December 2015 Moms

the mom I said I'd never be

Im turning into the mom I said I'd never be and I find it quite funny....

I said I'd never be like my mom, however each day I become more like her. 

I said I'd never cosleep... However I find myself co sleeping several nights a week. 

I said I'd never own a mini van yet yesterday I bought a mini van..

Anyone else find themselves being the mom they never thought they'd be...? 

Re: the mom I said I'd never be

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  • Also with you on cosleeping. I swore baby would start out in her crib, then I changed that to in a cosleeper next to our bed after reading the AAP suggestions. I was very judgey about bed sharing and I've been bed sharing since four weeks old, every night. 
  • I said I would be an exclusive breastfeeder - she's been getting some formula since day 1 for various issues.

    I said that baby would never use a pacifier - the hospital staff introduced one without my permission and it's such a lifesaver that I said the heck with it and let her keep using it.  Its in her mouth right now.

    I said baby would sleep in the crib immediately - nope.  Started out in pack & play, moved to rock & play and co-sleeps about 25% of the time.  I was also very judgmental about this.

    I said baby would not interfere with my normal activities, that I would go out just as much and would use a carrier.  Um, those things are sitting in a corner untouched.  I'm too tired to figure out how they work.  Not to mention its so cold here right now that I feel I can't take baby out much.  And feedings take sooooo long that I basically never want to leave the house.  Sigh. 
  • Ditto on the bedsharing. Always thought minivans were the bee's knees so didn't worry about that and am actively trying to talk hubby into getting one once our car is paid off. My mom is mostly awesome so I figured I'd do well if I even halfway was the parent her or my grandmother was.

    Something else I was against before was early exposure to technology. Then I thought about my own exposure (I had my own desktop with dos at 5 years old) and how my parents approached it and decided it wasn't too bad. Plus the only way we could get DS to burp early on was to play Clifford the Big Red Dog. He'd get distracted, forget to be angry and voila. Now I just never want it to be the babysitter.
  • I said I'd breastfeed for a year. My LO is 8 weeks old and I'm 90% formula feeding already, and planning to be 100% in the next 3-4 weeks.

    I always judged the moms with screaming babies in the stores. I totally feel for them now.
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  • I said I'd EBF, DD is formula fed.
    I said I wouldn't get an epidural, it ended up being the best thing ever.
    I said I wouldn't give DD a pacifier until she was 1 month old, she used it when she was 2 days old and loves it.
    I said I would dress her up in girly frilly clothes everyday, I never dress her up unless we have to go somewhere. Lol
  • I said I wouldnt get her all pink and tutu frufru clothes and I am guilty. I have gotten her like a lot of pink and purple and bows and dresses haha

  • ashhsa said:
    Yup on the cosleeping. You have no idea until you bring that little person home. And I was oh so judgy about it too. 
    I was never really judgmental about it. I was more in awe of the mums who made it work. But for me, I assumed that I'd just never feel the need to. You know, because of how dangerous it can be etc.. And i felt it "wasn't for me" (whatever that means.. i used to know..) And then wouldn't you know, from day one, my very uterus ached the second she was laid in her bassinet. I didn't sleep for the first few days after her birth because i couldn't let her go. 

    She's 2 months old today and I still bring her into my bed as much as i can because the urge to be close to her is just overpowering. I caught the flu and was too sick to reliably feed her in her nursery. So I started bringing her into bed for feedings. On more than one occasion we've fallen asleep for the better part of an hour. I wake up terrified that she's suffocated. She hasn't. And i want to keep her there. I get teary every time i put her back in her bassinet. 
  • I never thought I would be so obsessed with my kid. Always talking about him, looking at pictures of him and missing him when I am forced to go out and do things without him. I just love hanging out with the little guy! 
  • andreaAL11andreaAL11 member
    edited February 2016

    ashhsa said:
    Yup on the cosleeping. You have no idea until you bring that little person home. And I was oh so judgy about it too. 
    I was never really judgmental about it. I was more in awe of the mums who made it work. But for me, I assumed that I'd just never feel the need to. You know, because of how dangerous it can be etc.. And i felt it "wasn't for me" (whatever that means.. i used to know..) And then wouldn't you know, from day one, my very uterus ached the second she was laid in her bassinet. I didn't sleep for the first few days after her birth because i couldn't let her go. 

    She's 2 months old today and I still bring her into my bed as much as i can because the urge to be close to her is just overpowering. I caught the flu and was too sick to reliably feed her in her nursery. So I started bringing her into bed for feedings. On more than one occasion we've fallen asleep for the better part of an hour. I wake up terrified that she's suffocated. She hasn't. And i want to keep her there. I get teary every time i put her back in her bassinet. 
    This. I'm actually more paranoid when she's in her crib than when she's with me. Because I know that I have the comfort of knowing she's right next to me and I am an extremely light sleeper, so every cough and sputter she makes wakes me up and I'm right there next to her. She also has a hard time falling asleep anywhere that's not next to me, since day 1! 

    Dont not get me wrong I still worry about the risks of cosleeping but I feel way better with her next to me than somewhere else. 

    Edited 3x: because pizza is more important right now

  • ashhsa said:
    Yup on the cosleeping. You have no idea until you bring that little person home. And I was oh so judgy about it too. 
    I was never really judgmental about it. I was more in awe of the mums who made it work. But for me, I assumed that I'd just never feel the need to. You know, because of how dangerous it can be etc.. And i felt it "wasn't for me" (whatever that means.. i used to know..) And then wouldn't you know, from day one, my very uterus ached the second she was laid in her bassinet. I didn't sleep for the first few days after her birth because i couldn't let her go. 

    She's 2 months old today and I still bring her into my bed as much as i can because the urge to be close to her is just overpowering. I caught the flu and was too sick to reliably feed her in her nursery. So I started bringing her into bed for feedings. On more than one occasion we've fallen asleep for the better part of an hour. I wake up terrified that she's suffocated. She hasn't. And i want to keep her there. I get teary every time i put her back in her bassinet. 
    This. I'm actually more paranoid when she's in her crib than when she's with me. Because I know that I have the comfort of knowing she's right next to me and I am an extremely light sleeper, so every cough and sputter she makes wakes me up and I'm right there next to her. She also has a hard time falling asleep anywhere that's not next to me, since day 1! 

    Dont not get me wrong I still worry about the risks of cosleeping but I feel way better with her next to me than somewhere else. 

    Edited 3x: because pizza is more important right now
    THIS. So there are these two sides of me. I'll call them the French side and the crunchy side. 

    So the french side of me is all into french style parenting. Detatched, dignified, a strong belief in the idea that children should be addressed like miniature adults, be given their own space right from the start. etc. This is the mother i had envisioned myself being, mostly because this is how i treated a majority of my relationships until now.

    And then there is this crunchy side of me that (i suspect) is my actual self. Super-attached. undignified and weepy with a strong instinct to address my child like a piece of my own soul. Screw personal space! Cuddles are in order! This is the mother I became. 

    I know intellectually  that cosleeping creates a slightly higher risk of something going wrong. But instinctively, this loud voice in my head says "BABY NEEDS TO BE NEAR MOTHER OMG BLARGH!!" and it physically aches to do anything differently. So ironically, her being in that slightly riskier situation FEELS SAFER. 

    We're looking into cosleeping options like mesh inserts for our bed. I'm not entirely sure how hubby feels about cosleeping. He's been strangely quiet when i bring it up. I think part of him wants her in our bed too. And another part of him is deferring ot me (oddly...) on this topic. 
  • I hate to be *that* person but I think I am very much like the mom I thought I'd be. I didn't realize how much love I would feel, because I don't think that is able to be described with words. But otherwise I have done things pretty much the way I thought I would. Maybe I am just particularly introspective, or my age, or perhaps a combination of both.
  • I said I'd never bed share and she's never slept by herself!
    I said I'd never comfort nurse, that rocking and cuddles would work.. I let her comfort nurse to her hearts content.
    I also had the super model, super mom image and well that didn't happen with DS and it's definitely not happening now. Although strangely I'm slightly more together with 2 kids.
    With my first I said I'd never: formula feed, give him a pacifier, let him watch TV before the age of 3, buy Gerber snacks (planned on making my own), let his routine control me.. All I can say to that is hahaha! All that happened, I even bought Gerber puffs for myself once because I loved the banana ones! We do what we need to survive!
  • Said I would do my makeup etc each day LOL. Said I wouldn't cosleep and I am and I love it. 
  • We said we'd never cosleep and she's been in our bed since we got home from the hospital. I too get emotional when I put her in the bassinet that is literally 5 inches away from me. I even hold her hand or keep my hand on her belly when she's in there! She'll only stay in there for an hour or so before when starts crying for cuddles. I really look forward to that moment  :# I only put her in there to appease DH who is on the fence about bed sharing. Yikes!!!
  • I thought I would be the kind of mom who would wear the baby, and read her books every day, and not use a bottle or pacifier until she was old enough not to get nipple confused, and always have her sleep in her bassinet, never in her RNP, and put her to bed when she was awake to self soothe, and generally have everything planned and figured out. I read all these books and thought I knew all the right things to do. 

    When she spent the first month of her life screaming it all became a survival game. It was all about making it through the day at any cost. All those things went out the window, and baby girl isn't any worse for wear. I also know now that all those "perfect" or "right" things to do for a baby are not necessarily right for my baby. 
  • Am I the only one who be bedshares but doesn't really want to? I always said I would never bedshare but he just won't sleep by himself. If I try to lay him in his bassinet he'll just wake up and scream within like 5 minutes. I don't understand people who say let them cry it out. Like for how long? Until he's blue in the face? Not that that has to do with plans that didn't work out, never planned on doing that nor do I really want to but just saying how do people do that?? I also used to say I wouldn't ever even have the baby sleep in the room with us but while I was pregnant I changed my mind and realized that just wasn't very practical.
  • I bought the Halo bassinest because my baby was not going to sleep overnight in the RNP (to avoid flat head, etc), it was for day naps only. Well after the first few weeks of her not sleeping anywhere but my arms and me not sleeping AT ALL, I began to try everything. Guess where the only place she wants to sleep is? The RNP. And she sleeps very well there too. I learned it's all about survival and that I will do just about anything for a little bit of sleep.
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  • This ones a little different but I thought I would be a super attached mom. I thought I'd never want to leave him or share him with anyone else. Now even though I love him tremendously. I don't mind leaving him to run errands or letting people hold him. I actually enjoy watching everyone bond with him and as long as he's happy I don't mind pass the baby. I love all the attention he gets and the little breaks I get.
  • @BrookeBrown2015 I dislike bedsharing and won't if I can avoid it. I love holding and being close to my babies but I need sleep too and I just can't sleep when I bedshare. I have Tourettes and besides the normal worries with bedsharing I worry about my tics. So I snuggle with DD in bed until she's in a deep sleep then move her to her crib (right by my bed).

    We did the same with DS. Once he was consistently sleeping through the night we moved him to his own room. We'd snuggle in the living room until he'd fall asleep and move him to his crib.

    Crying it out isn't recommended until baby is at least six months old. We started with DS when he was about a year old. By then he was laying down and taking naps on his own during the day so we felt he was more prepared. He has a crib soother he uses so we have his routine and lay him down tired, turn the soother on, tell him good night and walk out. He cries a couple minutes sometimes and goes to sleep, most times he doesn't cry at all. We have an agreed on time, we started with five minutes and after that we'd check on him. We also listened to how he was crying. Certain cries we didn't wait. If he was just doing his tired fussing but was winding down we'd give him a little longer.

    It's helped both my kids sleep in their cribs when I rolled up muslin swaddle blankets and tucked them under the fitted sheet around the baby. I'd lay them down and adjust the postion but they both started sleeping there fine with this. It seems like it makes things feel closer and more secure for them and the rolls might feel like arms around them.
  • At first my little guy would wake up after 5-10 minutes, but we just kept at it, sometimes for hours at a time in the middle of the night. Once he got it, he got it. It wasn't a mean way of doing it, because he never really cried. We just refused to give in. He needed his own bed just like we need our own.

    I'm not saying that every baby is like mine, or that this will work for every baby. But I think sometimes people think that babies who sleep in their own bassinet or crib did so without any trouble, which simply isn't always true. It was way more difficult to get him in his crib than it would have been to pull him into our bed, but I feel like it is paying off now.
  • Lucy1108 said:
    This ones a little different but I thought I would be a super attached mom. I thought I'd never want to leave him or share him with anyone else. Now even though I love him tremendously. I don't mind leaving him to run errands or letting people hold him. I actually enjoy watching everyone bond with him and as long as he's happy I don't mind pass the baby. I love all the attention he gets and the little breaks I get.
    I am polar opposite. I thought I would be all super cool and like "hey, take my baby" but nooooo. I actually get mad when people try to take him from me. By people I mean my dad and step-mom. Who are here visiting. From across the country. And yet I get mad because they want time with him. 
  • @BrookeBrown2015 you and me are basically the same person. Don't let people tell you to let baby cry it out. He/she is a newborn and you sleep however you can. I was so hard on myself for bed sharing when I said I'd never but when that's the only way any of us could sleep, I did whatever worked. Figure out the routine/habits/etc later when they're actually capable of forming habits! 
  • I was so against co-sleeping...  Until I brought him home.  He doesn't self soothe and will only fall asleep unless someone is holding him or he's within eye shot of mommy.  So one morning (after daddy left for work) we fell asleep in the bed together.  I put baby on a pillow and lay on my side facing baby, my arm supporting his head and keeping him from rolling around.  Last night I fell asleep last night next to daddy for the first time with baby still in my arms.
  • I honestly had no idea what our sleeping situation would be before. I just know I will do anything go to get sleep.

    However I didn't think I would be the mom that posts pictures of DD on social media all the time, but I can't help myself. I know most people don't care, but damn DH and I made an adorable child.
  • Took my child on.. you know what? Let's call it an evening social outing. Spent the outing harping on and on abouat how i wish i could afford an au pair. 

    Post pictures and updates about her nonstop. 

    Two things I used to despite. Honestly, two things I still despise. So being a total hypocrite! Something new i learned about myself!
  • I have now resorted to bed sharing after DS reaches his last thread in the bassinet each night. It has happened for the past 4-5 days and it's been the only way DH and I get at least 4-5 hours of sleep.  Not that even those 4-5 are the greatest, but it's something.  

    I also said I would be an exclusive breastfeeder/pumping mom.  That lasted for about 3 weeks.

    I also post/talk about DS about 1-2x every couple of days on FB and I said I'd never be that mom, to do that. I was all for giving monthly updates and/or posting a new picture every couple of weeks.  Yea, that flew out of the window real fast.  
  • I said I wouldn't be a mom who buys so many clothes that by the time he/she is out of a size, half the stuff would still have a tag on it.  I sit and look at DS's closet and think to myself, "You idiot, Megan!" Way to get suckered into, "Awww, that's so cute." Being that he was preemie we were able to wear 99% of his Newborn stuff before he outgrew it.  Had he been born term I know more than 1/2 the NB gear would have been unworn.  He just had his 2 mo checkup today and he only weighs 7lb 9oz. Some of the NB stuff still fits, but I have pretty much retired it all and am onto 0-3 month and 3 mo. Carters stuff. With that being said, I am still looking at piles of 3mo and his 6-12 mo. stuff and I now that half of his stuff will still have a tag on it.  

    I will continue to fall victim to the "Awww, that's so cute!" line when shopping at any store that has a baby isle in it.  What matters most is I have admitted my problem and I hope I can have some will power to say, "No!" to all of the baby clothes.  

    Side note- *I would totally be screwed if I had a girl.* And by screwed I mean broke and probably divorced if DH knew just how many clothes she'd have if we had a girl. lol :#  :s
  • I said I'd never buy a NoseFrida because EW they weird me out. Here I am, currently attempting to suck the snot out of my DS's nose....with a NoseFrida.
    Yes! When my coworker talked about using one on his DD before I was even pregnant I almost gagged hearing about it. He told me I would feel differently if it was my kid that was miserable. Well he was so right because when DD got her first cold at 3 weeks I was sucking snot out of her nose without hesitation. 
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  • @esscapelle and @breezypip I was explaining a nose frida to DH the other day and he was grossed out. He asked if you could wind up eating snot. I have no idea bc I've never used one. Is it likely to happen? I've heard such good things about them and I want to get one.
  • @Court11152325 that was my biggest fear too, but no it's not possible. There's a filter-type thing that blocks whatever comes out of their nose from getting into the tube that goes to your mouth!
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  • I said I'd never buy a NoseFrida because EW they weird me out. Here I am, currently attempting to suck the snot out of my DS's nose....with a NoseFrida.
    Is there any other way to get the snot out??
  • Ok I read the other posts and you're talking about something different than I thought but I don't know what the thing I am thinking of is called but it's shaped like a narrow tube and a big ball and you squeeze it right before you put it in their nostril and then it collects snot and boogers.
  • @BrookeBrown2015 It sounds like you're describing a suction bulb. Hubby and I call it a snortblat. I don't remember the reason but we were tild not to use one of these in the nose.

    The best luck I've had is trying to catch it early and sit in a steamy bathroom with them or use a humidifier. There's a chest rub we use with DS that works wonders but says to ask a doctor for babies under 3 months. Maty's baby chest rub. DS is 15 months old and for his last cold started bringing us the jar to put it on. I ended up using it as well and it seemed like it cleared DD up some from laying against me when I was using it.
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