I'm wondering how everyone is dealing with the demands of LO at night. Do you and DH take turns getting up when your babe cries? I have been feeling a bit resentful because 90% of the time I am up with the baby. It does make sense this way of course since I am EBF and usually during nursing or right after, baby will poop so I end up changing most of the diapers at night too. However..the other times when I know she is fussing because of a wet diaper or wants her paci back, or just needs snuggles my DH is proving to be quite the heavy sleeper and I usually just cave and get up with her than too..ugh. He is great with her during the days/evenings he is home . I suppose as long as I'm on mat leave this could be fair (?) but this could get ugly when I go back to work. Do you and your DH share the workload pretty evenly? Or is anyone else feeling frustrated about this?
Re: How helpful is DH during the night?
Can you try to talk to him about it when you're awake? Tell him you're tired and need more help at night, and that you need to be able to wake him up when LO doesn't need food but just something else.
I hate the heavy sleeper excuse. Yes some people wake more slowly, but what would happen if both parents are heavy sleepers who "just couldn't" get up at night?
On the weekends, it's reversed. He'll take the late night/early mornings to give me a break.
She is getting up every two hours or so with the occasional three hour stretch. And every feeding takes about an hour (feed, burp, change diaper, feed again, and burp again) and the whole time my DH is just snoring away. He will occasionally be woken up if she's really fussy and he'll offer to burp her, but as soon as he takes her, he falls asleep with her on his chest/shoulder! So then I'm paranoid and rather not have him do it if he can't even stay awake for 5 minutes. It drives me crazy!! Then he complains during the day how tired he is. What?!? I'm the one getting up every two hours!!!
I'm so tired and my LO has had feeding issues from day 1 so you can imagine how I feel about this.
Then he says that I should be getting more rest because my stress will rub off on the baby. More guilt. I just want to take LO and move in with my mom sometimes. Apparently it's my fault that DH's life is "boring" anyhow. This has been the most challenging 2 weeks of my life.
Even if DH was in our bed (which he will be at some point, but for now it's safer bed sharing if he's not, and he gets a better sleep this way) I wouldn't be waking him up for anything.
The first week I was always hungry in the middle of the night so he would make me toast at 2am, but I don't really need him at night now.
The big issue a lot of posters are having is that they need help they aren't getting. Tell dad to man up. Sit him down for a serious conversation and make it clear that while you know you're BFing and he can't feed, he can still help when you need it and that GETTING UP AT NIGHT IS PART OF BEING A PARENT. Being tired or working or whatever isn't an excuse.
Be firm and clear. If he says that he's tired, say that you are too and it's not a competition, but that you need help with HIS baby so he needs to get up.
If he starts in on a third glass of wine, tell him that is not a reason to not get up later.
If he doesn't get up from the tv, walk into the room, hand him the baby, and say "I said I needed your help NOW."
Yes, it is an adjustment to be a parent. Yes some guys struggle. But it isn't okay for it to happen at the expense of the other parent. If mom can struggle along and learn while caring for the baby, dad can too.
I'm mainly pumping but BF a couple times a day. The last couple weeks I've been sleeping downstairs with DD and doing all night duties so he can sleep, then he takes her in the morning so I can sleep a few more hours. It works for now but will be hard when he goes back to work, especially because I'm back in school Tuesdays and Thursdays. Coffee is my best friend.
You really have to do what works for you. Even when I go back to work I think it will be me to get up. I tend to soothe her easily so she goes back to bed quickly.
It's super important though to get help if you need it. Don't let yourself get to a point where you're hurting your relationship because resentful.
You're a better woman than I. I can't even begin to respond in a civilized manner to that comment
dx PCOS 2007
BFP #1 (natural) 12/23/2010. Stillbirth due to IC 4/2/2011
TTC #2 starting 03/2012
RE starting 07/2012
05/2013 BFP on a Letrozole (Femara)/trigger!
Cerclage, Procardia, Makena, GD (with insulin), MBR, and we made it!
Our Angel was born sleeping at 20 weeks due to IC.
@megash113 You might want to be careful with how you come at me; you didn’t have to get smart with me. How can you be upset because it’s my truth? MY kid naps pretty regularly throughout the day while my husband is stressed to the high hills at work. It’s not undermining anyone’s frustrations; that was not my intention. I was just stating how my household operates at this time. I’m talking about my personal situation… you know, just like how you talk about your personal feeling towards being in the SFP club.
I did this whole mother thing with DD1 by myself without help even being an option, so yes, it is no big deal TO ME. After not having any help at all I’m grateful for the help I do get whenever I get it. I didn’t say it was easy at all, you implied that. Having a newborn is seldom easy. I’m just saying it’s no big deal for me to be up at night because I did it before and got through it. I know I won’t be getting up by myself forever.
@bribbon being home with the baby was not meant to sound like it was an implied luxury. I was just stating my reality. It’s how my house functions while I’m home with my kid. She sleeps through the day. So while I’m up all night with her, I get my rest during the day when she sleeps. If you see that as a luxury then I can’t help that. I see it as how we do things since she’s up at night. I posted a few days ago about how much I actually miss work and felt bad because I want to go back; I talked about how much my career meant to me. I know that work can come as a welcomed relief; maybe that’s why I’m itching to go back after a month. I know that staying home with the baby long term doesn’t work for me.
@golfergirl08 I’m sorry that it’s not the case for you and I never said it was all puppies and rainbows. I got my own postpartum feelings and situations I’m dealing with. Just because it’s not happening for the majority doesn’t mean it’s not happening for me. Since I’m up all night it is nice that I get to nap during the day.
It’s like when one person has a remotely good thing going and mentions it they get pounced on when it’s not happening for the majority. We are all at different places with our Feb 14 journeys. My bad for sleeping during the day! I thought I deserved some sleep since I do take the night shift.
Wow.
I don't see the issue with her original response.
— The Doctor, Season 3, Episode 6