{New #OutsideTheMomBox post} July #NewMoms group conversation: changing #relationships

The second Saturday of each month is the Outside The Mom Box support group for new moms and babies. Each session starts out with introductions and then goes in our main topic. We leave about 30 minutes for Q&A, then close. We've tackled introducing solids, travel, summer, and a slew of other relevant baby topics so this month we focused on mom. Our topic was "changing relationships".  Here are a few noteworthy snippets from that conversation:

"Being listened to is one of the highest forms of respect and validation." - Mark Ogletree

"Being listened to is one of the highest forms of respect and validation." - Mark Ogletree

Juggling your rapidly growing baby is enough of a task but when you factor in outside employment, extra commitments like church or volunteering, pets in the home or other issues, finding time to catch up with friends, even if they do have kids of their own, can feel overwhelming. Luckily, the moms on Saturday felt like that they either a) did have some good friendship that were being attended to or b) were in the process of building new friendships with other new moms. I definitely was in the latter category until Elisabeth was about 7 months or so. I didn't know many women who were also new moms who lived closely or who were home with their child and honestly, many new moms seemed much more together than I. I felt vulnerable reaching out to new moms. It was way too easy to attend to my own child and not talk to anyone else. But I don't recommend that strategy; it was lonely! One mom shared that it can be hard to be the only couple in their groups of friends to have a child. All social activities seemed to have stopped now that baby is getting older and a bedtime routine has developed. It's crucial for us to find moms with babies around our kids' age to connect with, for our own mental health and to ensure future playdates.

Some of the women in the group talked about their relationships with their own parents. One woman's relationship with her mom became very positive after her baby was born. Another woman talked about how she still felt like a little kid around her own dad sometimes, even though she is an adult and now a parent herself. Dealing with our parents now that we are parents can be tricky. My own mom just sent a book of nursery rhymes to my daughter when she learned that Elisabeth didn't have one ("they teach memorization and movement!!" she said). I don't really like it. I WANTED to like it so badly, believe me. But it just doesn't do it for me. My mom, though, loves the idea of Elisabeth reading nursery rhymes and so I let it go. 

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We also talked husbands! How we have a shorter fuse now than we did before with him and how challenging it can feel to have our partner not have the same sense of urgency when it comes to doing something baby-related i.e. baby proofing etc. Especially in the early days with a new baby, dad might default to mom to soothe the baby with "you're better at it," or "she likes what you're doing better,". That's hard for mom because then it feels like it is all on her, all the time. Sometimes dads tend to try 1-2 things and if they don't work, they give up...too easily, many of the moms agreed! When one of the moms shared that she did what many of us moms do (just keep trying a bunch of things until something worked) I was reminded of the #lifesinvisiblework hashtag that I created. There are so many little things that moms do all the time, all day (and all night!) long for their baby, that aren't remarkable or particularly noteworthy but are still important. 

Finally, we talked sex. In the beginning, and that means the beginning of when you start to have sex again after baby (not related to baby's age), it will likely be uncomfortable. It can be painful, especially if there was any tearing. It definitely was for me. A lack of sleep, too many things on our "must tackle" list and the unpredictability of a baby schedule's can add even more angst to getting back into feeling like you want to be intimate with your partner. We talked about scheduling time for sex and while that can feel lacking in spontaneity, it can help with feeling more relaxed, less rushed and perhaps in a better mood overall. Easing into sex by starting in a position that has traditionally been better for you, both in terms of comfort and also pleasure, can also help. Getting enough rest so you don't feel tired, starting with massage or an evening out can also go a long way to making you feel more comfortable about resuming sex again.

For Durham area new moms, our August (8/10) topic is: "sleep". Once again, we will be at my office at 1200 Broad Street, Suite 104, in Durham. RSVPs are not required!

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{new #OutsideTheMomBox post} 13 #stress busters for #pregnant #women

Anxiety isn't good for any of us but it can be especially detrimental to pregnant women. For pregnant women extra stress can cause high blood pressure which can trigger preterm labor. Preterm labor can lead to a host of issues for baby: including intellectual and developmental delays, hearing and vision challenges and more. This March of Dimes article articulates many of which here. So, let's all calm down! Here are 31 ways how to reduce stress:

  1. Avoid information overload. DON'T Google everything! Find a trusted friend, educator that you can depend on for quality information. No, they won't have all the answers but they will be able to refer you to someone equally awesome when they get stumped.
  2. Find a support group. Connecting with other women is so important at this often scary, vulnerable time. Hear that they are feeling the same and learning from each other. 
  3. Start saying "no" now. I know you're a helper. I get it, I do. But the best person you can help now is YOU. Practice saying "no" to whatever doesn't feel like the uber-best fit for you and your new family. Trust me; you'll get a lot of use out of this new habit down the road.
  4. Sit on a birth ball. I can't say enough about how much I love birth balls. They keep you moving, keep your hips fluid, get you off your feet, keep your pelvis in a good position. And they just feel good! Try it.
  5. Take a warm bath. During my last trimester, I must have taken a warm bath 5 out of 7 nights a week. I listened to my breathing CD, took deep breathes, talked to Little Sun and slowly dripped warm water over my big belly. It felt great and allowed me to sleep better.

  6. Go for a walk. I didn't do a lot of exercise when I was pregnant but I did walk nightly. It helped me calm down from the craziness of a work day and kept me active and mobile,even when I didn't want to be. It felt good.
  7. Drink more water.  A dehydrated body can lead you to confuse cravings with real hunger pangs. Also a dehydrated uterus is a crampy uterus which is an unhappy uterus. You want a happy uterus. Happy = healthy and feeling good!
  8. Hit the sack earlier. Rest now because it feels so good and because you won't have as much time. If I hear one more story about a pregnant woman heading out for a jam-packed day, with nary a nap in sight, I swear! Take it easy, please. Trust me on this one.
  9. Talk to a coach. Most of my Outside The Mom offerings are ones that I wanted. Wellness Coaching is no exception. One session (or a handful!) includes simply talking to someone who has been there before can bring much relief as well as education, resources and support.
  10. Journal. In Baby Body and Soul, Tracy Gaudet recommends journaling. It was really helpful to me to write down some of the anxieties that I was feeling about the pregnancy and what I still felt like I needed to sort out before I had her. 
  11. Enjoy a chiropractic adjustment. For three-four months leading up to my daughter's birth and for over a year, I received regular chiropractic adjustments at Imagine Chiropractic. They felt great but also reminded me that I was doing good prep work for labor. 
  12. Enroll in a childbirth class. Prep and information reduces stress now...and down the road. I have a seven week, Sunday afternoon class starting in September in Durham for couples and September online for survivors. I also have other local resources for childbirth here.
  13. Ask for help more often. Boy, do I wish that someone had strongly encouraged me to start asking for help when I was pregnant. You will need help. I did. We all do but it's hard to ask. Start that vulnerable act with someone you trust & see how that goes.

New moms, what would you add to this list? P.S. Your 13 comes up in a few weeks. I didn't forget about you!

{new #OutsideTheMomBox post} Why is it so darn hard to feel like a good #mom?

Do you hear from others that you are a good mom and sometimes have a hard time believing them? I did, especially in those very early days when my daughter was in those single digits. Intellectually I believed what the person was saying; I knew that they weren't lying or trying to placate me. But emotionally, I felt like I sometimes was failing Elisabeth. Because of that belief (even if it was occasional), I found it hard to believe that I was a good mom.  Here are a few examples of moments that made it hard for me to feel like a good mom:

  1. I'd share a story of a recent baby challenge with one of my sisters or a friend and ask, “did _____ ever do anything like that?” and they'd answer “No.” Argh! "Is it just me?", I would wonder.
  2. Elisabeth was growing so quickly and in so many different ways that reading her “cues”, following her lead or knowing how to best stimulate her learning felt impossible sometimes. And then I felt foolish or stupid.
  3. Given the choice of a shower or breakfast, I always opted for the shower even though I knew that I should eat. 
  4. My husband has a billion songs from childhood that he remembers very easily. Me? Not one. For months I didn't sing "you are my sunshine," (one of the only songs I know) because it felt too depressing. "What kind of mom isn't singing to her baby?" I'd think.
  5. Elisabeth was ten months before I took her to story time at the library. But everyone seemed like they'd been going for years...judging by how well they knew the finger plays!

There's more of course. Society pushes women so much toward an impossible double standard that it can be hard to feel like a success at anything! But putting even that aside as much as I can, I've learned two things that have made me feel calmer and more confident about the kind of mom I am:

Elisabeth at seven months

Elisabeth at seven months

  1. Support from other moms is essential. I started going to Paula's new moms groups because I wanted the support and community around a new baby but quickly found I was running the group! That was wonderful but didn't answer my need for support. So, I started connecting to newer moms in my community through local list serves as well as reaching out to moms from my childbirth class. Those actions helped me feel less alone and also provided support and encouragement about my parenting. When one mom said she thought Elisabeth was "brave, open to new experiences," I felt like I had won the lottery! If she was seen as brave at seven months, I must be doing something right.
  2. Time away from baby gives great perspective. I started working two afternoons a week when Elisabeth was five months. It was one of the best decisions that I've ever made. I was desperate for adult company, to have a little money coming in but didn't want to feel stressed by my work. Working part-time in retail fit the bill...along with being pretty and fun too! The time at work freed up my mind too. I started to imagine what kind of work I wanted to do and eventually started planning Outside The Mom Box. I came back to my family refreshed and energized with a new perspective on the parenting that I was doing and what I wanted to be more cognizant of in the future.

Today, I don't think much about whether or not I'm a good mom: I know I am. I may periodically miss signs that Elisabeth is giving me or waited a while to schedule her first dentist appointment (whoops!) but I'm less inclined to evaluate my parenting based on what I haven't done. 

Thanks as always for reading! If you enjoyed this post, please consider sharing it by clicking the little "share" icon below, located just to the right of the heart. 

{new #OutsideTheMomBox post} Impact of maternal #childhood #sexualabuse on #babies

Childhood sexual assault (CSA) survivors have a different set of challenges than new moms who aren't survivors. [For perspective, about 1 in 7 girls will be sexually abused before her 18th birthday.] These challenges can manifest themselves in different, often unexpected ways, not just in mom, but also in baby. As the first in a new series here dedicated to raising awareness about the realities that survivors face as pregnant women and new moms, I'm going to highlight three ways that a history of CSA in mom can impact a newborn's health and well being:

  1. From the strange new feeling of your milk letting down to the realization that your breasts really aren't your own anymore, breastfeeding can be a very triggering act for a survivor. Add in factors like an infant's roving hand, pain of any sort, feedings at all hours and you can start to see why some survivors don't breastfeed. For survivor moms, it's usually less of a "choice" and instead often related to not being able to tolerate breastfeeding or the fact that it just doesn't work for them. And yet, we all know that breastfeeding is ideal for baby. Studies that confirm this are numerous; check out the first paragraph here for details. 
  2.  Failure to thrive (FTT) is a state of undernutrition due to inadequate caloric intake, inadequate caloric absorption, or excessive caloric expenditure. There are two types of FTT: non-organic (a non-medical reason the infant isn't thriving) and organic (a medical reason that the baby isn't thriving). With both types, the bottom line is that baby isn't getting fed enough. There are many reasons why FTT can occur: lack of success breastfeeding, emotional overwhelm in mom, misunderstanding or a lack of understanding about basic infant needs in mom/parents, lack of attachment to baby by mom, etc. Each of these above reasons can be by-products of mom's past history of abuse. Dr. Kathleen Kendall-Tackett, IBCLC talks a bit about this here.
  3. Not all women bond immediately with their baby.  For survivors, however, that bonding may take even longer, even if the baby is "just" a normal, dependent infant. If the baby is special needs, is "difficult" or has other challenges (colic, etc.) then bonding may be even harder. "Mere" insistent neediness of a baby may stir up past feelings of vulnerability and powerless that mom associates with the perpetrator of her abuse. It's normal: the perpetrator took what he wanted from the survivor and when a new baby enters the survivor's world, dependent and unable to feed or care for herself, the survivor's body is once again at the whim of someone else. This lack of bonding can become problematic though if FTT (see #2) develops and/or if mom begins to have ideas of harming her baby.

What does all of this mean? Well, simply due to their past abuse, survivors carry with them challenges that can complicate their ability to provide the best care for their baby. Add in factors like poverty, a lack of education, an absent or abusive partner, and you have a survivor mom who may barely be hanging on. This is something that should concern all of us. But here's what we can do:

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  • Keep in mind the challenges of survivors that we discussed above when you hear the ever-present "breast is best" motto. Click here for a bit more on this issue. Not being able to breastfeed a child can be devastating for a new mom's fragile mental health but what is often more detrimental to mom and baby is the societal guilt that moms are made to feel by not doing the "best" they can for their child i.e. breastfeeding.
  • Provide support. Support is continually named over and over one of the best resources that you can give a new mom. Good, informed support helps new moms feel less alone, more normal and more accepted. Not to mention provide them with trusted resources that they trust when they need more help or advice. All of this is why I offer free groups. What can you do? Attend a group, help make a group happen for those who need it, or volunteer in a way that feels right to you.
  • Rise above the "mommy wars". It can be so hard to sit back and mind your own business. That's true for me too! But we really must. When we accept that we can't ever know someone's whole story and therefore have no place to judge them, then we are removing ourselves from the insidious "us vs. them" battle. It's a battle that neither side will win, even if we "lean in" so let's just opt out of it altogether.

Starting this fall, I'll offer my first virtual program: a childbirth education class specifically for survivors. Open to any survivor, living anywhere, we will meet weekly over a conference call line for seven weeks. First names only. If you'd like more details, head over here to give me a call or message me. Thanks for reading.