New Motherhood: Now and Then

Did you feel lonely when you had a newborn?

Were you ever thrown off by the challenge of adjusting to life with a baby and the reality of how different it actually was than you’d imagine?

Ever cry on a total stranger?

If you’ve nodded your head in agreement to any (or all) of the above questions, today’s post is most definitely for you. The answer for me – for all of the above – is a resounding YES.

In fact, with the above subject matter, I am thrilled to continue the amazing series of guest posts we’ve had here on Wired Momma. Jessica Smock, DC area mom and blogger behind School of Smock, is the writer of today’s guest post. I discovered Jessica’s blog not long ago because she contributed to another favorite site, The Broad Side. I immediately liked her and have really enjoyed keeping up with her since then.

True confession: I actually emailed her and asked her for a guest post and was thrilled when she agreed and then shared what sort of post she’d send…..one about motherhood and friendship. This is a topic that always resonates with me and I know resonates with so many of you based on the response I received from a piece I wrote last summer about making friends as an adult. Jessica actually ended up weaving in another one of my favorite concepts – this idea of what we THOUGHT motherhood and parenthood would be before we had children and then what happens when we actually discover REALITY.

So with that, I turn the pages of WM over to Jessica:

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Jessica and her adorable son

Jessica and her adorable son

I’ve been interested in new motherhood for way, way longer than I have been interested in having a child of my own.

When I was a senior in college, I wrote my honors thesis for my sociology major at Wesleyan about the transition to first-time motherhood. At the time it was a somewhat random topic. I was – and still am – a feminist. The issues that I was – and still am – passionate about related to gender and women’s issues. My adviser had this idea that she wanted to pursue herself, but didn’t have time, to study first-time parents before and after they had their first baby. So that’s what I did. For an entire year. I drove all around Connecticut, interviewing women from Lamaze class as well as their husbands before their babies were born and afterwards. I was 22, and I mostly didn’t like babies much. In the back of my mind, I viewed them as an impediment to everything that women could potentially accomplishment: equality in the workforce, in politics, in household labor.

And, as a 22 year old in 1996, here’s what I learned about new motherhood (and, yes, I dressed it up over hundreds of pages in social psychology talk, feminist theory, and sociological literature):

1. New moms get really sad. Nearly every one of the new moms in my study cried during the interviews. They were moody basket cases, and they frightened me. I didn’t know too much about postpartum depression, but I remember asking my adviser if I should get help for some of these very sad women. (She told me that the “baby blues” were normal in early parenthood and that I was not qualified to make medical diagnoses about my study participants.)

2. New moms end up parenting very differently than what their pre-baby intentions were. I heard long conversations before the babies were born about “family beds,” “breastfeeding is my biggest goals,” “we’re going to be equal as parents and co-parent.” Motherhood was very different than what they had anticipated.

3. New moms get really angry at their husbands. Much of my interviews with moms were about complaints about what their husbands were or were not doing with the baby. They seemed resentful that their husbands’ entire identities hadn’t been changed as much as theirs.

4. New moms light up around their babies. During my interviews I remember how much these women stared at their babies, almost incomprehensively. Did that really come out of me? Their faces melted like butter when they gazed in their eyes, and even if the midst of their tears, they would light up and smile at their babies.

5. New moms get really, really lonely. My conversations with these moms went on forever. I could barely tear myself out the door. (I often got anxious because I knew that I had to transcribe all these pages of interviews.) They were desperate to talk to someone about the changes in their lives.

Now it’s a long time later. I’m a new-ish mom myself. My son is a toddler. It’s 2013, not the mid-1990s. I’ve had an entire career unrelated mostly to new motherhood (education policy). Parenthood has changed in a lot of ways, but motherhood is very much the same in many others. None of the women in my study had the internet. There were no blogs, no social media. No reality shows, no cell phones.

The use of https://www.drugtrialsformoney.com/ambien-10mg/ alongside opioid analgesics, antitussives, barbiturates, antidepressants, sedatives, antihistamines, benzodiazepines, clonidine, neuroleptics, ethanol may develop symptoms of depression of the central nervous system and respiratory center.

Is motherhood harder or easier today? With each year, the standards for parenting increase. We wonder if we should be Helicopter parents, free range parents, Tiger Moms, attachment parents… We live a global economy where competition for jobs and for success is fiercer than ever. Motherhood, much more so than when I talked to new moms, is a full contact, rigorous sport. (Even the cover of Time magazine asks us now: Are You Mom Enough?)

I want to find out how motherhood is changing, and I want to learn how new mothers’ lives change once they become mothers. My blogging collaborator Stephanie Sprenger (from Mommy, For Real) and I have started a new project called The HerStories Project: Finding Support, Staying Sane, and Reinventing Yourself During Early Motherhood. We’re asking women through our survey to tell us about their experiences during new motherhood. We’re also asking experts in many areas – psychology, sociology, support groups, sleep training – to contribute to our project with interviews and posts.

Reading my thesis again nearly decades later, I’m amazed at how much I got right – and wrong – about new motherhood. I was right that it is difficult, life-changing, and powerful. But I was wrong not to ask more about how these women coped. Did they rely on friends? Family? Books? How did they make sense of their new lives?

Now I want to continue the project that I started way back when being the mother of a son was unimaginable. Now it’s everything. How did that happen?

Jessica Smock is a doctoral candidate in educational policy at Boston University who will receive her doctorate in May 2013. When not reading academic research, she writes at her blog, School of Smock, and collects stories of motherhood and women’s friendship at The HerStories Project.

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Thank you to Jessica!! I loved the visual of her driving around interviewing all those new moms. Not to mention the accuracy of her conclusions before she experienced it herself. I hope you’ll check out Jessica’s new site, The HerStories Project and take her survey. It actually made me feel ancient because when I was a new mom, in 2005, social media didn’t have the role in our lives that it does today – I wasn’t even on Facebook – so thanks for making me feel old, Jessica!!!!

As always, if you’d like to contribute a guest post, email me at wiredmomma@me.com. And be sure to hit “Like” on the Wired Momma Facebook page – it’s actually one of my favorite places to go to feel community and like we’re all in it together.

The Nurse Off: Or Why I’m a Better Mom than You

Breast might be best for you.

Or maybe your kids are older and it was best for you.

But it wasn’t for me. Like so many other new moms, I was woefully unprepared for the difficulty and pain that would come with nursing. I was unprepared for the latch issues. I was unprepared for the bleeding. The mastitis. And I was definitely ill-prepared for the challenge that I faced in eking out any more than a few ounces of that liquid gold at a time.

I never quite flowed like this. Photo Credit: (AP Photo/Reinhold Matay) CBS News http://www.cbsnews.com/2300-3445_162-10003450.html

I never quite flowed like this. Photo Credit: (AP Photo/Reinhold Matay) CBS News http://www.cbsnews.com/2300-3445_162-10003450.html

My sister, she didn’t have any of these problems. Like a bountiful fountain, the milk flowed from her.

Not me.

Clearly that makes her a better mother, right?

Some think so.

Here’s the thing – this line of thinking is idiotic.

If you are among the group of people who enjoy attacking other mothers for the reasons why they opted for formula over breast milk – then the sad truth is – you have some unresolved insecurities that are about you. Like the very bully on the playground that you hope your child isn’t, you make yourself feel better by knocking down others and better yet – telling them what’s best for their baby.

But I think this: There’s no reason to dump these feelings on other moms, especially new moms. Those women – and we’ve all been one once – they need a break.

I was well prepared to handle, with confidence, the breastfeeding challenges I faced with my second child. And certainly those challenges were different from what I faced with my first. I had support. I met with lactation nurses. My husband was there to encourage me.

Rah Rah Rah.

Guess what – still didn’t work out so great.

If only I’d had that level of confidence the first time around, I might have had a happier and less emotional entry into the minefield that is new motherhood.

Earlier this week, I proudly chimed in when Rebekah of Stay-At-Home Pundit asked for opinions from formula feeding moms on why it worked best for them – for a piece she published on the site Babble. I pulled from a blog post I wrote back in 2008 titled “I hated breastfeeding.

That post still gets a decent amount of traffic and often comments from new moms grateful for the insight that they are not alone.

Nothing quite like the trolls in the comments section of web sites.  Photo Credit: Warner Bros.

Nothing quite like the trolls in the comments section of web sites. Photo Credit: Warner Bros.

Naturally, Rebekah’s piece brought out the trolls that we can always count on when it comes to hot bed issues. These bullies enjoy saying things like this in the comment section:

I know that breastfeeding advocates have a reputation of being inflexible in their opinion but we need to forget about opinions when it comes to the safety of our babies and look at the facts. If you choose to formula feed your baby (and unless you have a legitimate medical reason which prevents you from breastfeeding then it is a choice) then you should first educate yourself about the risks – and there are several. In the west we have come to regard formula as being comparable to breastmilk and have convinced ourselves that feeding formula is basically the same as breastfeeding, but that’s simply not true.”

Well isn’t that special?

How about this one, apparently this woman is confident in being the spokesperson for another woman’s baby – a stranger’s baby at that:

“Never even tried because the formula was right there. And who knows – She might have absolutely loved breastfeeding. Guarantee that her baby would have preferred it.”

Should I keep going? If you’re interested in the article and the vitriol that comes from some nursing advocates, you can read it all here.

Instead, I will end with this. I’m only 7 years into motherhood but that’s a lot further in than when I was still nursing a baby. Especially that first time. I’ve grown. I’ve gained confidence. And I have a much longer view of parenting right now. The markers of a great mom aren’t things like

  • How long you breastfed for
  • If you gave your child formula
  • How quickly your child slept through the night
  • If you shared a bed
  • If your 2-year-old never had a tantrum
  • How quickly your child gained mobility
  • How quickly your child started talking
  • How quickly your child potty trained

Should I keep going?

Because that’s just the beginning and we all have challenges, hurdles, pure joy and plenty of stress in front of us. Much like most of us have grown bored with the “Mommy Wars” debate and we couldn’t care less if you work or not, most of us also couldn’t care less how long you nursed for and certainly don’t care how your success in nursing demonstrates your greater commitment to motherhood. The same is true for all of the above. Your child who potty trained so fast? Let us know how your second child turns out. Those full sentences your brilliant toddler is speaking? Isn’t it fun now that they can yell at you and negotiate endlessly?

Should I keep going.

My kids are awesome. I gave them breast milk for 13 weeks each. And when I spend time volunteering in my first grader’s class, there isn’t one person in there wondering if they were nursed by mommy. Trust me.

Used Tramadol 100mg because of the leg pain (or rather due to the unbearable constant pain caused by the tumor in the knee joint)

My kids are awesome because me and my husband have worked hard all these years.

So if you are a new mom and having guilt issues over whether or not you are nursing enough – don’t waste your energy on that guilt. Take a nap. Read a book. Read your baby a book. Go out to dinner with your partner and taste the food.

And if you get off on insulting other women because you nursed for longer, enough already.

Have you hit “Like” on the Wired Momma Facebook page yet? I hope so……

 

Summer’s Around the Corner….Helping You Plan

We are less than two months out from summer break – insane, right? With that in mind, to help you get your creative juices flowing in how best to schedule some fun activities during the dog days of summer, today I bring you a guest post from Amy Suski, local blogger and co-founder of DCMetroMom. The thing is, Amy didn’t just start a blog, she’s gone on to do something many bloggers dream of: publish a book. Amy teamed up with her other DCMetroMom partner, Claudine, and the fabulous Micaela Williamson, formerly of SuperNOVA Mommy fame, to publish Kid Trips: Northern Virginia Edition. Their book came out earlier this spring and has received tremendous press attention and praise from local parents. And all for good reason. These women are the trifecta of DC-area based kid activity knowledge, not to mention business savvy, social media savvy entrepreneurs who are providing all of us an excellent resource to make our lives easier and more fun. I’m proud to turn the pages of WM over to them today, in Amy’s voice, and introduce you to their book and what you might find in it. With that, I give you Amy:

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Book-CoverIn my twenties, I lived and breathed city life in the District: working on K Street, shopping boutiques, going to the theatre, strolling the art galleries, biking along the Potomac, and dining at trendy restaurants every chance I got. But while I was busy streaming into the city for work and play, NoVA was sneaking up on me as a happening place to be.

Over the last decade, Northern Virginia has really come into its own and can boast much more than proximity to D.C. While preserving its historic old towns, gardens, and parklands, Northern Virginia has forged ahead to create its own identity as a terrific family destination all its own with super-fun seasonal events (Spring Egg Hunts, Summer County Fairs, Fall Pumpkin Patches, Winter Festivals), family-friendly performance venues, nature centers, oodles of indoor play-spaces, innovative playgrounds, art studios, interactive museums, farms, and so much more.

With so many new things happening in NoVA I wished for a guide to steer my family on its travels. Although there were a lot of big name family travel guides for D.C., I couldn’t find a comparable book dedicated to NoVA. So, after years of living in and exploring the area, I teamed up with Claudine Kurp (co-founder of DCMetroMom.com) and Micaela Williamson, a.k.a., Super NoVA Mommy, to create a guide especially for families living in or visiting NoVA. Between the three of us we’ve pretty much dragged, chased, and strolled all seven of our kids across the entire area. As local bloggers we’ve also had unique opportunities to visit and review many terrific activities and performance venues so we feel like we have an insider’s track on helping families find the best that NoVA has to offer.

There are so many reasons to explore NoVA and we hope our new book will help guide families along the way. Just a few of my personal favorites featured in the book:

+ Carousel and playground at Clemyjontri Park in McLean

+ Tot-rock concerts at Jammin Java in Vienna

+ Children’s Theatre-in-the-Woods at Wolf Trap Performing Arts Center in Vienna

+ Museum, farm, and gardens at the Mount Vernon Estate

+ Artist studios at Old Town Alexandria’s Torpedo Factor Art Center

+ Art programs for Children at the Greater Reston Arts Center

+ Children’s garden at Green Spring Gardens in Alexandria

+ Farm fun at Frying Pan Farm Park and Loudoun Heritage Farm Museum

+ Sprayground parks in Arlington

+ Miniature Train at Burke Lake Park

+ Leesburg Animal Park

+ Marine Corps Museum in Quantico

+ Hiking at Great Falls

+ Super Science Saturdays at Udvar-Hazy Air & Space Museum in Chantilly

+ National Battlefield Park and Historic Train Depot in Manassas

For hundreds more local attractions, “Top Picks,” “Insider Tips,” seasonal events, and parenting resources get your copy of Kid Trips: Northern Virginia Edition through Amazon or as an ebook on Kindle, Nook or Smashwords (coming to iBooks soon). To sign-up for monthly newsletters, updates, and blogs visit www.gotrips.com.

About the author: Amy Suski and her husband are parents to two sons, a daughter, and a rambunctious boxer dog. Before motherhood Amy worked in Washington, D.C. as an attorney and is now writing, editing, and volunteering. She is co-founder of DCMetroMom.com and co-author of Kid Trips: Northern Virginia Edition.

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Thank you so much Amy for contributing today! I hope everyone will consider supporting these local moms, their book can be purchased for $8.99 on Amazon and it’s well worth it to give yourself a whole host of ideas for lazy summer days! You can also find these lovely ladies on Facebook.
And I liked everything. I did not notice any Buy Zolpidem side effects. Yes, and I felt myself after them just fine.

As always, I hope you’ll “Like” the Wired Momma Facebook page and if you’d like to contribute a guest post, please email me at wiredmomma@me.com.

That Day I “Got Nothing Done”

“Sleep when the baby sleeps,” is one of those standard pieces of advice we give all new parents. I’ve offered it. Others offered it to me.

The truth is, when I offered that advice to others, I knew I was a hypocrite.

She look familiar? Photo Credit: SF Gate On the Block Blog

She look familiar? Photo Credit: SF Gate On the Block Blog

Why did I even bother saying it, I wondered? Almost no one rests each time the baby rests and honestly, just knowing you’re supposed too can add to your list of things you feel unsure or guilty about.

But see, this mantra really never goes away.

It morphs into this: “Enjoy it now, it all goes by so fast.”

Both are telling you that you need to slow down. That you need to rejuvenate. You need to rest. You need to enjoy. You need to relish.

And so, we often find ourselves in this vicious cycle of cramming in errands, work or grocery runs when kids are napping or at school. And then if something goes awry or something unexpected happens, we fret about how we “didn’t get anything done.”

How often have you ended your day lamenting that you “got nothing done?”

Just last week, we had an AC repair man to our house and he ended up being here three hours. It was three hours of constant interruption and questions – sure, with questions about things that needed to be done – but he sucked up the entire morning when I have both kids at school and can “get things done.” In this instance, it was paid work that wasn’t getting done.

I was totally stressed out. My day was thrown off. I found myself venting to my husband. Then I decided – fuck it.

I didn’t get done what I intended too but come the next hot day, we’ll be pretty glad the AC works properly, so something actually did get done.

Just not what I planned.

My conclusion, you ask? I didn’t come by this easily being the extremely type A person that I am but here it is people: Putting the kids to bed at night with clean bodies, full tummies and happy hearts, should be enough to qualify as “getting something done.” No, scratch that. It’s not that it SHOULD BE ENOUGH. It actually IS enough.

C’est vrai. I might even start a Wikipedia entry on the definition of “Getting It All Done.”

Therefore, how about easing up on the pressure for more? I’m going to start cutting myself a little more slack.

Can we call for a ban on the phrase “getting something done,” please? If nothing else, if you catch yourself the next time you are saying it, and give it pause for a minute, then my work here is done.

Don’t forget to hit “Like” on the old Wired Momma Facebook page for more deep thoughts (or funny SomeEcards)