I thought this would be fun since our board seems slow!
FTM's this is your place to ask ST+M's anything. I mean ANYTHING! Pregnancy, birth, postpartum, the good, the bad and the ugly! I'd also say ST+M's feel free to share something about your experience that no one told you about or that surprised you. Also, keep in mind everyone's experience is different, even from one pregnancy to the next for the same mom, so take in all the possibilities but know that you will have your own stories to tell.
This isn't meant to be scare you or "just you wait" from ST+M's but you have questions and this is what a community of moms is for. No question is stupid or too gross or silly.
*TW LC*
Me & MH: 32
DS: 6/1/18 (Pre-E; IUGR; seizures; NICU)
TTC #2: 12/2019
Sept 2020: HSG possible blocked right tube
Nov 2020: Letrozole + TI - BFN
Dec 2020: Letrozole + TI - BFP!!! EDD 9/18
Re: ST+M AMA (Ask Me Anything)
DS: 6/1/18 (Pre-E; IUGR; seizures; NICU)
TTC #2: 12/2019
Sept 2020: HSG possible blocked right tube
Nov 2020: Letrozole + TI - BFN
Dec 2020: Letrozole + TI - BFP!!! EDD 9/18
Some people will say "sleep when the baby sleeps". This sounds great, but with DD, by the time I realized she was sleeping, she was nearly awake again (lots of 20 minute naps). Meanwhile my friend with the same age baby was snagging 3 hour naps! So if you can't get naps due to baby's sleep schedule, please please please, find someone you feel comfortable watching baby for a couple hours a week and use that time to catch up! Or ask your partner to watch baby on the weekend for a few hours while you sleep in. Some of us turn crazy with sleep deprivation and you will be amazed at how "like your old self" you feel after a great nap.
One thing that I had heard of but never really realized how important it was until my second kid, is learning how to breath through the pain and transitions. Prenatal yoga really helped with that. One tip, is you want to make deeper noises. The screaming and high pitched noises won't help your progession and pain.
Also research all the different things about birth (medications, tools, labouring options, as well as anything c-section related). Literally anything can happen, and you should arm yourself with knowledge to make it as close to the best experience as you can.
I though the transition from 0-1 kid was a lot harder than from 1-2 kids, but DS2 was (and is) a pretty chill kid.
Breastfeeding for me was either incredibly difficult or super easy. DS1 was hard to latch on and we eventually switched to formula. DS2 got it right away. Both boys lost almost 10% of their body weight before my milk came in and that’s normal! I didn’t lose ANY weight until 6 months after DS2 was born even though I was EBF.
@krash_ I’m always cold, and I do remember shaking but at the time I attributed it to the cold. I’ve been binging ‘one born every minute’ on Prime lately, and there are so many moms who go through the shaking. They spent a chunk of time talking about it in one of the early first season episodes.
@CanadianGamerMom yes, the research is key! I felt confident going in that I had an idea of what I wanted/what was needed of me should anything arise.
@whatabout2ndbreakfast that spray is amazing!
I would say listen and take in the help that’s offered while you are in hospital. For me, I was shy and embarrassed about asking for help. I didn’t attend the BF class that was offered daily while in hospital, and I think if I had then I may have discovered his tongue tie sooner and saved us from some of our BF issues.
I suffered severe post partum anxiety with both kids and I definitely wasn't expecting it. I would just make sure you take care of YOU after birth and don't try to be a hero. Ask for help, take a shower, get outside for fresh air. And talk to someone if you're feeling down, can't sleep/sleep too much etc.
I also second having an open mind about labour and delivery. You can plan for an epidural and have no time and no choice but to do it unmedicated, you can plan vaginal delivery and end up with an emergency C etc. Its definitely good to have a plan but be open minded and don't beat yourself up if it goes differently!
1. If you plan to breastfeed, or pump for that matter, search now for resources, specifically a local breastfeeding support group and lactation consultants. The beginning is so hard to figure out, but I do think it's worth it to keep trying if that's what you really want to do. You will want some help in the beginning, and it does get easier most of the time. I found such an amazing community in my local breastfeeding support group. I went religiously every week for over a year after my son was born. These ladies became my friends, and they (along with the LC who hosted it) helped me wean from a nipple shield, became my first sounding board for telling my birth story (in tears, obviously), procure donor milk when my son wasn't gaining weight, and just became my first real group of mom friends. It was wonderful, I hope I get to experience a group like that again!
2. Postpartum Depression. I think it is brought up frequently in prenatal classes and books and STMs do bring it up and try to prepare FTMs for it, but it's so hard to understand what it might feel like. I guess, keep it on your radar, and TALK TO YOUR PARTNER. Mine felt like an identity crisis. I had imagined myself transforming into a mother and really enjoying every minute with my baby. I thought I wanted to quit working and be a stay-at-home-mom. I did that, and it just ended up making me feel empty. I loved my son, but I no longer felt like myself, and that wasn't my expectation of what PPD might be like, so it didn't occur to me for way too long that that's what was going on.
3. Ok 1 more, don't bring a ton of sh*t to the hospital. You will barely open the bag. I guess in COVID times if opportunities to have things delivered or your partner having limited opportunities to leave this might be different, but I brought entirely too much stuff into the delivery room and I just felt dumb! You really don't need much! And your baby especially doesn't need much. Like one outfit to leave in and the car seat, that's it. No diapers, wipes, pacifiers, lotions, nursing pillow, blankets, nothing. Don't bring a diaper bag!
DS: 6/1/18 (Pre-E; IUGR; seizures; NICU)
TTC #2: 12/2019
Sept 2020: HSG possible blocked right tube
Nov 2020: Letrozole + TI - BFN
Dec 2020: Letrozole + TI - BFP!!! EDD 9/18
@JustAnotherUsername16 this is so true! DH thought I was crazy for continuing to pump 3+ times a night and maybe 5 times a day even months after having DD but I felt so much guilt about "breast is best" and how much the pump cost when we were short on cash that I didn't want to switch to formula. If I had switched, or done half of each, I think I would've been a way more patient and kind mom because I would be getting the rest I badly needed. A side note - I saw a picture of a rubber nipple from like 1000ish years ago so even then they had to do BF substitutes! Our Kenyan friends use formula if they can afford it and goats milk if they can't, so the BF struggle has been for moms across time and across the world!
I was never a sleep when the baby sleeps person. That was my time to get stuff done around the house.
I agree with the don't over pack for the hospital. All I needed for the baby was going home outfit and car seat.
My biggest advice is take the help when offered and don't be afraid to ask for help when you need it. My daughter was a horrible eater. I joked it seemed like she thought she could live on air. We would both get so frustrated. Letting someone else take over is what we both needed.