She was ok with hiring one during the day so she can be ok with it at night. |
Honestly I would feel weird about having someone else in my house at night too. Plus I think it's pathetic that the go-to solution when a man doesn't want to do his share is to outsource it to another woman so the status quo can remain. |
That makes no sense. If you are ok with a sitter watching your newborn while you sleep during the day, then you can get ok with a sitter at night too. OP can’t make her husband do anything. It’s not fair but it’s true. She can initiate a divorce (with what time? She has a newborn!) or she can bring in some paid professional help, without his permission. |
There are male night nurses if it makes you feel better. |
Let's be real op wouldn't be getting any rest even with a day nanny because she would still be finding things to do and micromanaging the nanny. So if her husband isn't going to step up she's just going to have to tough it out until the baby is sleeping longer |
Or have a nap. |
This, plus also refusing to supplement more to free up more time. Both are very rigid, which is fine, but makes things much harder. |
+1 to all of this. And OP, I'm going to give an opinion that you are not going to like, but here it is - start learning to trust your gut. You've got a pediatrician micro-managing you and a lactation consultant micro-managing you and you are trying to do everything they say and also live up to your husband's expectations that you breastfeed. So, #1 - if it's really that important to your husband that you breastfeed he needs to step up and do a late night or early morning feed so you can rest. #2 - grill your pediatrician on the weight gain. You can feed an otherwise healthy newborn on demand. Was your baby low birth weight? Lose a lot of weight in the hospital? If he's not gaining as quickly as your ped would like what is the ped basing that on? Because something is not adding up if you have sufficient supply, are pumping, and supplementing. #3 - give yourself and your husband a break as much as you can. The newborn phase is HARD. |
This is how we did it too. |
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Girl, get up and feed your daggone baby and let the man sleep. This is a no brainer. He has to get up to work, you don't. Through the night feedings don't last forever. Put your big girl panties and feed the baby. Geesh. |
Get outta here. Take the baby to the doc every two weeks for how long?? Newborns don't stay newborns for long. After a few months the child won't even need through the night feeding. You sound ridiculous. She's home, she can nap when the baby naps so that she won't be sleep deprived for all these 5011 doc appointments you think they have. Smh. |
These new mothers are so soft. Who whines about this type of crap? My baby nursed wouldn't bottle feed and my husband didn't have breasts to feed the baby so guess who did? And guess what? I SURVIVED!! You chose to have a baby, this is what having a baby is for goodness' sakes. You're complaining like this baby will need nighttime feedings until he's 16. |
+1 |
Reading this made me so glad I coslept with my babies. Whip a boob out and go right back to sleep. No pumping. No washing parts. No babies crying at night. It’s the norm in so many other countries, but we make American mothers miserable with safe sleep advice because doctors can’t come out and say that cosleeping is only for nursing mothers who don’t use substances and are generally healthy (e.g. no morbid obesity and sleep apnea). Look up the seven Ss of safe cosleeping and save your sanity. |