Anonymous wrote:I also would have lined up a therapist and gotten prepared for the reality that my body after kids was gonna feel like a foreign place and accepting that you can never get the pre kids body back. I really thought I was just gonna have a few stretch marks and do some kegels and it was all gonna go back. Ha. Ha. Ha.
Anonymous wrote:I also would have lined up a therapist and gotten prepared for the reality that my body after kids was gonna feel like a foreign place and accepting that you can never get the pre kids body back. I really thought I was just gonna have a few stretch marks and do some kegels and it was all gonna go back. Ha. Ha. Ha.

Anonymous wrote:I will add that you cannot hold a newborn too much and there is nothing wrong with chilling on t he couch with your baby on your chest and just enjoying it! They are out of the newborn phase before you know it and the first few weeks when they are teeny tiny and snuggly will be gone quickly. I fully admit I am a total newborn lover so I really loved the early days (other than being exhausted al the time).
Anonymous wrote:I had a baby last fall and wanted to breastfeed and focus on nourishing my body post-partum. I made freezer meals to make things much easier and know that I was getting good nutrition for my body and to make milk. I also bought a ton of one hand and easy snacks for the first couple of weeks that I didn’t normally buy.
We got the Snoo. It has been amazing with sleep and I didn’t have to spend a long time rocking to sleep during the sleep deprived times.
I got weekly massages and it was amazing. I splurged on post-part skincare items to make things feel more luxurious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Assuming for a second that you're a woman married to a man. Or a woman in a live-in relationship with a man, advice still applies. And that you both have jobs.
Make sure you and your husband have figured out the whole chore/responsibilities thing BEFORE the first baby comes. Not necessarily for the postpartum period (that's unpredictable, you're just surviving), but in general. Is he handling at least one household area of responsibility, completely, without any input/reminders/nagging/help from you? Cleaning/cooking/laundry/grocery shopping?
How about baby stuff and the mental load? Who is in charge of making sure you always have diapers? That you have clothes in the next size (they go through a lot of sizes early on!) clean and ready to go into drawers? Who will deal with communication/paperwork/logistics with daycare or the nanny? Who is going to figure out how to sleep train? Who is going to figure out how to introduce solids? Who is going to book all the pediatrician appointments?
I'll tell you right now - if none of this is figured out in advance, it's you, the woman. If you opt to "play it by ear" - it's you. Figure this out NOW and divide up areas of responsibility.
Oh, and read some sleep training books and pick one you like before the baby gets here.
This is great advice!
Anonymous wrote:Assuming for a second that you're a woman married to a man. Or a woman in a live-in relationship with a man, advice still applies. And that you both have jobs.
Make sure you and your husband have figured out the whole chore/responsibilities thing BEFORE the first baby comes. Not necessarily for the postpartum period (that's unpredictable, you're just surviving), but in general. Is he handling at least one household area of responsibility, completely, without any input/reminders/nagging/help from you? Cleaning/cooking/laundry/grocery shopping?
How about baby stuff and the mental load? Who is in charge of making sure you always have diapers? That you have clothes in the next size (they go through a lot of sizes early on!) clean and ready to go into drawers? Who will deal with communication/paperwork/logistics with daycare or the nanny? Who is going to figure out how to sleep train? Who is going to figure out how to introduce solids? Who is going to book all the pediatrician appointments?
I'll tell you right now - if none of this is figured out in advance, it's you, the woman. If you opt to "play it by ear" - it's you. Figure this out NOW and divide up areas of responsibility.
Oh, and read some sleep training books and pick one you like before the baby gets here.