Another thread about who you want in the delivery room made me realize a lot more people think like i do than i thought.
So i wanted to talk about it on its own.
I dont want people in my waiting room.
I dont want people showing up right after the baby is born.
I really dont want anyone in the hospital at any point besides DH at all.
I am afraid if said people do show up, i am going to lose it. I have nightmares about having to call security.
That all being said, i really dont want any one at my house the first few days either!
Did anyone successfully achieve this? or are you planning something like this too? What did you do, how did you do it, etc?
Did you experience any backlash, do you think you will, do you care? Anyone else just totally feel this way too?
I just feel like the beginning of the babies life is for me and DH, and we should get all the alone time we need before people are bothering us.
Breastfeeding is of the utmost importance to me, and i dont want to feel like i need to adjust myself or my babies needs because cousin joe schmoe decided he needed to see the baby immediately.
Disclaimer - I have a seriously bad relationship with my mother and for whatever reason was never properly ''attached/bonded'' to her despite that i lived with her for over 20 years and she was a stay at home mom. Still not entirely sure why, but i view her as any other person, and she holds no ''special'' place in my life. So that likely has an effect on how i feel about this.
Re: Keeping being in labor a secret until after birth?
With our last we had DS at home and didn't have anyone come to the house until after noon. That gave us the whole morning to cuddle, shower, have a quiet breakfast and just rest. It was the best! And hopefully plan on doing something similar.
I have a strained relationship with my birth mother and with some of my family from her side. So we don't feel comfortable with having them at the hospital. not sure how things work in the states but here in Canada I can be made anonymous once I check into the hospital. That way the only way people know we are there and know our room number is if we tell them.
Other people can meet the baby a week or two later, I'm not in a rush at all for that and my siblings/ uncles all live on the opposite coast.
We did this with our DS and it was awesome. The only people who knew we were going to hospital was pet sitter and one neighbor. I had a long labor, that ended in c-section. We didn't call anyone until the next day. Honestly, it was such a whirlwind, that I would have probably gone crazy with people calling, waiting at the hospital.
My parents tried to schedule a visit to help out with my new niece the week of my due date. And if I happened to have baby, that would be great. I freaked out on them, told them I didn't want them here that week and got some backlash. They ended up rescheduling. After baby was here, all was forgotten.
I would like to do the same this time around, but need to figure out arrangements for DS.
Good luck!
Otherwise, the first notice people will be getting is when the baby is born (they live 4-6 hours away) and we plan to tell them to not come until we're back home, it just isnt worth the trip for the 1 hour visit the hospital allows each pair (only two non baby parent visitors at a time). Only siblings and grandparents will be visiting early on due to the travel involved but we'll be having a party at 2 months old near each of our families for everyone else to meet them.
I had our daughter in February 2015. The plan was to not tell anyone until the baby had arrived. My MIL had asked me prior what I wanted them to do (his family all lives about an hour and a half from the hospital) and I told her to wait until we tell her she can come. I didn't know at the time, but his family has always waited in the waiting room during labor and delivery. Not something I wanted.
Fast forward to actual D- Day. I went into labor at midnight, got to the hospital at 3:30. H wanted to let his boss know he wouldn't be in to work that day (he was contract at the time so it wasn't a huge deal. He could take off whenever he wanted and with minutes notice per the contract). I got admitted around 7 o'clock shift change. As soon as we got in our room, H wanted to text his mom so she didn't find out from his boss's wife. I caved and let him, thinking there was no way she was up yet (she typically gets up around 11 and doesn't sleep with her phone in her room). Unfortunately, she was up and already in the car going with her husband to a dr's appt. she called and said she'd be right there. I didn't want her there. She's not the nicest person to me. She was pissed we were having a baby when we announced to her and I just didn't want her there. All morning H fielded calls from her with an updated timeframe of when she'd be there because SFIL's doctor ordered tests. The last time she called, H told her to wait in the waiting room because I was about to start pushing. Did she listen? Nope. Not one bit. She tried to boss her way passed the nursing student to get in the room saying "I'm the mom." She wasn't allowed in and instead of waiting in the waiting room like she was told, she waited outside the door. Once the doctor and nurses left, she tried to get in and wasn't allowed because we were doing two hours skin to skin. She actually called H demanding to be let in and when he said "no, wait in the waiting room. We aren't ready for you yet." Her response was "well, where's my picture?"
Aside from that, I had the best labor and delivery experience possible. My nurse was an angel.
For this time around, we will not be telling anyone. We MIGHT tell SIL so she can watch our daughter, but I'm not sure because of the risk that MIL will find out and pull stunts again.
Love and learn. What I learned was not to feel bad about saying "no". It is your medical experience. My MIL didn't come to my gall bladder surgery. I didn't go to her back surgery. You get the say in this decision.
Ps. Sorry for the novel.
Second time around, being a RCS, I am sure my family will know when we go in (if we make it to the RCS and not earlier) but we will establish a time for family to come beforehand.
I think my MIL will be taking my DS and dog. So if I go into labor before my RCS, we will have to tell her. And that means I'll tell my family too, but we will still establish visiting hours.
As for the first few days, I won't mind visitors as long as they are my immediate family and not sick.
DST T4L
My sister never told me when she was in labor and it was always awesome to wake up and see her text announcement that a new baby had arrived.
If something were to go wrong, I would have my husband reach out to both of our parents but I would want him to keep it to just them.
After DS was born and was in the NICU I had a fight with my mom over her demanding that we call her with updates first thing in the morning and throughout each day because she was worried and refused to understand that her worries were not our top concern. So I know I was right to not tell her I was in labor.
I also don't want people in the waiting room texting us for updates or seeing baby immediately after. Sorry, I did all of the work, I get some uninterrupted baby time and some time to freaking REST. My mom is the type of person who, once she's let into the room, she won't want to leave -- so that'll be fun.
If something went wrong, DH would call everyone. With the exception of my MIL, our entire families live less than 20 minutes away from our hospital. This is why I don't think I could get away with not telling them until we're home, which would be ideal. I'll probably have people driving by my house to see if our cars are here religiously around June. They're nuts.
I think if we lay some ground rules for our families ahead of time (respecting our space, allowing us to have our time, not constantly texting us), things will be fine with them knowing when I'm in labour.
There is still a long time before this is the reality, so I've got some time to figure it all out.
(Edited because words are hard today)
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We do have a dog and we would have to come up with some sort of a dog plan, but i would probably try for a friend or DHs brother/SIL. Our pup will be fine alone for a bit as long as people stop to feed him and take him out 3x day. So i imagine we wont have a huge issue there, and anyone we would be calling would be someone who has the sense of mind to understand, please dont come to the hospital or tell anyone we are in labor.
My DH is going to be acting as doula, and we are both very very adamant on doing whatever we can for a natural drug-free birth and working hard on establishing good breast feeding right away. I just cannot imagine something like you said @TattoosandLacecause that is just insanity.
So i am hoping either DH will give everyone the lowdown before hand of, hey, we are doing a natural birth, we cant have any distractions or people waiting and therefore no vistors until we say so, like you said @DeePaddy24and/or simply telling nearly no one. I could see myself being okay with maybe 2-3 of my girlfriends stopping by and maybe even DH's brother/SIL at some point. But any parents are pretty out of the question for me for the beginning and if and when they do stop by, it is going to need to be for a very very short period of time. As you said @vulpiniI want all the time in the world to work on breast feeding and I want to be able to lift up my baby and put her on the boob whenever she wants to be put there, and not have that adjusted by someone being in my hospital room that i didn't invite.
...and i am literally going to scream if DHs phone goes off one time asking for an update.
We won't be able to do that this time because my parents will need to watch DS. And I need to ask about visiting rules with preemies as they will be in the NICU right away.
Triplets due 6/29/16 also from an IUI!
With DD1, we didn't tell anyone when I went into labor. I wound up with an emergency c-section and a rough few hours following it, so we didn't tell anyone until I was back in a room with DH and the baby and we had had a few hours to bond with the just the three of us. At that point, we were okay with family and close friends coming to visit.
With DD2, my oldest was staying with my parents while I labored, so we dropped her off with them the evening of my induction. DD2 was born very early in the morning, so DH and I had several hours with just her, and then he went to pick DD1 up to come meet her sister. We got some push-back on that, because my mom wanted to come to the hospital then, too, but we both felt that no one should meet the baby before her sister got to do so. Once the girls had some time to meet each other, we called the rest of the family and invited them to come by.
Why didn't your husbands just shut their phones off? Then no one would have bothered you at all.
This time Dh will have to go home and take care of the other kids anyway after the baby is born, so I guess it's just different with the third kid.
I had everything on your wish list with the birth of my DS, unfortunately however it was mainly due to the fact that my family members were on the east coast, and my DH and I were on the west coast.
When I told my MIL that I didn't want any visitors she made a face but didn't say anything, so my plan of attack is simply to not tell anyone (except my mom so she can babysit DS) when I go into labor, and maybe not reveal that my DS is even born yet until I get home from the hospital.
I had a lot of success with BFing my DS early on, and I attribute that mainly to the fact that I had plenty of skin to skin time and practically zero interruptions after he was born. I would love to relive that this second time around. GL
Me: 29 / Hubster: 31
Married July 2010
DC #1 Oct 2013
DC #2 EDD June 2016
Me: 42, DH: 46, Married: 11/12
Losses: MMC#1 11/12 BO, MC#2 11/13 at 8w BO?, MMC#3 8/14 chromo healthy M @12 weeks, stopped growing at 10.
Negligible AMH, FSH finally went high. Pursued DE.
DD born at 38w2d on 5-27-16. Finally!!
Pregnant again with OE. EDD 11/9/17 Girl!