Hi, does anyone else have a severe lack in support while pregnant. I'm just 13 weeks, and needless to say this is so far from real for my husband. If anything these hormones are just making me want to get so far away from him. My mom... gah where to start.. She hates my birth plan and just is the most negative person in my life right now.. Scare tactics to make me change my plan. Like I don't realize just how trying this is all going to be.. I guess I could use a friend.. Any soon to be mommies feel like they're on their own right now?
Re: Support.. or lack of.
One of the hardest parts of being a mom for me is all the “advice” and trying to brush it off. You don’t have to take it but they are just expressing what “they think” is best for you maybe due to personal experience.
Talk to them, set boundaries, and you do you momma.
We are here if you need us. Try to enjoy this and know this is YOUR moment, and don't let others bring you down. Easier said than done, especially when the most important people don't seem to be supportive. Definitely talk to your hubs, and keep us posted. Keep your head up, momma!
Married: 6/27/2008
DS: 3/14/2010 Planned, PG first try
M/C 6/2012
DD: 4/22/2013 Planned, UnDx Infertility, PG on our own
BFP: 10/28/2016 Unplanned, HUGE SURPRISE!
M/C 12/12/2016
BFP: 10/27/2017 Unplanned, HUGE SURPRISE
EDD: 7/2/2018
I know it’s hard to feel like you’re going into this alone, but you’re also only 13 weeks and things could change. One of the hardest parts about being a mom, for me, was setting boundaries, and learning to stick up for myself and my son and make choices for myself- especially when it went against what others were telling me to do. Everyone has an opinion, especially if they’ve gone through pregnancy before. (Extra f* you points if they haven’t- but that happens too) Their “way” of doing it will always be better to them, because it is what they know. And the “advice” only gets worse after baby is here.
You need to forge your own path and learn for yourself what works what doesn’t for you. And if your birth plan changes, that’s okay too.
Speak to your mother about your feelings, she’s been through this before, she might understand she’s overstepping if you lay it out for her. If she doesn’t, maybe take some space for yourself, at least for a little bit. It sounds like you could use it. Baby isn’t coming tomorrow, you have time.
As far as your husband, some guys take some time to get used to the idea of pregnancy, its
not their body changing. Has he gone to any appointments? Maybe enroll the two of you in a pregnancy or birth class? Bring him to an appointment where he can hear the heartbeat?There are tons of ways you can engage him in the pregnancy, and there is still plenty of time.
QFP
This is true. Additionally, since you say it doesn't feel real, it might seem that way to him since "nothing has changed" in terms of you look the same! My husband told me I should maybe take another test (the first had a very solid second line - definitely not a squinter) because he couldn't believe I was actually pregnant, haha. I did just because I had an extra and I wanted to ease his mind. Still positive! And I had no symptoms at first (they tend to not start until 6 weeks and I found out at 4), so nothing was really different.
Even after seeing her on the dating ultrasound, it was still a little unreal. It became more real once I started getting a bump and when he could feel her move. That's pretty normal.
Thanks for reading the rules post and owning your mistake! That goes a long way around here! We’d love to get to know you better when you participate in more threads! Congratulations on your LO!
For your mother, definitely try to set boundaries. When I was pregnant with DD, a casual acquaintance and I were chatting about the baby, and he said “can I give you some advice?” (Insert my internal eye roll) “everyone and their brother is going to tell you exactly how you should raise your kid. Smile, nod, then ignore them and do whatever you think is best. You know your kid best, not them.” Seriously, the best advice I got. Same goes for your birth plan. I also got very comfortable using the doc/pediatrician as a deflection. As in, well you might think X but I talked to DDs pediatrician about it and she agreed that Y is a good way to go. You could definitely use that here too if you wanted. “Well my doctor says my birth plan is perfectly safe and s/he supports it.”
Hugs mama. You got this.
Glad you know the board org now, too
Married: 6/27/2008
DS: 3/14/2010 Planned, PG first try
M/C 6/2012
DD: 4/22/2013 Planned, UnDx Infertility, PG on our own
BFP: 10/28/2016 Unplanned, HUGE SURPRISE!
M/C 12/12/2016
BFP: 10/27/2017 Unplanned, HUGE SURPRISE
EDD: 7/2/2018