Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had 35wk twins and pumped. It was tough.
My advice is to put DH in charge of as much as you can (washing pump parts, errands etc).
For food, maybe order some easy things from Costco or supermarket instead? Rotisserie chicken, bagged salad etc. ask DH to cut up a ton of fruit for you (I was obsessed with fruit at that stage- berries, melon etc). I also loved cut veggies with spinach artichoke dip and that sort of thing. Some of the Costco premade stuff is not bad (chicken pot pie or chicken soup, taco platters, take and bake pasta dishes etc). Definitely better than fast food IMO. Also lots of good stuff in the refrigerator section. Maybe some cold sandwich stuff if you like- easy to safely eat with one hand while holding a baby. Also muffins, quick breads or bagels with cream cheese etc.
I will do this. We are just wrapping our heads around it all and have been eating snacks and delivery. My husband had to work this week because to finish up work before he takes leave. He will be home for the next 8 weeks starting next week.
No reason for the both of you to be home, take alternating leave. Preemies require more care for longer time, you don’t just send these types of babies to daycare at 8-12 weeks. That’s absurd!
Anonymous wrote:What’s wrong with takeout? I love takeout. Supplement with formula.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had 35wk twins and pumped. It was tough.
My advice is to put DH in charge of as much as you can (washing pump parts, errands etc).
For food, maybe order some easy things from Costco or supermarket instead? Rotisserie chicken, bagged salad etc. ask DH to cut up a ton of fruit for you (I was obsessed with fruit at that stage- berries, melon etc). I also loved cut veggies with spinach artichoke dip and that sort of thing. Some of the Costco premade stuff is not bad (chicken pot pie or chicken soup, taco platters, take and bake pasta dishes etc). Definitely better than fast food IMO. Also lots of good stuff in the refrigerator section. Maybe some cold sandwich stuff if you like- easy to safely eat with one hand while holding a baby. Also muffins, quick breads or bagels with cream cheese etc.
I will do this. We are just wrapping our heads around it all and have been eating snacks and delivery. My husband had to work this week because to finish up work before he takes leave. He will be home for the next 8 weeks starting next week.
Anonymous wrote:I had 35wk twins and pumped. It was tough.
My advice is to put DH in charge of as much as you can (washing pump parts, errands etc).
For food, maybe order some easy things from Costco or supermarket instead? Rotisserie chicken, bagged salad etc. ask DH to cut up a ton of fruit for you (I was obsessed with fruit at that stage- berries, melon etc). I also loved cut veggies with spinach artichoke dip and that sort of thing. Some of the Costco premade stuff is not bad (chicken pot pie or chicken soup, taco platters, take and bake pasta dishes etc). Definitely better than fast food IMO. Also lots of good stuff in the refrigerator section. Maybe some cold sandwich stuff if you like- easy to safely eat with one hand while holding a baby. Also muffins, quick breads or bagels with cream cheese etc.
Anonymous wrote:Take the next 2-5years off and learn to adapt. Cook when you can, feed when you must, but try to relax and just be a mom.
Anonymous wrote:I hear you, OP. My son was born at 35 weeks but sent straight home (no NICU) and I felt helpless. He wasn’t like every other baby. He wasn’t “awake” until I had to go back to work at 6 weeks. Maternity leave was a stressful sleepless mess. I’d feed, then I’d put him down and pump, sleep 30 minutes if I was lucky, and he’d be up again. He never had enough strength to nurse fully, despite continually trying. Letdowns caused him to sputter and choke, wasting milk. Lactation consultants had no advice other that to pump.
Order the takeout. This will be a blip on the radar in a few years. Your body will recover from a month of takeout food faster than it will recover from more stress meal planning/shopping/cooking.
When I had to go back to work I gave up pumping and went to formula and it was life changing. You may be able to make it work—I could not. My son is now 11 years old and brilliant and right in the middle of the pack for height/weight. In the moment I sobbed and cried that I was failing my baby when in reality I was saving myself.
Realize that as long as she is fed and changed and loved, everything else is extra. Take care of yourself, even if it means paper plates and a laundry service for a few months.
Anonymous wrote:Order healthy takeout