Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t do very much postpartum but I am grateful I was able to shower every day. My DH would come home after a long 12 hour day at work and the first thing I would do is go and shower. It was my alone time and it made me feel much better. I still wore the same clothes day in and day out. But I did shower. Please find some time for yourself to shower. You will feel better.
Ok. I will make it a part to shower everyday and change my clothes. I don’t like spending money but I will order some more clothes.
You don't own seven outfits? You can't do a load of laundry halfway through the week? Come on, OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t listen to these people, OP. You’re doing great. I didn’t shower very much for the first month postpartum either. Once or twice a week and, like you mentioned, bidet. I didn’t get sweaty at all because it was the middle of winter. I had wipes for my boobs and underboobs if milk leaked. I did change my underwear and bra 4x a day, but wasn’t really wearing “real” clothes that I could go out in.
It was completely a season of life, and my husband was home every day and had that first two months off too. I started by wearing easy and loose dresses, then moved onto athleisure.
Take it easy, as long as you feel clean, that should be good enough. Ignore your husband or tell him he’s being a complete ass. His negativity sure doesn’t help. He can do more if he wants you to heal faster.
Thank you! I do change my underwear daily. I just don’t change my sweats out unless it’s really bad. I wipe my body down.
I think the biggest issue for is showering and laundry. I’m very small and bending to reach clothes is hard enough. Adding in everything else makes it challenging. I hate doing laundry because of it and will only do it if I have absolutely no clothes. My husband tries but often forgets to switch them over and I have to rewash and put in the dryer.
So ask your husband to move your clothes somewhere you can get them more easily! Ask him to put your load of laundry in the wash before eating dinner, and then in the dryer after dinner. Then take it out before going to bed. Not that hard, OP. You're being lazy here. I don't know if that's your natural way or you're depressed, but COME ON! Be a problem solver.
Anonymous wrote:If it is not severe depression, then it's just laziness.
Sounds like severe crippling depression though. Most people who have that don't realize it.
Your husband should take the kiddo and leave you be for a while, while you get yourself together.
Or better yet OP, you should leave or check into a facility if you can afford it.
You sound like you might harm the child or yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please shower each day. You will feel better.
Showering for me is a task. I’m in a lot of pain. The herniated disc presses on my sciatic nerve. Standing up, bending, and walking is really painful. I can only stand for very short periods before the pain becomes too much.
1. Could you fit a plastic lawn chair in your shower? DH leaves it on the shower at all times, unless he is showering. You do not life the chair. DH lifts the chair. That would make showing more restful.
2. What does your doctor say about this? Does she know how hard showering is for you? Ask her if you’d qualify for social services. If you don’t qualify for government assistance of some kind, I’d start calling local churches. Some old lady somewhere is done having kids and would love to hold your baby while you shower. Say that you prefer people who already volunteer in the church’s childcare program. Those ladies should have passed a basic background check.
Anonymous wrote:Put a chair in the shower so you can sit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t listen to these people, OP. You’re doing great. I didn’t shower very much for the first month postpartum either. Once or twice a week and, like you mentioned, bidet. I didn’t get sweaty at all because it was the middle of winter. I had wipes for my boobs and underboobs if milk leaked. I did change my underwear and bra 4x a day, but wasn’t really wearing “real” clothes that I could go out in.
It was completely a season of life, and my husband was home every day and had that first two months off too. I started by wearing easy and loose dresses, then moved onto athleisure.
Take it easy, as long as you feel clean, that should be good enough. Ignore your husband or tell him he’s being a complete ass. His negativity sure doesn’t help. He can do more if he wants you to heal faster.
Thank you! I do change my underwear daily. I just don’t change my sweats out unless it’s really bad. I wipe my body down.
I think the biggest issue for is showering and laundry. I’m very small and bending to reach clothes is hard enough. Adding in everything else makes it challenging. I hate doing laundry because of it and will only do it if I have absolutely no clothes. My husband tries but often forgets to switch them over and I have to rewash and put in the dryer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you need a lot of support right now. Back pain from an herniated disc while tending a newborn is a lot. It would be hard to get out of bad daily for most people in this condition. Are your parents nearby?
My parents don’t live nearby and can’t help anyway. Older with health issues. My family has kids of their own and work.
We make a little over 200 combined. Way more than the average American, but definitely far less than most on this forum. We can afford childcare but definitely not an expensive doula. The ones I’ve looked into charge like $45-60/hr. We can’t find a nanny willing to work less than 30 hours.
It’s been bad. I’m usually a very clean person. I make it my best to make sure I don’t smell. I take care of what I can. I’m just in so much pain that doing basic tasks takes so much out of me that I don’t want to shower. All I want to do it sit and ice/heat it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t do very much postpartum but I am grateful I was able to shower every day. My DH would come home after a long 12 hour day at work and the first thing I would do is go and shower. It was my alone time and it made me feel much better. I still wore the same clothes day in and day out. But I did shower. Please find some time for yourself to shower. You will feel better.
Ok. I will make it a part to shower everyday and change my clothes. I don’t like spending money but I will order some more clothes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please shower each day. You will feel better.
Showering for me is a task. I’m in a lot of pain. The herniated disc presses on my sciatic nerve. Standing up, bending, and walking is really painful. I can only stand for very short periods before the pain becomes too much.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t do very much postpartum but I am grateful I was able to shower every day. My DH would come home after a long 12 hour day at work and the first thing I would do is go and shower. It was my alone time and it made me feel much better. I still wore the same clothes day in and day out. But I did shower. Please find some time for yourself to shower. You will feel better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you need a lot of support right now. Back pain from an herniated disc while tending a newborn is a lot. It would be hard to get out of bad daily for most people in this condition. Are your parents nearby?
My parents don’t live nearby and can’t help anyway. Older with health issues. My family has kids of their own and work.
We make a little over 200 combined. Way more than the average American, but definitely far less than most on this forum. We can afford childcare but definitely not an expensive doula. The ones I’ve looked into charge like $45-60/hr. We can’t find a nanny willing to work less than 30 hours.
It’s been bad. I’m usually a very clean person. I make it my best to make sure I don’t smell. I take care of what I can. I’m just in so much pain that doing basic tasks takes so much out of me that I don’t want to shower. All I want to do it sit and ice/heat it.
You do make enough to hire help. It is a matter of priorities and your husband isn't making you one