And yet, I'm here, upstairs at 11pm, while baby J cries and screams. I hate the crying. I hate the screaming even more. I hate the uncertainty, as a mom and baby who have always had a complex relationship to breastfeeding, of whether or not he's hungry 4 hours after his last feed. He's slept already, at 6 months, with only one feed a night and I think he can do it, but I hate not having any other way but a quick pat and a few hums of his sleeptime song, to communicate "not feeding time yet". Last night it was an hour, from 10pm to 11pm. I was in the room for about half of it.
I'm now trying to just go in every 15 min., once I've left. (I still sleep in there for my ability not to wake too much during the middle of the night feed but also because right now this family is getting more sleep with us each in separate rooms).
I hate how now, after a month of colds and complications, or ear infections, coughs, croup and teething, he's more insistent, cries louder. And that the suggestion is to have time go all night without a feed. And while training him on that, to let him cry through teething pain and cold symptoms but not serious problems like croup or an ear infection. Even if I agreed with that plan, how are you supposed to know where one ends and the other begins? Or a fever, or a dirty diaper? This is the part about sleep training I hate and may not be able to weather so well. Because although I believe it can work, and will, I think it means letting your baby cry in pain or discomfort sometimes because you're waiting him or her out. Like tonight - I'm waiting for it to be less than an hour, less than last night's crying. And if he was having real problems, it would mean I was letting him suffer those for up to an hour before actually responding.
So there, I hate sleep training because it involves the real potential for letting a sick, feverish, or soiled baby cry for an hour. Or a baby who feels hunger. That is part of the deal. And that is shitty.
It doesn't mean I won't do it, but it does mean I'll do it my way. Because the guilt is on me for this, no one else. And I don't like to sweep the ugly parts of a process under the rug so that I'm more comfortable with it. I want to to be honest about what, exactly, a process like this entails.
11:15pm. 30 minutes after waking, and he seems to be asleep, just at the mark where I would have gone in again to pat, fix his pajama if needed, smell the air, touch his forehead and hum a few bars. I expect he'll now wake between 1 and 2am to feed and I'll feed him.
11:18pm. Nope. Still awake, another wail comes out of the bedroom. My heart sinks a bit again. My body silently prays that he falls asleep. I hate this.
11:27pm. I've gone in, unhooked his hands from the crib and put him back in sitting or laying position a few times - baby J can stand now, which is what he does immediately when he wakes this week - and patted his bum, told him it is time to sleep, hummed a few bars. Hating. No stinky diaper smell, no fever. Came upstairs again to, oh cruel world, have a snack while I refuse to feed him. Yeah, feeling like a lovely human being right now. He's sounding calmed down again, but I'll wait another 10 minutes before I head back down there to try to go back to sleep. What if he is still awake and starts crying again?
That is the hardest part of this for me, not knowing my breaking point where I go pick him up and feed him. I feel very uncomfortable with "as long as it takes," because of the potential for things to go wrong. And to turn off my responding to his cries. That is the other thing this process does, makes you start to ignore baby cries and that isn't all good.
11:33pm. Whimpers and cries start again. Crap, crap, crap. Silence. What if he makes it to an hour? Then what? What do I do? What if I feed him tonight, at midnight? Another crappy thing about this process that I have yet to write about - then I feel like a failure at the process and like I've wasted his and my time maybe. And this part, the not wanting to "fail" at sleep training is another thing that raises my warning signal. This letting him cry a while longer so I don't fail at something that is made up, no one seems to know why or how it works just that it does in a real coarse way. Stupid.
11:46pm. Fuck. It doesn't seem any better. I went in again, same shit. I'm getting angry now, at the whole sleep training community. Bullshit stories of "crying an hour the first night and then sleeping through until 7am, and then sleeping 11 hours straight every night since". All I know is, 14 more minutes and I'll feed him, feel like a failure, wonder when he will ever learn to sleep better and I will get to sleep a long stretch again, and hope like hell he doesn't wake up at 3am. I hate this hate this hate this. I am not in control and I hate this.
Quiet again. But my whole body is now awake and on alert and not believing that I'll be lucky tonight, that I won't have to make the decision in 14 minutes.
12 midnight. Quiet. Shit. I mean, sure, good, but just as long as last night, if not longer. I hate this. I've been up for 1 hour 15 minutes, hated most of it, and now I need to go back to sleep and pray it doesn't happen exactly the same tomorrow night, Because 3 nights, of crying at 10 or 11pm...that I most likely my limit. I back off then, and feed him a few times a night again and wait until I'm okay letting him go all night without a feed and try again.
Saturday, October 11, 2014
Going back to work
There is nothing like making a mistake to learn. And nothing like experiencing a situation first-hand to make you aware of the subtleties of the psychology surrounding it.
I’ve been thinking about how the difference between offering the option to stop the tenure clock for maternity leave and automatically stopping it affects women and the groups in which they work. About how the second option normalizes the practice instead of making it something you have to worry about doing lest someone think you are lazy or not capable enough. And about how to think about other options, in service of work-life balance, could be made standard instead of having to be sought out in secrecy (or not at all) - counseling, for instance. What if every new group member in a research group had a one hour chat with a counselor or social worker who could talk about a variety of issues, from depression to communication with the group leader or peers, to to settling into a new culture (for those from another country)?
And while I’m thinking about this, I find myself having to pump milk, during the work day, at a new job. I’m just starting to meet people, and here I am, worried about putting a bottle of milk in the group refrigerator without its cooler pack. I should have brought a paper bag for it, I realize, because putting a warm bottle in a thermos casing in a refrigerator is kind of defeating the purpose of both the fridge and the thermos casing. There is food in that bottle, so of course it can go in a food fridge, but the fact that it came from my breasts instead of from the udder of a cow makes a difference. I worry about offending someone.
Part of me thinks “well, if pin-up posters and sexist comments have happened in these halls” (hypothetically), then who cares if I make someone uncomfortable. But a bottle of breastmilk is not the same as a pin-up poster. It is food. I shouldn’t even have to justify it. And yet I’m keenly aware of feeling like I do. A jar of baby food or a box of formula would be fine - they came from other teats and from the earth, but not something of a human breast.
Hmm.
Nothing like experiencing something firsthand to make you think, “yes, there should be a dedicated pumping room, with a lock, and safe fridge in each building.” And about 2 hours ago, I wasn’t sure.
I’ve been thinking about how the difference between offering the option to stop the tenure clock for maternity leave and automatically stopping it affects women and the groups in which they work. About how the second option normalizes the practice instead of making it something you have to worry about doing lest someone think you are lazy or not capable enough. And about how to think about other options, in service of work-life balance, could be made standard instead of having to be sought out in secrecy (or not at all) - counseling, for instance. What if every new group member in a research group had a one hour chat with a counselor or social worker who could talk about a variety of issues, from depression to communication with the group leader or peers, to to settling into a new culture (for those from another country)?
And while I’m thinking about this, I find myself having to pump milk, during the work day, at a new job. I’m just starting to meet people, and here I am, worried about putting a bottle of milk in the group refrigerator without its cooler pack. I should have brought a paper bag for it, I realize, because putting a warm bottle in a thermos casing in a refrigerator is kind of defeating the purpose of both the fridge and the thermos casing. There is food in that bottle, so of course it can go in a food fridge, but the fact that it came from my breasts instead of from the udder of a cow makes a difference. I worry about offending someone.
Part of me thinks “well, if pin-up posters and sexist comments have happened in these halls” (hypothetically), then who cares if I make someone uncomfortable. But a bottle of breastmilk is not the same as a pin-up poster. It is food. I shouldn’t even have to justify it. And yet I’m keenly aware of feeling like I do. A jar of baby food or a box of formula would be fine - they came from other teats and from the earth, but not something of a human breast.
Hmm.
Nothing like experiencing something firsthand to make you think, “yes, there should be a dedicated pumping room, with a lock, and safe fridge in each building.” And about 2 hours ago, I wasn’t sure.
Thursday, September 11, 2014
5 months along
Oh, August, you kind of just blew by us, didn't you? We have a 2-toothed, sitting and crawling bubbly boy in our household now, who likes daycare, who doesn't use a pacifier anymore (which is 3 years less than his sister), but who is still getting up to feed a few times a night. Ugh. Tired. Work starting soon and I'm tired.
An attack of head lice and the loss of my wallet (with all kids' IDs as well) has made for a busier month than I'd hoped, given that both kids are now at school some of the time. It mostly means we're not paying a babysitter for me to get bills and errands done and a nap in once every few days.
Did I mention the tired?
I was so sure I'd be rested and ready to work by now, but I've at least gotten my hair cut (and no comments from the stylist about foreign creatures in my roots...whew!). A bit of lipstick and hopefully no one will notice that I still can't remember some 5% of English words or what day of the week it is.
And then there is this mom, over there, with her baby, calmly breastfeeding. He looks around every once in a while, sometimes just pauses, looks deep into her eyes and coos. And then goes back to feeding. He tries to sit up when he needs to burp. Those two look like they're a natural pair. I'd hate her, but she's actually me. It took anti-reflux medicine and 5 months of developing, patience, being okay with half feeds and writhing and all else, but here we are. My baby boy has learned to breast feed. Just near the end of it for us. It caught me unawares, and the stares and coos still stop time and offer me this bubble of wonderful I get to inhabit once a day. It is short, that bubble, but I try to fill it out with my whole self. There will be no photos or videos of it, because they might disrupt it, and it is short-lived as it is. But I will stop and be there, as present as I can be, for those 2 or 3 minutes. Because the rest of life, in its crazy, tantrumy, sleep-deprived and never enough clean glasses glory is soon upon me again. And my little bonding moment bubble is popped.
But at least it happened.
An attack of head lice and the loss of my wallet (with all kids' IDs as well) has made for a busier month than I'd hoped, given that both kids are now at school some of the time. It mostly means we're not paying a babysitter for me to get bills and errands done and a nap in once every few days.
Did I mention the tired?
I was so sure I'd be rested and ready to work by now, but I've at least gotten my hair cut (and no comments from the stylist about foreign creatures in my roots...whew!). A bit of lipstick and hopefully no one will notice that I still can't remember some 5% of English words or what day of the week it is.
And then there is this mom, over there, with her baby, calmly breastfeeding. He looks around every once in a while, sometimes just pauses, looks deep into her eyes and coos. And then goes back to feeding. He tries to sit up when he needs to burp. Those two look like they're a natural pair. I'd hate her, but she's actually me. It took anti-reflux medicine and 5 months of developing, patience, being okay with half feeds and writhing and all else, but here we are. My baby boy has learned to breast feed. Just near the end of it for us. It caught me unawares, and the stares and coos still stop time and offer me this bubble of wonderful I get to inhabit once a day. It is short, that bubble, but I try to fill it out with my whole self. There will be no photos or videos of it, because they might disrupt it, and it is short-lived as it is. But I will stop and be there, as present as I can be, for those 2 or 3 minutes. Because the rest of life, in its crazy, tantrumy, sleep-deprived and never enough clean glasses glory is soon upon me again. And my little bonding moment bubble is popped.
But at least it happened.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Not so sexy
I haven't shaved my legs for over a year now.
They're furry. Softer hair than at first, but still, dark and furry.
When I started this experiment I thought that eventually the sight of hairy legs and heels would look normal to me. Or feminine. That my definition of feminine, or, of sexy, would change.
It has and it hasn't. I think my notion of feminine, as being what a female human looks like, has started to change. She looks somewhat like a male human, and since they are mammals, she has body hair. Body hair does not hinder reproduction or pretty much any other human activity she might undertake.
As for the notion of "sexy", that one is different. I think that in this year I've become more and more aware of how often women are judged on their sexiness alone. Or their prettiness. Or their femininity-as-defined-by-magazines-and-media. Hairy legs aren't very sexy, then.
But the point is, who cares? Why do women need to care if they look sexy when they walk out of the door in the morning? What does looking sexy have to do with working, with mothering, with being a friend, with walking, talking, driving, flying, reading, or going out to enjoy yourself? Nothing.
I don't give men a second glance, usually, as to how they are dressed, or how their body looks. Why do I, and we as a society, do that to women?
They're furry. Softer hair than at first, but still, dark and furry.
When I started this experiment I thought that eventually the sight of hairy legs and heels would look normal to me. Or feminine. That my definition of feminine, or, of sexy, would change.
It has and it hasn't. I think my notion of feminine, as being what a female human looks like, has started to change. She looks somewhat like a male human, and since they are mammals, she has body hair. Body hair does not hinder reproduction or pretty much any other human activity she might undertake.
As for the notion of "sexy", that one is different. I think that in this year I've become more and more aware of how often women are judged on their sexiness alone. Or their prettiness. Or their femininity-as-defined-by-magazines-and-media. Hairy legs aren't very sexy, then.
But the point is, who cares? Why do women need to care if they look sexy when they walk out of the door in the morning? What does looking sexy have to do with working, with mothering, with being a friend, with walking, talking, driving, flying, reading, or going out to enjoy yourself? Nothing.
I don't give men a second glance, usually, as to how they are dressed, or how their body looks. Why do I, and we as a society, do that to women?
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Control control control
Ohmigodseriously, stop. Just stop, I tell myself after the fact. Stop trying to force your kid to do what you want. What is it with wanting to control others? To get them to stop picking their nose so much it bleeds, for instance. Ooh, sounds serious. The kid should really stop that.
Why?
Because it will keep bothering her, at which point, especially when tired, she will keep bothering me.
Hmm. Will she die of this condition?
No.
Will I?
.....no.
I have this habit of trying to verbally coerce my kid to stop doing something, or to say thank you or to share or to...whatever it is I want. And while part of that action is well meaning, another part is about control. About winning. I have some ideas where this desire in me comes from, but what I'm sure of is that it is not something I want to keep doing. Making her scared so that she'll do something. Or ashamed. Or the like.
I don't like a part of myself right after we've had this kind of interaction, which tells me there is something not quite noble about it.
So my new mantra is: "Ask. Listen. Let it go...for at least a day." Basically, find out why she does it. Listen to her. Maybe explain why you don't want her to do it (but not with exaggerated consequences) And, really, just drop it for 24-hours. She won't die. I won't die. And she'll get to be in control of herself. Which is how I think it should be.
Why?
Because it will keep bothering her, at which point, especially when tired, she will keep bothering me.
Hmm. Will she die of this condition?
No.
Will I?
.....no.
I have this habit of trying to verbally coerce my kid to stop doing something, or to say thank you or to share or to...whatever it is I want. And while part of that action is well meaning, another part is about control. About winning. I have some ideas where this desire in me comes from, but what I'm sure of is that it is not something I want to keep doing. Making her scared so that she'll do something. Or ashamed. Or the like.
I don't like a part of myself right after we've had this kind of interaction, which tells me there is something not quite noble about it.
So my new mantra is: "Ask. Listen. Let it go...for at least a day." Basically, find out why she does it. Listen to her. Maybe explain why you don't want her to do it (but not with exaggerated consequences) And, really, just drop it for 24-hours. She won't die. I won't die. And she'll get to be in control of herself. Which is how I think it should be.
Thursday, June 19, 2014
I guess it isn't colic, then.
Colic is supposed to peak at 6 weeks. We're way past that, and let's just say that intestinal gas issues still come up with a vengance. Not every day, which makes me hyper-vigilant about what I ate the day before, but enough that this baby can be tough to put down. He needs to be carried, soothed, if I want to have quiet. If I was okay with screaming, well, that'd be different.
So he's just had a tough 24 hours, which begs the question...why am I unable to sleep at 2am? Hint: it isn't because I'm so well rested from the day. Perhaps it is the opposite, that my brain thinks I need alone time and has decided to provide it in the middle of the night. My night brain doesn't seem to be in consultation with my day brain - the one that has to do all the soothing and not-sleeping.
Here I am, then. Awake. And I can feel the buzz that means I won't be asleep for another hour at least. Lest you be tempted to tell me to stop using a computer, I was already awake for an hour, in a dark room, doing breathing and abdominal muscle exercises in an attempt to fall back asleep. Shouldn't have tried to burp him and change a diaper with very little in it. Maybe then I would have fallen back asleep. And maybe then the next 24 hours would have been bad like yesterday. Maybe maybe maybe.
I'm not very directed right at this moment. My thoughts aren't really collecting to make a point. I'm just awake and decided to write.
Almost three months on, and at least we're surviving. No one is all that well rested, now that A is also waking in the night again - nightmares, coughing, having-a-new-brother-who-takes-her-mom's-time-a-lot. And there is also the small one. Still waking 2-3 times a night. Still waking around 5 or 6 am fussy, and somehow my body keeps not understanding that that is my new waking hour.
The almost three month update: J is a smiley smiley guy when he's not in digestive distress. A loves her brother fiercely and keeps him supplied with lots of passionate head and foot kisses. I didn't gain much weight pregnant, so there is not that much to lose, although for those who think I'm managing a miracle, let me dissuade you - I'm still wearing pregnancy jeans and I've started working with a personal trainer at home to get my back and my nether-regions back in shape - not because I'm going to be out at the beach soon, but because I don't want to be worried about jumping and sneezing. I'm on a mild herbal anti-depressant to help with the waking-in-the-middle-of-sleep-due-to-screaming-baby situation. Our dog sitter is gone for two weeks and let's just say the dog is better than I thought at "holding it." All our visitors (friends and family) got us through to this point, where I can actually manage a sinkful of dishes twice a week, laundry (we're tlaking underpants and baby clothes...the bare minimum) once a week, and paying the bills myself while also having a baby around.
Oh, there is also a babysitter helping a lot because, wow, two kids at once, on my own, is not something I've managed to survive more than 2 times these last three months.
I also happen to be fairly happy and quite taken with both my children. When I'm fully conscious.
So he's just had a tough 24 hours, which begs the question...why am I unable to sleep at 2am? Hint: it isn't because I'm so well rested from the day. Perhaps it is the opposite, that my brain thinks I need alone time and has decided to provide it in the middle of the night. My night brain doesn't seem to be in consultation with my day brain - the one that has to do all the soothing and not-sleeping.
Here I am, then. Awake. And I can feel the buzz that means I won't be asleep for another hour at least. Lest you be tempted to tell me to stop using a computer, I was already awake for an hour, in a dark room, doing breathing and abdominal muscle exercises in an attempt to fall back asleep. Shouldn't have tried to burp him and change a diaper with very little in it. Maybe then I would have fallen back asleep. And maybe then the next 24 hours would have been bad like yesterday. Maybe maybe maybe.
I'm not very directed right at this moment. My thoughts aren't really collecting to make a point. I'm just awake and decided to write.
Almost three months on, and at least we're surviving. No one is all that well rested, now that A is also waking in the night again - nightmares, coughing, having-a-new-brother-who-takes-her-mom's-time-a-lot. And there is also the small one. Still waking 2-3 times a night. Still waking around 5 or 6 am fussy, and somehow my body keeps not understanding that that is my new waking hour.
The almost three month update: J is a smiley smiley guy when he's not in digestive distress. A loves her brother fiercely and keeps him supplied with lots of passionate head and foot kisses. I didn't gain much weight pregnant, so there is not that much to lose, although for those who think I'm managing a miracle, let me dissuade you - I'm still wearing pregnancy jeans and I've started working with a personal trainer at home to get my back and my nether-regions back in shape - not because I'm going to be out at the beach soon, but because I don't want to be worried about jumping and sneezing. I'm on a mild herbal anti-depressant to help with the waking-in-the-middle-of-sleep-due-to-screaming-baby situation. Our dog sitter is gone for two weeks and let's just say the dog is better than I thought at "holding it." All our visitors (friends and family) got us through to this point, where I can actually manage a sinkful of dishes twice a week, laundry (we're tlaking underpants and baby clothes...the bare minimum) once a week, and paying the bills myself while also having a baby around.
Oh, there is also a babysitter helping a lot because, wow, two kids at once, on my own, is not something I've managed to survive more than 2 times these last three months.
I also happen to be fairly happy and quite taken with both my children. When I'm fully conscious.
Friday, May 9, 2014
Almost 40 days gone
almost 4am.
they’re all asleep - my husband, my child and my baby. and, of course, the dog. the dog is always asleep if anyone else is. special talent that i envy a bit right now.
5 weeks in, and this is the first time i am completely alone - no one to care for - and awake after almost 5 hours sleep straight through. this baby, J, is not the same as his older sister was.
he is still fussy from a gassy body, poor little guy. crying or screaming one minute and as soon as the pain or discomfort passes, smiling a glorious little smile. at me, at someone else, at that red thing over there, at the corner of the room. he is beautiful.
but, after 5 hours straight sleep my body has decided to be awake, it seems. so much rest and now quiet to think whatever thoughts i didn’t have time for all day. a long day of what must have been a growth spurt because little J was hungry every 2 hours. at the least. he seemed hungry as soon as he finished feeding, ready to go again. but with the tummy troubles we keep him to minimum of breastfeeding every 2 hours. so he was walked and rocked. he was bounced in arms and hammock and bouncy chair. he got some tea (fennel, caraway, anise all aimed a alleviating his woes). the babysitter came early and i got some sleep - a vital 1.5 hours without one ear listening for his cries.
so with 5 hours at a pop, my body seems to think it is morning.
5 weeks, going on 6. almost 40 days. i think it is no coincidence that colic is said to peak at 6 weeks and mothers in more traditional cultures rest for 40 days. 6 x 7 = 42 days. that’s about right. if the gassiness and fussiness peaks around 40 days, that is the right amount of time to give the new mother so much support. a gassy baby does not lay in one place for long without crying. he needs to be held, swayed, tended to, comforted. he doesn’t care about the dishes or the growing piles of milk-stained poop-stained shirts of his or his mama’s. he cares about getting that fart out. he cares about that one elusive burp. as he should.
but it leaves little time or energy for much else.
40 days. with a new baby. not the same as last time. still intense, but not life destroying, the arrival of this new life. so many things are different this time (and others enough the same to let me re-visit the first one with fresh eyes). he doesn’t need to be rocked within an inch of his life to fall (and stay) asleep at night, or for naps many days. he sleeps more - and soon knew when night was enough that i wasn’t faltering for sleep. feeding every two then three hours for at least 2 cycles. i could stay sane and start to trust that things weren’t going to fall apart like they did the first time.
this whole month has been a series of “better than last time”s, that have made one more thread of fear and tension (nestled deep in my muscle memory) fall away. i’d been holding my breath, in a sense, for 4 years. i cried when he was born, because it was finally over, the labor but also the worry that he might not make it. that we weren’t meant to have a second child and he could be taken away somehow at the last minute. but i’ve also almost cried every time we reach another milestone that was horrible with baby A and isn’t with baby J.
and i realize now how much a part of the cycle of horrible we were, too. sure, she was sensitive and colicky, she was too alert for her age and really hard to get to stay sleeping. but we were also a problem, too quick to try finding some new solution, too nervous. i started taking an herbal anti-depressant at the first sign of irritation this time and it is working. i set my goals much more humbly - to physically breast feed for one week and feed him breast milk for one month. we had more help this time, from family. we had more help hired in, as well. we are working to stay calmer and most importantly to not succumb to terror as soon as something slips, not to wind up panicked that our first experiences will repeat.
while baby A’s body and system might have played a role in how hard her first year was, i think we now realize that we have to take credit for at least 30% of that. as does the context around us - the people, the help, the weather (spring instead of a long snowy winter), the neighborhood (where we can see people and life and go shopping in 5 minutes and feel connected to the world again). that is the last 30%.
so here we are, at roughly 40 days. we’ve made it and it will continue to get better. it will still be hard some days, many days, but we’ve made it. i made it. even so far as to sit here and write a blog entry. welcome back, me. now, me, go back to sleep!
they’re all asleep - my husband, my child and my baby. and, of course, the dog. the dog is always asleep if anyone else is. special talent that i envy a bit right now.
5 weeks in, and this is the first time i am completely alone - no one to care for - and awake after almost 5 hours sleep straight through. this baby, J, is not the same as his older sister was.
he is still fussy from a gassy body, poor little guy. crying or screaming one minute and as soon as the pain or discomfort passes, smiling a glorious little smile. at me, at someone else, at that red thing over there, at the corner of the room. he is beautiful.
but, after 5 hours straight sleep my body has decided to be awake, it seems. so much rest and now quiet to think whatever thoughts i didn’t have time for all day. a long day of what must have been a growth spurt because little J was hungry every 2 hours. at the least. he seemed hungry as soon as he finished feeding, ready to go again. but with the tummy troubles we keep him to minimum of breastfeeding every 2 hours. so he was walked and rocked. he was bounced in arms and hammock and bouncy chair. he got some tea (fennel, caraway, anise all aimed a alleviating his woes). the babysitter came early and i got some sleep - a vital 1.5 hours without one ear listening for his cries.
so with 5 hours at a pop, my body seems to think it is morning.
5 weeks, going on 6. almost 40 days. i think it is no coincidence that colic is said to peak at 6 weeks and mothers in more traditional cultures rest for 40 days. 6 x 7 = 42 days. that’s about right. if the gassiness and fussiness peaks around 40 days, that is the right amount of time to give the new mother so much support. a gassy baby does not lay in one place for long without crying. he needs to be held, swayed, tended to, comforted. he doesn’t care about the dishes or the growing piles of milk-stained poop-stained shirts of his or his mama’s. he cares about getting that fart out. he cares about that one elusive burp. as he should.
but it leaves little time or energy for much else.
40 days. with a new baby. not the same as last time. still intense, but not life destroying, the arrival of this new life. so many things are different this time (and others enough the same to let me re-visit the first one with fresh eyes). he doesn’t need to be rocked within an inch of his life to fall (and stay) asleep at night, or for naps many days. he sleeps more - and soon knew when night was enough that i wasn’t faltering for sleep. feeding every two then three hours for at least 2 cycles. i could stay sane and start to trust that things weren’t going to fall apart like they did the first time.
this whole month has been a series of “better than last time”s, that have made one more thread of fear and tension (nestled deep in my muscle memory) fall away. i’d been holding my breath, in a sense, for 4 years. i cried when he was born, because it was finally over, the labor but also the worry that he might not make it. that we weren’t meant to have a second child and he could be taken away somehow at the last minute. but i’ve also almost cried every time we reach another milestone that was horrible with baby A and isn’t with baby J.
and i realize now how much a part of the cycle of horrible we were, too. sure, she was sensitive and colicky, she was too alert for her age and really hard to get to stay sleeping. but we were also a problem, too quick to try finding some new solution, too nervous. i started taking an herbal anti-depressant at the first sign of irritation this time and it is working. i set my goals much more humbly - to physically breast feed for one week and feed him breast milk for one month. we had more help this time, from family. we had more help hired in, as well. we are working to stay calmer and most importantly to not succumb to terror as soon as something slips, not to wind up panicked that our first experiences will repeat.
while baby A’s body and system might have played a role in how hard her first year was, i think we now realize that we have to take credit for at least 30% of that. as does the context around us - the people, the help, the weather (spring instead of a long snowy winter), the neighborhood (where we can see people and life and go shopping in 5 minutes and feel connected to the world again). that is the last 30%.
so here we are, at roughly 40 days. we’ve made it and it will continue to get better. it will still be hard some days, many days, but we’ve made it. i made it. even so far as to sit here and write a blog entry. welcome back, me. now, me, go back to sleep!
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