kylie Kelce found strength on the field—not in the crowd
“I grew up significantly taller than most of my classmates,” Kylie Kelce shared in the reel, reflecting on how isolating that felt during her early years. As a kid, she longed to fit in but always found herself standing out. While her father encouraged her to try basketball, she gravitated toward field hockey—a sport that ironically kept players low to the ground. “Of course, then went for field hockey, which is in the opposite direction,” she said with a laugh.


https://www.instagram.com/reel/DKPssFOuYeu/ https://www.instagram.com/reel/DKPssFOuYeu/


Despite the contradiction, field hockey became her sanctuary. It taught her to appreciate what her body could do, rather than fixate on what it looked like. “So field hockey gave me, uh, an appreciation for my body. And I think that when you can see the strengths that you’ve been given and then things that you can work towards, all of that comes together to help you stand a little taller, roll your shoulders back, own your height,” she said.


Her height, once a source of ridicule, became an advantage. “I didn’t ask to be five 11, but, um, my reach in field hockey defensively was an absolute asset.”

Now a mother of four—Wyatt, Elliotte, Bennett, and newborn Finnley—Kylie’s openness doesn’t stop at her past. On her podcast, she’s equally honest about the challenges of motherhood . “Maternity leave is not a break or a vacation—that is a crazy concept,” she said, dismissing the myth that postpartum life is relaxing. “Specifically, my right arm is permanently, just permanently, in this position, claw included. I am going to have the sickest bicep on this side.”

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Whether on the field or in the chaos of parenting, Kylie Kelce continues to show that strength comes in many forms—and sharing that journey makes her a role model far beyond the world of sports.
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