I'm pretty sure that I'll fall IN LOVE with my baby once I have him/her. But I've heard a few stories from women about them thinking their newborn is ugly (& refusing to hold them) or the bond that mom & baby have doesn't come natural to them. THIS SCARES ME. I'm sure my baby will be perfect but is there something I can work on while still pregnant to sort of "pre bond" Or am I worrying too much?
Re: Not Liking your Newborn
LFAF Summer 2016 Awards:
Elizabeth 5yrs old Jane 3yrs old
Around a month he started to be super cute like I thought he should look.
Now looking back at pics he was always cute! I just don't think I had any experience with new borns lol
With my DD, I had no help after she was born and I felt all alone. Family wasn't helping me and giving me a hard time over breastfeeding and pumping since my milk came in 8 days after I had my DD. It got ugly fast and I felt like a failure. Everyone is different but it just depends. I was also in the middle of nursing school when I had my DD. I had a lot on my plate.
I did not love my first one right away. It took awhile. We did not know each other. However, I was very protective of her. It was not love, buy momma bear. The love came with in a few weeks.
My second though, the bond was there so quickly . She was mine.
My eldest had a rough delivery (labored prior to C/S). She was bruised and swollen not really 'cute'. My 2nd had a perfect little round 'c/s' head. She was not as puffy.
At first, I mostly felt like my son was a weird little creature that kept sucking on my boob. I did have some ppd issues so I could be worse than some moms but I think it is a common to not feel an immediate bond.
Not to scare new moms but I also think we underemphasize just how hard the first few weeks with a newborn can be. A lot of countries have complex tradition of caring for new mothers. American culture just pushes going back to work as fast as you can. My son was born when we lived abroad in China and all the locals were shocked I didn't have family or full time help to care for my son and me. They even have spas in China where you can stay for a month a have a staff take care of you and the child. I thought it sounded crazy until I had my son. I had an awful complicated birth and felt worse during recovery than I had in my entire life. I walked a few miles a day up until the day before my son was born; the two weeks after he was born I could barely make it a few feet. I literally passed out walking to the bathroom one time. My hormones went crazy, I had all kinds of crazy hot and cold flashes and was a giant mess. Also, breasteeding was really painful the first few weeks so I felt miserable and cried all the time while my son cluster fed. Even though everyone told me he had a perfect latch he managed to take a chunk out of one nipple and bit the other nipple so badly it was dangling off. I put way too much pressure on myself and kept breastfeeding anyway... eventually I switched to exclusively pumping for a while which definitely helped a lot. Anyway, with the recovery and the exhaustion I think it is perfectly natural to not feel a strong bond early on.
I only started to feel something beyond a sense of obligation to care for my son when he smiled at me (at 3 weeks old). I felt more connected to him the more he began to interact. Now he is 19 months and I couldn't love him more. I really think it is normal to not automatically fall in love. In my opinion, a lot of people say they do because the want to sound like a good mom.
I think the main thing to do during pregnancy is adjust your expectations for how the early days will go. Talk to lots of moms with newborns. Go to La Leche league meetings. If you breastfeed they are the best resource you will find and it helps to go to meetings before the baby arrives. I wish I had. Make sure you have support around you early on. The bond will get there but it takes time for most people.
If you don't feel that magical bond immediately, you will (barring an illness like PPD) grow the bond over time as you relax into and commit to the cycle of trust created by responding to the baby's needs and meeting them again and again. You will belong to your baby and your baby will belong to you.