Beautederm CEO Rei Tan and Maja Salvador 
LIFE

Maja Salvador reveals postpartum struggles and healing through self-care

Jefferson Fernando

For most of her life, Maja Salvador has performed on center stage — a force of nature in every teleserye, dance concert, and red carpet. But nothing prepared her for the life-altering role she stepped into last year: becoming a mother. When baby Maria arrived after a harrowing 30-hour labor and an almost tragic childbirth complication, the curtain rose on an entirely new act in Maja’s life.

'That wasn’t me—but I couldn’t control it.'

Maja speaks candidly about her postpartum experience, describing it not just as physical recovery, but as an emotional reckoning. She recalls how her once-steady patience was replaced by sudden bursts of irritability.

Parang pumipitik ka, and you ask yourself, ‘Sino ’yon?’ Because I knew it wasn’t me,” she shared. “Buti na lang I had my husband, my family — my support system — who just reminded me to breathe.”

She quietly experienced postpartum depression at first, unsure of how to label what she was feeling. When her breastmilk supply dropped eight months in — after she began working out and dieting again—the emotional weight intensified.

Na-depress din ako na hindi ko na siya ma-breastfeed,” she confessed, eyes welling up as she described the pain of that disconnection.

Perspective-changing trauma

Her empathy for fellow mothers deepened, especially after hearing of a tragic incident in Bulacan involving a mother and her children. “Hindi ko kaya. Just reading it broke my heart,” she said, visibly shaken. “I thought of Maria. I hugged her tighter. I prayed even harder.”

Maja also revealed that her childbirth was nearly fatal. After giving birth, she suffered a rare condition — uterine inversion — which caused her uterus to turn inside out. Three OB-GYNs attempted manual repositioning as she bled profusely and her blood pressure dropped. Surgery seemed inevitable.

“I couldn’t do anything anymore. I had no strength left,” Maja recalled. “So I just prayed. Hail Mary, over and over. And then, miraculously, one OB was able to fix it. I owe that moment to prayer and grace.”

Recovery and majesety

Out of that darkness came something luminous — not just the joy of motherhood, but the rediscovery of herself. Together with her longtime mentor Rhea Anicoche-Tan, CEO of Beautéderm, Maja launched her self-care brand: Majeskin.

Born from her postpartum journey, Majeskin is more than a body lotion or calming scrub. “It’s healing in a bottle,” she said. “At a time when I felt like I was losing control, this gave me a purpose again.”

The idea had been there long before motherhood, but fear kept her from pursuing it. “Ang dami kong idea, but I never did it. I was scared. But with Rambo, my friends, my Manang Rei… ‘eto na siya. We made it happen.”

Just three months after giving birth, Maja was back at the gym — not out of vanity, but self-love. With her sister-in-law Yanee Alvarez (a mom of four), Maja found a workout partner and emotional lifeline.

“I cheer for myself now,” she said. “Because every mom who gets up, keeps going, and still finds joy in little things — she’s already winning.”

Her voice cracks again as she talks about Maria, who’s about to turn one.

“All I ask God is for more time. A hundred years if He’ll allow it,” she whispers. “Because now, everything I do — including Majeskin — is for her.”

From the near loss of her own life to the creation of a new one, Maja Salvador’s story is no longer just about stardom. It’s about survival, sisterhood, and self-empowerment. And like the queen she is, she’s rising — scarred, strengthened, and shining.