By BETH MACDONALD
All the pregnancy books and stuff you read when you are pregnant prepare you for just that: the pregnancy. The tricky bit is all the stuff that happens AFTER that. And by tricky, read the hardest thing you will EVER do in your life (except, of course, if you run marathons or cure diseases or something hard like that).
It’s like all those brides out there who become obsessed with prepping for their wedding without actually thinking about the whole marriage thing. I think it was the wise Dr Phil who said to prepare for the marriage, not the wedding. So it must be true. Because he is a doctor and everything. You are prepped for the pregnancy- just not so much on everything that comes after that. Like the child-rearing bit.
Like every other first-time Mum, I was completely swept up in the whole growing-a-baby thing. Thinking smugly to myself how clever my husband and I were for making a baby. A baby! I subscribed to all those emails that describe what the baby had done that week. “See honey? I’m tired because I grew some eye lashes!” I read everything and anything I could get my hands on about being pregnant and giving birth.
I soaked up all the attention that I was getting, the seats on the bus, the ever-growing concern from my husband about how I was feeling every second of the day, the chats from co-workers about how I was doing. I loved, reveled, BASKED in all it’s first time pregnant glory! It was just the family and friends who were already mothers who smiled at me as I passed on the charcoal chicken just in case I would get listeria. If only I knew what that smile meant.
Top Comments
I had varied birthing and newborn experiences between the three of my babies. It definitely could've been worse. However, they all slept up to 10 hours at a time once they hit 10 weeks old. I know I was very lucky in this respect.
I'd read the baby books along with the pregnancy books so who knows if that assisted somewhat.
TODDLERDOM however - was something I was totally unprepared for!
I'd expected tantrums, not constant defiance.
I'd expected crankiness when tired, not destruction.
I'd expected occasional aggression towards others, not regular aggression towards me!
I'd expected odd behaviour, not oppositional behaviour.
To top it off I expected all of this to last for.... hmmm about 6 months? Not 2 years for each child i.e 6 years straight....eeeek Cue vasectomy!
I keep coming back to it - parenthood is equal parts joy and hardship.
Yes if been pregnant and giving birth were the hard part I could have 10 kids. I have 3 and would say it does not get easier it just changes both the good and the bad. I would say the 3rd was easier apart from the fact that I then had 2 other children and I was smart enough to have a 3 1/2 yr gap between them all.