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Three years in.
Somehow, in my head, the last three years stretch way further than the first twenty nine; I put that down to the value that has been added. (It may also be because I have spent the same amount
At the same time it seems as if only three days can have passed. This twist of time perception is down to my constant attempt to hold on tightly to each precious moment and milestone which seem to come on a daily basis. The more I try to treasure these the quicker they slip through my fingers. However fast these moments turn into memories or worse, fade away, I can still
The first moment came after hours of extreme stress and fear. Being taken out of the birthing pool after a night on the gas and air because nothing was happening, having my waters broken (I thought the brain was supposed to anaesthetise these memories, not sure why mine has chosen to keep that particular one. Ouch.), hours of pushing, still nothing happening, preparing for surgery and then having a last
But I did it and she was there and it was a shock. It was a shock because after everything that had happened over the previous 14 hours I think I genuinely believed that the baby
The second moment was a lot less fraught. After worrying that labour might start in the middle of the night or at a time when there was no one about to look after our elder daughter my waters broke at, a most convenient, half past nine on a Saturday morning. After a fairly relaxed day having contractions
The journey into motherhood begins slowly; you get that positive pregnancy result and life changes in tiny increments as the bump gradually grows and you stock up on all those ‘essential’ baby items. I look back at my first pregnancy in particular as being a wonderfully serene
The real introduction into parenthood is labour and birth. A bona fide baptism of fire. You can pootle along in pregnancy sometimes enjoying the precious feeling of growing life, sometimes despairing at the tiredness and sickness and the inability to get comfortable anywhere. But then in those last few hours everything ramps up and you are expending
So now we are here, three years later, nearly 16 months since the last time I gave birth and life is bloody good. There are days when I wonder how I will get to 7pm, when everyone is tired and whinging and demanding Every. Minute. Of. The. Day. But increasingly there are days when the three or four of us have a wonderful time together.
Don’t be fooled into thinking it hasn’t been hard work
Exhaustion. Due to 25 hours of labour followed by 48 hours on the maternity ward. You don’t sleep on a maternity ward. If you do manage to drift off in between babies crying then a midwife will come and wake you up to check you are still alive.
More exhaustion: Feed your baby every three hours. Sleep when they sleep.
Mixed in here is an attempt to breastfeed. Is the latch right? Is it supposed to hurt this much? Is she getting enough? Is it still supposed to hurt this much? Maybe I should stop. I’ve come this far, I can’t stop now. Is the latch right? Fuck this is hard work.
Next came despair. The baby stopped sleeping altogether. No idea why.
Elation. After the emotional turmoil that lead to my eventual acceptance that she would be formula fed she slept. A whole night. Then another one. Not consistently but enough to finally start to feel human again. This was around six months in. It didn’t last long, in fact it was around seven months in that we began co sleeping because
Serious discussion then started about the fact that we definitely wanted another baby and perhaps the best option was to just do it, we were already seriously sleep deprived so why not get it all done in one fell swoop. We decided to give it a go and were lucky enough to fall pregnant within a couple of months.
Ahh morning sickness and a very small toddler, that was an adventure. I spent the first few months of my older daughter’s second year with her pottering around my head
Guilt. At about 7 months into my second pregnancy I began to get the guilt sweats. My daughter had spent every day of her life with just me, we were as one. She started where I ended. And now I was going to force a separation on her, against her will. She would no longer be my one and only, how could I have been so
Elation again. Baby number two, a girl as predicted at the 20 week scan, four days before my own birthday (the best birthday I have ever had).
Stress. Having a 20 month old and a newborn is really fucking difficult. They both need so much from you in such different ways and balancing those needs was tough. There were tears. A lot of tears. The girls cried a fair bit as well. The same can be said of a 21 month and a 1 month old, and a 22 month and a 2 month etc etc.
Exhaustion. Again. Despite believing we had learnt from the first time
Stress. Breaking the boob habit, wow. That was tough. Listening to her tears of anguish and anger because I was doing anything but the one thing she wanted was awful. But we rocked, bounced and sang our way through it and finally, after a night in which I sent my husband and daughter to my in laws and went
Happiness. A few months on, we are all getting a full night’s sleep pretty much every night and everyone is so much better for it.
I considered briefly the possibility of a third because surely I’ve got it nailed now? But I am not willing to tempt fate. I just want to spend the rest of my life with my beautiful, happy family and never have to wake up every 45 minutes again.