I'd rather slam my nuts in a door jamb than live through 1 day of postpartum again.
I'd rather slam my nuts in a door jamb than live through 1 day of postpartum again.
Be watchful of postpartum depression. My wife had it with both our first two kids. It's something to take very seriously.My wife and I were recently blessed with our first child--a son who's now 3 months old.
She's proving to be an incredible mother. But dear LORD what is up with women and baby brain? Now, on a given day she is driving in the wrong lane and wondering why the cars are coming at her. Or heating soup on the wrong burner and wondering why the potholder is on fire. Or walking the dog by holding his collar while the leash is unused in her other hand.All of this would seem to imperil a newborn. Meanwhile my situational awareness is dialed up as if I'm in the field, on a stalk.
BUT she can also read our little dude to a "T." With the slightest peep or cry she's up to nurse him from a dead sleep. And she has this intuitive sense of what he needs, and can remember his last feeding, last diaper, his daycare teachers' names, etc., etc. Watching the connection between them is heartwarming and absolutely amazing...and this is coming from someone who feels connected and deeply involved in his son's life.
It makes me wonder what your experience has been and if you think there's a biological, evolutionary explanation to how/if men and women change when they're raising a new baby. We laugh a lot and we're happy to have each other and be on this journey together. But they way we've changed, it feels beyond fatigue, to something more fundamental...
I've found that if I specifically know I'm going to be the one getting up with the baby that night, I'll wake up at the slightest noise. But if I know my wife will get up I'll sleep through the whole thing. I think some of it just comes down to what you're expected to do.With the slightest peep or cry she's up to nurse him from a dead sleep.
As others have said, do not underestimate what sleep deprivation can do to a brain.With the slightest peep or cry she's up to nurse him from a dead sleep.
No matter what physical feat I accomplish in my life it will never compare to what my wife accomplished with our three kids. Simply amazing how she could function while doing what she did.
Now that our kids are 13, 10, and 5 things are a little easier.
Try to enjoy the crazy and I hope you do no experience any serious mental or physical health concerns.
I could not agree with this more. My 1st sons mom had a hard time and would basically hand the baby over as soon as I got home from work and would be my responsibility until I went to work the next day.If it works for your family, try to get your wife to pump milk so you can do middle-of-the-night feedings and diapers some of the time. Don't get me wrong--it sucks! But dads are already at a huge disadvantage in bonding with kiddos... but doing those early feedings and such help you establish a bond with your kid that lasts a lifetime. Pumping may seem like a waste of time in the beginning because your wife will just be getting up to pump instead of nurse... but it ends up paying dividends soon enough in letting her get more sleep, go to Target for no reason, have lunch with a friend, etc. That will have a major impact on your wife's metal functioning. All of that can help stave off post-partum depression.
My first son (who's now 16) was a super colicky baby... very hard to get to sleep... never stayed asleep for longer than 45 minutes.... really tough to nurse, etc. When he was 3 months old, my wife left her wallet on top of the car in a parking lot. Within minutes some meth-head had stolen her identity... and we STILL have headaches from that. Sucks.
Do whatever you can to get your wife more sleep. Don't be that dad that lets mom do all the hard work in those early months... you will never catch up.
My wife and I were recently blessed with our first child--a son who's now 3 months old.
She's proving to be an incredible mother. But dear LORD what is up with women and baby brain? Now, on a given day she is driving in the wrong lane and wondering why the cars are coming at her. Or heating soup on the wrong burner and wondering why the potholder is on fire. Or walking the dog by holding his collar while the leash is unused in her other hand.All of this would seem to imperil a newborn. Meanwhile my situational awareness is dialed up as if I'm in the field, on a stalk.
BUT she can also read our little dude to a "T." With the slightest peep or cry she's up to nurse him from a dead sleep. And she has this intuitive sense of what he needs, and can remember his last feeding, last diaper, his daycare teachers' names, etc., etc. Watching the connection between them is heartwarming and absolutely amazing...and this is coming from someone who feels connected and deeply involved in his son's life.
It makes me wonder what your experience has been and if you think there's a biological, evolutionary explanation to how/if men and women change when they're raising a new baby. We laugh a lot and we're happy to have each other and be on this journey together. But they way we've changed, it feels beyond fatigue, to something more fundamental...