Hoping to hear from STMs on this.
I have been lurking on other BMBs and have been reading about women who are so attached to their newborns that they tear up just having baby in the back seat (separated from them), or aren't comfortable allowing others to hold the baby (because it upsets the new mother; not because of hygiene fears etc). Is this a universal thing, or are these descriptions from the more extreme end of things? Do all new mom's feel this way, more or less? Is it automatic because of hormones? (I can't imagine feeling that way.)
Re: Hormones, bonding
The ride home from the hospital I sat in the backseat with him, which seems just silly now.
In tune with "mama bear" instinct, I will say that my grandpa, who I love very much, wouldn't hand me my DD when she was little and crying one time, and I got irrationally upset with him, felt overwhelmed with frustration/anger, barely kept from yelling at him, and then started crying. It's really hard to describe that intense protection feeling until you experience it.
ETA: she's 2 now, and although I leave her when I go to work full time, I still feel weird/guilty/anxious leaving her to run errands or something when I'm not working. I think a lot of that is personality. My step sister left her son overnight starting at around 2 months and never seemed to have any issue with it.
LOL @thisusername - our first vacation away from our rescue dogs (took forever to rehabilitate our sweet guys) involved a 5 page instruction manual, and a very high international phone bill for constant check-ins.
I don't know what it is - maybe it's being super busy and fighting off consecutive colds and new parenthood (adopted this fall), but I don't feel I have a special bond with my unborn son (also maybe I am less emotional because carrying a boy? - so testosterone instead of estrogen?).
I guess I will have to wait and see! Equal parts excited and apprehensive at this point.
I will say I've never found myself to be a very mothering person and I'm still not fond of newborns. Toddlerhood is where it is at