Some Thoughts on Becoming a Mother
A few months ago, an acquaintance asked me if I had advice about raising a son. I think I said to just let him play in the dirt and have lots of rags on hand for clean up. Later, I thought about things some more and came up with what follows below. A lot of it is stuff I'm still trying to learn and some is stuff I wish I'd know when I had my first kid.
Expect that you will be utterly
overwhelmed with a newborn. Expect to get very, very little done
that's visible to anyone. In truth, you will be working harder than
you probably ever have before. Your body is producing nourishment
for your child, as well as healing from the most Herculean effort it
has ever performed. The Church in her wisdom gives you some time off
from services. Take it. Embrace it. I was *barely* ready to go
back to church at six weeks postpartum. I think I took a very long
nap that afternoon. Think of those six weeks as the Church giving
you permission to generally skip out on commitments. If people come
over to see the baby, they have to help you. Period. You should not
have to play hostess to anyone. If you're used to being a bit of a
super woman, learn to ask for help.
Speaking of sleep, whatever you have to
do to get enough to function, do it. Lots of people recommend
co-sleeping, at least for the first few months, as a way to
facilitate sleep. I was surprised that my second child really didn't
seem to like sleeping with me after about a month. He did much
better when I moved him to a bassinet in my room, then into a crib in
his own room. I don't know why; my first son would probably still be
sleeping with us if we let him.
Be sure to get plenty to eat. I
remember one afternoon, with my first baby, being famished and yet
feeling unable to set my son down for a second to get up and eat,
because he would cry. Finally, my husband came home, took the baby
from me and ordered me to eat. Don't let it come to that! Keep
protein-rich snacks within easy reach, as well as plenty of water.
Get a sling so you can carry your baby and use your hands. And,
really? It wouldn't have killed either me or the baby if I had just
put him down and made myself a sandwich.
Try, as much as possible, to let go of
judgements about whether you are a good mother or a bad mother. If
you love your child and are trying your best to do what's best for
him, you are a good mother. Trust that. Really, truly, you are a
good mother. YOU ARE A GOOD MOTHER.
Let go of perfectionism. Life is not
perfect. You cannot give your child perfection. You CAN give him love.
A few practical notes about screaming
infants: Get Happiest Baby on the Block,
read it and internalize it. You may feel silly swaddling a teddy
bear or a pillow, but do it anyway. If you get the short stick and
have a colicky baby, you will be so grateful not to be trying to
learn to calm him on the fly. My second was colicky. There were
nights when he would scream for four hours solid. Even with the
Happiest Baby techniques. Sometimes my ears would burn, and I would
feel the adrenaline coursing through my limbs. I could see where the
edge was at those times. The edge, falling over the edge, terrified
me. That was when I knew I had to put the baby in the swing and
leave the room. I would swaddle him tightly, secure him in the baby
swing (a dead useful piece of baby equipment you can find for a song
on craig's list), and go drink some wine and eat something. I
wouldn't go back to him until I could feel that the adrenaline was
gone. Usually he would be asleep. Sometimes he would want to nurse
and then sleep, even though I'd been trying to nurse him before.
Please, please, if you have a colicky baby, don't let anyone guilt
trip you if you feel afraid or angry at your baby. It's just a
feeling. It doesn't make you a bad mother. It just means you've
been pushed very, very far. Know when to call in reinforcements. If
there aren't any, know when you have to give yourself a break before
you break down utterly.
"It takes a village" has
become trite, but it's repeated because it's true. We are raising
children in a very strange way--away from kinfolk and friends.
Cultivate friendships with other parents whose parenting you mesh
with. If you need advice about how to deal with difficulties, call
your parents or in-laws first, as long as you trust them to give you
good advice. If you don't feel you can ask your family, turn to your
friends. People who know you and know your husband and your child
are going to be able to give much better help and advice than
strangers on a message board or books.
Be cautious about accepting advice that
doesn't feel right to you. You are the expert on your child. You
can learn a lot from books about the bell curve of normal child
development, but you can't get a recipe for how to raise the perfect
child. There aren't recipes for this. Anyone who claims otherwise
is a charlatan who should not be trusted. Beware, especially, of any
advice that puts you in an adversarial relationship to your child.
Everyone in a family is on the same team. I'm sorry to say that
there are a lot of Protestant child raising books that are based in
erroneous ideas of what a human person is and which therefore
advocate this adversarial approach. While you might be able to glean
some useful tools or ideas, I would be very, very cautious about
them, especially as a vulnerable new parent. If you can find them, I
highly recommend the Sr. Magdalene books on children. She may not
have had physical children, but she has a heart full of love for
them. I was blessed to meet her and
hear her talk before I got married. When I feel very down about my
mothering, reading a few pages of her books can set me straight
again. In person, she is full of love and warmth, and this comes out
beautifully in her books as well.
A final thought:
there is a lot in the ether now about losing the baby weight and
getting back into your pre-pregnancy jeans. Just be aware that
though you may lose the weight, you will probably never get your
pre-pregnancy shape back. We are, as a culture, deeply uncomfortable
with bodies that tell our life stories. The thing is, motherhood
imprints itself on your very bones. I have read of anthropologists
who claim they can differentiate between women who have given birth and those who haven't, even a
skeleton, by examining the pelvic bones. Embrace the fact that your
body is now the body of a mother, as much as you can. It can be
hard--nothing in our culture tells us to love our stretch marks or
our leaky boobs or any of the other changes that go with becoming
mothers. But we should! We should love our strong bodies that
nourished a life, and we should go easy on ourselves and our bodies
as we recover from the great work of gestating and birthing a human
being. Some women are able to start working out and running right
away. Others of us need to ease back into vigorous activity. Give
yourself permission to go slowly if you need to.
Comments
And, just to be clear, I'm in no way advocating letting an infant 'cry it out' when I said I should have put my first child down to make a sandwich. I just meant that my basic needs needed to be met, too.