By SHAUNA ANDERSON
When I had my first baby I was busy. I was working an “important job in TV land.” I was dedicated, I was committed, and I was focused.
Pregnancy was just a sideline.
Morning sickness – I could overcome. Pre-natal classes – you must be kidding I was too busy… I had Prime Ministers offices to call. Midwife appointments were barely just attended when I could make them. And a C-section was scheduled to optimise time.
What a bloody idiot I was!
Of course things went awry. My baby was breech and wasn’t growing properly and I had an early C-section at 36 weeks to avoid any problems.
Breastfeeding was a disaster which took weeks to sort out. And no one prepared me for the fact a baby was coming after the whole birth bit.
I managed to battle through, but I tell you things were completely different for the second and the third pregnancy.
I was a model patient.
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Pigeon. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100 per cent authentic and written in their own words.
Looking back I wish I had just spoken to a midwife like Nicolette Chapman. She has been in the baby game for over 15 years. Listening to someone like her would have saved a lot of tears. (Oh and a pile of broadband usage consulting YouTube “how-to’s”)
Here’s the top things I wish I knew before I had a baby.
1. Education.
Nicolette is a big fan of education. She says most first time mums get completely fixated on the labor bit and are unprepared for what comes after – er, actually having a living breathing person with needs you have to tend to.
Top Comments
I would add educate yourself on models of care available, and choose one that will suit the type of birth you want. Research before you get pregnant> So many women get railroaded into the type of care their GP advocates, and its often not the right fit for them. They desperately want a drug-free vaginal birth and end up booked with an Ob with a 50% cesarean rate.
I think as well as antenatal education, some relaxation education for childbirth would be valuable.
Realise that there is more help out there than your GP. They have a very broad area of practice. People like myself have a very narrow, specialised field of practice (i.e; maternal and child health) and we kinda know what we're doing. Please utilise our services. It's amazing how many women we see when there's a crisis, or when their GP can't help with specific breastfeeding/sleeping/behavioural issues.
As for the bottles and teats, I wonder how Nicolette is getting away with endorsing a specific brand as a midwife. We're generally not allowed, ethically, to recommend a particular product.