Hi ladies! This is my first post! I am a person who loves animals, almost on the border of loving them than most humans lol. I currently at home I have one dog (just turned 3) and a holland lop ear bunny (1.5 yrs). Ever since I got my dog she has been my EVERYTHING pretty much. When I'm home she's glued to my hip, goes on most errands with me if she can, and goes running with me everyday. When I have to leave her at home she gets so depressed (heartbreaking). And I know I sound biased, but to me she's the best dog! I love my bunny very much too, but I just have a special bond with Rae (my dog) that is harder for me to have with the bunny because he doesn't like being held and Rae wants to be loved on all the time and cuddled.
I know that there are books out there on "how to introduce the pup to the baby" and things like that. But I would like some advice from some of you ladies who already have a baby/children and have a pet that you love like it was one of your children. How was it for you? What helped ease the transition? And does it get better? The reason I'm asking is because Rae really is treated like a member of our family, my mom calls her the grand-dog lol and when we got Toby (the bunny) she was devastated! It was horrible, if one of us wanted to give affection to the bunny the other person had to be loving on her (which was mostly me, she never liked seeing me loving on that ball of fur but totally understandable!). Presently, they are best friends now and everything is great! But a baby is TOTALLY different! I already feel guilty knowing how much time will be spent on the (actual) baby (and I'm ok with it because I'm so excited for this pregnancy and baby and that's how it obviously should be! I'm so excited to be a first time mom

) But the other part of me feels sad knowing how Rae will feel. Is there a balance? Please help!
Re: the other (four-legged) baby...
Now that's Holland is older they can interact more, and it's adorable.
I will say to work on obedience training before the new baby comes. Having an obedient dog has made it a million times easier, since I can tell him to do something once and he just listens.
Thanks and I'm glad I'm not the only one out there concerned about my first "kids"
When we had DD, we only had 1 dog, a miniature Australian Shepherd. She couldn't care less about DD when we first brought her home and didn't act any different. Now that DD is older, they are great friends.
This time around, we will have 2 dogs to introduce the new baby to (we just got a German Shepherd a few months ago). She already does so well with DD, so we're not worried about bringing the new baby home to her.
Good luck to you and Rae!
I put out ALL the baby stuff (swing, bouncer, pack n play...) SUPER early. I think I was 6mo pregnant? Maybe earlier. That way by the time baby was there they were use to the new stuff and knew the rules (no touching).
DH took DS's dirty blankets from the hospital and put them on their beds at home. This was right after he was born, so we still had a couple days left in the hospital.
When we got home we greeted them like normal and let them find/greet the baby on their own.
We gave lots of extra food those first few weeks. We read they can start to dislike the baby because they see the baby as competition for food. So, we wanted them to know that that was not an issue.
Best of luck! Hope that helps.
Now DD is 4 and Molly still doesn't want much to do with her and just moved away If DD gets in her space.
Our biggest thing is that we wanted be sure that we didn't treat the dogs a whole lot different then we did before the baby. Obviously some changed but we made sure to get our play and cuddle time in with them. Just try to make her realize she's still an important part in your life but so is the baby.
She's very attached to us (she was a rescue). She gets jealous when DH and I are affectionate with each other. Overall she's very obedient and we haven't had any issues training her. I guess we won't really know until our LO is here.
I tell you this not to scare you but to say that even with the best laid plans, you can't predict how it'll go... but everyone will adjust! Seven years later and I still call my dog my firstborn and don't know what I'd do without him. He considers me the alpha (when he's not trying for the position), still sleeps by my side of the bed each night and his old-man arthritic butt will still get up and run to me with his tail wagging whenever I enter a room. So I think he's forgiven me.
I have a very spoilt puppy / baby depends who you ask in my family. His name is Byron he is a Kelpie x blue heeler.
So far I'm sitting on the couch cuddling a doll wrapped in a baby blanket that I borrowed from a friend with a baby odor just so my puppy knows what's his time on my knee and what's the future babies time.
I'm putting up a child safety gate on the baby room so the room is a no go zone.
I've also got friends recording baby cries because where he sleeps he's bound to hear them in the night and I don't want him to stress later (that's my job).
I'm also teaching him times of day that I hope will remain his. Hanging out the washing is his crazy stick chasing time. We also got some chickens which he now fondly watches like TV.