Now that most of our December babies have arrived and we are getting settled into motherhood, there are things along the way I'm sure have taken us all by surprise. What are some of those things for you?
For me, it was never knowing breastfeeding would be so challenging. Why do so many moms make it seem like such a breeze? It really sucks sometimes and it's just hard.
Also, my milk letting down really catches me off guard sometimes. The things that trigger it are borderline ridiculous, I expected it to let down when I heard my baby cry but it goes beyond that. It lets down when I hear other babies cry even on tv and when I watch my dog or rabbit eat. While watching Animal Planet I saw a baby monkey drinking out of a bottle, then had milk everywhere before I knew what happened.
Edited because proofreading is hard
Re: Things about being a mom nobody warned you about
Also sorry if my post doesn't make sense I'm a little sleep deprived.
I babysat a lot of kids, growing up, but I'm beginning to realize none of them were baby boys!
I tore up at the top end rather than the bottom and as the doctor said "there's a chunk missing"
I never expected so much blood after delivering
Color me surprised when I got terrible chills, night sweat that forced myself and my husband to change clothes, fever, flu-like symptoms, AND my left boob feels like it is falling off.
So here I am WARNING you all. Do not restrain your breasts with tight bras, do not miss or skip a feeding, and empty your breast completely of milk. This is torture.
I'm also constantly freezing and definitely didn't expect that!
My parents came into town a week after the baby. Everyone said that learning how to breastfeed and PP bleeding were the reasons not to have visitors. Not the fact that it was going hurt just to sit down!
Granted, I had an episiotomy, but you would think someone who had a tear or episiotomy in the past would have shared their experience. It wasn't until I googled it after my labor that I realized there was a whole underworld of women who had shitty labor recoveries.
Also, how much my husband worries about PPD. I have always been overly dictated by hormones and everytime I cry or get frustrated about something he starts to worry and throw out the bat signal to my mom and my mom friends.
How challenging, stressful and difficult breastfeeding would be, and the guilt I would feel about giving formula.
How much love you have for them once they are here. I never thought I could love someone this much and how protective I am over him.
2. Depending on the temperament of your baby (mine is fussy like her mama), the sheer amount of entertaining you need to do. Granted, I love it, but I found myself googling what to do with her. Yes, many things ended up being common sense, but when you are sleep deprived, you run out of common sense a lot.
• How long you bleed PP
• After a c-section the numbness around the incision
• How fast your period can return (5 weeks PP and it's totally back)
• Yes! BF doesn't come natural! Annoying
I've definitely had the baby blues. I've cried pretty much every day for a week now. I'm afraid of "new normal" and what that means. I'm afraid I won't be as productive this semester as I thought I would be.
And I'd love to give a big middle finger to the lack of parental leave rights in this country (US).
It's also a lot easier to tell how old children are now. It also makes me feel and relate more about a child character in a book, or a child in a news story, because I now know what a 6 month old child is like and what an 18 month old child is like, etc.
Jamie
Of course that made it a little harder not to check on my little boy every few minutes while he sleeps
I also agree with the breastfeeding. People told me it could be challenging but it is literally the most difficult and painful thing I have ever done. I was seriously looking forward to that part so much and even now that I'm past the pain of cracked nipples I feel like I'm never not nursing and it's overwhelming and frustrating.
I have an intense amount of love for my son but I'm looking forward to when he sees me as something other than a big giant boob and we can do something else together besides solely nursing
Postpartum HURTS. sitting down HURTS. Peeing hurts. Pooing HURTS. Wiping hurts. Living hurts. I made the mistake of trying out some kegals and thought I was going to die. My husband wants sex and I'm petrified of it. I live in a small bubble of anxiety about my body. My belly button looks different.... My husband has started to tell me he loves me no matter how I look and I appreciate the concern and support but it's hard to describe to him. I look in the mirror and everything,I ever knew about my body the last 26 years is just.... Different. I didn't think I would be so vain ...
Housekeeping is hard work when you have an overworked husband and a crying newborn. And you have only slept 4 hours.
I also have some guilt from not working. I love being with my son, and I hate the idea of a stranger taking care of him ( I hate The idea of some family too) but a part of me misses working and bringing in my share of income and just... Being productive.
I also didn't know that something as simple as a shower could be so hard to find time for, and that taking one could make such a big (positive) difference in the day.
And finally, NOTHING prepared me for postpartum pooping being akin to an Olympic sport.
I knew how challenging BF could/would be but I really hoped the engorgement would pass faster, it hurts
My let down is so fast my baby is frustrated and I get soaked, I HATE wet bras (from dripping during feeds, the pads absorb breastmilk between feeds).
And OMG the laundry!
Also, people warn you constantly about lack of sleep, but I had no idea they really meant you might actually never sleep. I miss sleep.
I'm ready for both of us to go back to work so we can establish any kind of new normal.
This time, I was warned, but I'm still surprised how different DD is from how her brother was and how different it is having two.
Also, I always hated talk radio because of long car trips and listening to it as a kid and it'd make me sleepy. Now we listen to it all the time in the car because it keeps hubby and I supplied on topics to discuss outside babies and finances and so on. We have some pretty interesting debates from it and I love it.
I have to echo how challenging breast feeding is and how many obstacles you can face. Eta. Low supply, difficulty latching, tounge tie, pain, ect. I had NO idea because NO ONE shares how hard it is. I am sharing with all my friends who aren't mom's yet not to scare but to help them be more prepared. I spent 2 weeks feeling like a failure, I don't want that for my friends.
Also, mommy guilt. Oh, how real it is! I feel like when someone asks me how things are going, any answer other than awesome is not acceptable and makes me look terrible. How's her sleeping? Awesome I say with bags under my eyes. How's breastfeeding going? Awesome I say as my eyes water at the thought that I have time for either a nap, a shower, or food before the next feeding, and these days sleep wins most every single time.
And recovery after a tear and a repair is pretty rough! I didn't see anyone mention anything about bladder control. I'm no longer bleeding but still having to wear pads because i sure am leaking urine on the way to the bathroom... which at 25 I didn't think I would have that problem.
And the emotional roller coaster you will be on from the hormones to the lack of sleep. I feel like a basket case.
The strain on your marriage is rough too! It's no longer about you and your husband. I don't think my hubs and I have talked about anything other than our baby in a month.
Being a mom is great but all the other adult stuff that comes along with it is for the birds can't i just sit and hold my baby all day...
Jamie