...In the same month! My husband is getting deployed right after our first child is born. Hard to be excited about having a baby. Don't get me wrong, I'm very excited but as soon as I think about being excited to welcome this little girl, I think about how we'll be saying goodbye to the new Daddy. November is going to be a tough month. I'm bless that he'll be home for ten days with us at least.
Anyone have advise or been in this situation?
Thanks!
Re: Saying hello to a new baby and goodbye to my soldier...
Dear Armywife,
I'm going to be in your shoes come April. I'm due April 11, and my soldier is scheduled to leave not too long after. I find myself full of mixed emotions, and I'm constantly worrying about how i'm going to make things work. I work full time, go to school part time, and now I'm going to be thrown into single parenthood. I don't know if you are a religious person, but my best advice is to give it to God. He never gives us anything we can't handle.
Something we have thought about is being induced a week early, so my husband will have a little extra time with his first little one. I don't know if this is an option you have thought about, but, if not, it might be worth looking into. Best of luck to you ,and we will keep your husband and family in our prayers.
One ArmyWife to another
MH left when our son was only a week old. It sucked. I tried to look at the positive. B-boy was way to young to realize that his daddy was gone. I sent videos and pics every day so he wasn't missing every thing. I still send them for this deployment. This is the first one where he has actually missed his daddy. He's almost 3 now.
You can do this. Keep a journal or a blog that he can read. Take a ton of pictures and videos. Have him record a book or video of him reading. She will recognize his voice when he comes back. My soon to be 4yr old thinks her daddy actually stops what he is doing over there to read her a book. If he can use Skype or any other form of video chat over there, take advantage of it. It's going to be tough, but it is not impossible. You can do it!
Thank you! We are thinking about inducing me early as well so that he'll be here for the birth. I'm staying with family right now and he's with his unit in KS. It's been hard just being away from him right now. I will give it to God. I think that's the best thing.
Thanks again!
Could you please take the date that your H is supposed to leave out of your post? Safety first.
I've been there...twice actually. DH left when DD (our first DC) was 2 weeks old...which also happened to be 2 days after Christmas. This deployment he left when DS was 6 weeks.
All you can do is spend those days as a family. Don't worry about seeing other family members, it is all about the three of you. They can wait to meet the new baby.
I never talked to anybody else, and looking back on it I definitely should have. Your hormones are crazy enough after having a baby that a deployment on top of it really makes things difficult. Please PM me if you need someone to talk to.
I don't even know you girls and I already love each of you! It's so nice to hear the different ideas and advice! It makes me feel so much better!
Military Wives certainly are the strongest there is!
Thank you everyone!
This x1000. OPSEC OPSEC OPSEC.
Thanks for the catch ladies. I think my baby brain is already taking over. Mistake fixed!
Im in the exact same situation... My husband is leaving towards the end of the month and we are due on the 17th ... im getting extremely panicky that he wont be here for the birth and i understand exactly what you re going through... we even had to ask his mother not to stay for as long as she originally was planning to so that we could have more time together as just a family of three. This will be our first child so its definitely difficult.
I had the exact thing happen with my first daughter - had her on Friday Nov. 18th 2005 and he deployed 7 days later-
Everything everyone said is exact- keep family close, talk to others when you need to, love on baby all the time, skype, e-mail and chat with hubby as much as possible-
One thing I did was take a close up pic of DH's face and put it in a soft baby proof frame and that went everywhere with DD from day 1, even when she was in NICU at 3 wks old- she knew her daddy when he came home!
When he came home on R&R he was holding her and she kept looking at his face and then over at the computer screen- I guess she was thinking "How did he get out of the box!"
You will do great! Prayers for you and your soldier!!
Hang in there! Congrats on your upcoming arrival!
DH was there for DS' birth and the first 2.5 months, then was gone for 2 years (a switch from the AF to the Army and his first duty station with the Army was an unaccompanied tour to Korea.) Then, we moved here (Ft. Hood), we had 2 months together and he was gone for a deployment.
We have a baby due in March...God willing I won't have any complications like last time and have to be induced early, as he will be at NTC for most of February...then, after the baby's born, he'll have less time with this one and then will be gone for a deployment.
Take LOTS of pictures, use Skype, get a moveable computer camera, and keep him as involved long distance as you can...it's not easy, but it CAN be done!! PM me if I can be of any help!
The docs at FOrt Bragg would not induce before 41 or 42 weeks for exactly this situation. Perhaps they will for you. I had DD 11 days after DH deployed for 15 months. You'll make it through, and you are completely entitled to the irrational crying bursts that will come up doing the single parent thing. I've absolutely been there.
As far as family time, I would make your wishes known to your family now. One or two of them there for the birth if that's your thing, then no visitors until after DH deploys. In fact, you may want a few days to yourself to be sad for his departure before you're thrown into family-helping mode. Which is great, but sometimes you need some alone time before the support. At least I do.
GOod luck! I hope it's some comfort that thousands of us have had to do the same thing. Your well-meaning friends and family will say "I don't know how you do it," and it used to drive me crazy, but now I can take it as a compliment: "You're stronger than I am and I admire that" is what they're really saying.
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