Alyssa Milano on Her Struggle to Lose Baby Weight

See what she says about losing those last 10-15 pounds.

ByABC News
May 19, 2015, 10:22 AM
Alyssa Milano arrives at the "Get Hard" Los Angeles premiere at TCL Chinese Theatre IMAX on March 25, 2015, in Hollywood, Calif.
Alyssa Milano arrives at the "Get Hard" Los Angeles premiere at TCL Chinese Theatre IMAX on March 25, 2015, in Hollywood, Calif.
Michael Tran/Getty Images

— -- Alyssa Milano tweeted that after giving birth to her second child in September, she's trying to lose those last few pounds of baby weight.

It's a struggle.

"This last 10-15 pounds of baby weight is a b----," the actress, 42, wrote on Twitter Monday.

The actress and her husband, David Bugliari, welcomed baby girl Elizabella just about eight months ago and it's the second child for the happy couple.

The former "Who's the Boss" star also addressed the media scrutiny that comes from being an actress and the pressure to drop the weight so fast after having a baby.

"I’ve had weight fluctuations my whole existence, so I’m just trying to stay healthy, trying to have the endurance to get through the day as a mom of two and not be too sleepy," she told Yahoo! Parenting.

As for how her little bundle of joy is doing, she said, "She’s amazing. She is so delicious. It’s so different having a girl than a boy. My son [3 years old] always needed to be a participant in everything, even when he was a baby. He never missed a thing. With her, she’s perfectly fine just observing. I’m not sure if it’s because she’s a girl, or because she’s the second child, probably a little bit of both. Milo was so much more physically active, Elizabella is more nurturing."

Milano also made waves last month when her breast milk was taken away at Heathrow Airport in London.

"Every ounce of milk I'm able to produce for my child is nothing short of a miracle and to watch that milk be thrown away without any regard for my baby, was heartbreaking," she tweeted.

Milano said in the statement provided by her rep that she didn't blame security at the airport, since employees were "following orders to keep us all safe." She added that she hoped the policy received a "thoughtful reconsideration."