Missed last week because, you know, baby. But we’re back!
Category Archives: Mommyhood
Our Current Nighttime Routine
We take the word “routine” seriously around here these days, y’all. In fact, when my parents first came to meet Finn, they cracked constant jokes about our attempt at “structure” and “schedules” and such. They are probably right, I guess. Our pediatrician told us that, in the beginning, there are no patterns.
But now that Finn is nearly 7 weeks old, we are starting to develop patterns, and the need for routine is REAL.
Don’t let this picture fool you. Our little man has never actually spent a night in his own room, let alone his crib.
He started sleeping in our room immediately, which most people advised, especially since Sona is breastfeeding round the clock.
We started by having him sleep in the Nuna Mini, but he just wasn’t having it. It was too big and too open for him when he was a newbie, and one loooooong night, at 5AM, I ordered the Rock N Play from Amazon Now, and it was delivered a few hours later. (Thank goodness we live in a place with immediate access to all things Amazon.) He’s slept in that ever since.
While Finn has pretty much always been a decent nighttime sleeper, we haven’t done the best of job getting him on a “normal” baby schedule. That is, while a lot of babies we know sleep 7PM-7AM, Finn usually sleeps 11PM-11AM.
This is the result of a couple of things. First, we’ve both been off of work, luckily, and we are taking advantage of every opportunity to sleep in. So, we’ve trained our little guy to “sleep in,” too. (Once, at a B&B in Anguilla, a mom we met told us that she had “trained” all three of her sons to sleep until 10:30. I think we both secretly hope we can do the same.)
Also, if we’re being real, we just had a very difficult time getting our own schedules in order during the first few weeks. I don’t know where the time went, but we often found ourselves eating dinner at 10:00 or 11:00 at night, after just having put Finn down for the first time. That also meant, of course, that we wouldn’t go to sleep until after he’d had his first nighttime feed–usually at around 1:00. Needless to say, we had a hard time getting it together.
Finn is still going to bed pretty late, but we usually get a good 12 hours of “bedtime” out of him–all in increments of sleep, eat, poop, of course.
Here’s our routine: Finn usually sleeps 3-4 hours. This week, he’s inching closer and closer to 4. He even slept for 4 hours and 45 minutes one night, and we almost wept with joy!
He sleeps on my side of the bed. So, I am usually the first to hear his hunger whimper. I let him whimper for a good 10-15 minutes before I wake Sona and tell her that it’s time for her to whip it out. (You know what I mean.)
Finn rarely ever cries at night, which I think makes us very lucky. We always get him on the boob before he wails, and he usually goes to sleep without much of a fight–USUALLY.
So, I pick him up. I take off his swaddle and watch his ridiculously adorable biiiiiiiig stretch, and I hand him to Sona. If I’m feeling particularly generous, or if I start looking at my iPhone, I will stay up while she feeds him. Mostly, though, I’ll go back to sleep while she’s feeding him in bed next to me.
We make every attempt to be quiet and to keep the lights off during this time.
After about 25 minutes, which is how long he’ll feed on the first boob, Sona will wake me up. I’ll change his diaper, re-swaddle him, and give him back to her. She’ll feed him for 5-7 minutes on boob #2, and he’ll usually fall asleep right there. Then begins the most delicate, skilled process of trying to take him from her arms to his Rock N Play without having him wake-up.
Oh, parents, you all know this dance well, I’m sure.
(I should say, this new method is thanks to a good friend. Before her advice, we were feeding on both boobs and THEN changing. As a result, he’d wake up during the diaper change, and we’d have to spend 20 minutes rocking him back to sleep. This new method allows him to fall asleep on boob #2, and it’s been a game-changer. Instead of being awake for 75-90 minutes each time, we are now awake for only 45-50.)
Finn usually stays asleep, though there is generally a good bit of grunting at first. Then, 3-4 hours later, he starts to whimper again, and the whole thing starts all over.
This has been a routine we’ve grown accustomed to over the past 6.5 weeks. Though, next week, it’s going to have to start changing. Sona goes back to work in just a week and a half (insert VERY sad face, here). So, I’ll will be on FT night duty, which means that Finn will need to go to bed earlier, drink only from bottles, and–hopefully, very soon–sleep in his own room.
He’s been napping in both the Nuna and his crib for the past couple of weeks. We wanted him to get use to sleeping on a flat, non-vibrating surface before The Big Transition.
Truthfully, though, I think we’re both a little freaked out. We’re going to start transitioning slowly this week. So, wish us luck.
Our Favorite Things About Finn (Until Tomorrow, At Least)
Finn is 6 weeks old today–yay! His little personality is blooming, and he is constantly changing. I can’t believe how different he is now than he was just a couple of weeks ago. As sad as it is to seem him grow up so quickly, it’s also super fun to experience all of his various, ever-changing personality quirks.
Here are our five current Finn faves (you like that alliteration?):
Sona
- the smiles that are starting to come more regularly
- our mornings together–he’s so happy during that time
- his sleep noises (grunts, mostly)
- his various expressive faces
- having mommy/son “conversations” after feedings
Danielle
- his super serious, furrowed-brow expression (pictured above)
- changing time (he actually loves getting his diaper changed and putting on clothes)
- family naps
- the rare moments when he’ll sit still, lounging next to me on the couch
- how he stretches each time we take off his swaddle, arms up in the air, face strained
Tips for Getting Good Newborn Photos (from a Photographer and a Mom)
Everyone expected that I would photograph Finn’s newborn photos, but I knew that I’d want to have a professional do it. Yes, yes–I’m technically a “professional” photographer myself, but newborn photography requires a very specific skill set (not to mention a well-lit studio, backdrops, props, incredible patience, etc.), and I’ll be the first to admit that it’s not my photographic strength. So, we decided to have Patricia from Patricia Anderson Photography do Finn’s newborn session.
Patricia was a miracle worker, and I learned A LOT (both as a mom and as a photog), watching her during the nearly 3-hour session.
Based on my experience both having photographed newborns and having my newborn photographed, here are some tips I have for getting the kinds of photos you will love forever:
- If you want the perfect posed shots, like many of the ones here, you have to do the session within the first 12 days or so. The younger the infant, the more likely they will sleepily cooperate.
- Sleepy babies are the most cooperative babies. So, make sure they are sleepy for their session. This might mean keeping them up for a couple hours beforehand (we did this and it was torture, but Finn snoozed the entire time).
- Do one big feed right before the photos. That way, your little one is full, happy, and drowsy.
- Keep the photography location–whether your home or a studio–warm. VERY warm. When Finn got his photos done, the studio was nearly 90 degrees. Sona and I had to step outside a few times, but Finn loved it. When I shoot at a client’s home, I tell them to crank up the heat before I arrive. Space heaters can be great, too, if used safely.
- Do the things you do when you’re trying to get your infant to sleep. Mostly, have some kind of sound machine and a diffuser. We use both of these at home when Finn is sleeping, and most newborn photogs use them in their studios, too.
- Make sure you have access to lots of natural light. For me, this is hugely important, and it is one of the first questions I ask when parents contact me, wanting me to come shoot baby photos in their home.
- Take a backseat, parents. Finn knows when we are near, and he would want us if we hovered too much. So, for most of his session, we stayed out of the way. Also, as a photographer, I can tell you that nothing makes you second-guess yourself like a parent standing over your shoulder. Hire a photographer you trust, and let them do their best work.
- Most importantly, hire a professional. There’s such a small window in which to catch these itty bitty lovies. Don’t let it pass you by and then regret not having captured such sweet, fleeting moments.
- Also, don’t forget that most photographers have gift certificates, and you can add a newborn session to your baby registry.
And now, because I’m a proud momma who can’t help but show off my little doll (no, really, is it out of fashion to pull out a wallet with a plastic fold-out full of photos???), here are some of our favorites from Finn’s session.
Falling in Love with Your Baby is No Joke
Remember seeking the attention and affection of your first love? How absolutely mad you were with obsession? How much you wanted them to want you, too?
Well, that’s nothing compared to how desperately you’ll want your baby to love and need you.
When we found out Sona was pregnant, we were, of course, thrilled. I didn’t want to carry our baby, anyway, and I didn’t really experience any pregnancy FOMO.
That said, the one thing that did eat at me a little was the question of whether or not I would have the same immediate love for Finn that Sona had. Her emotional response was largely biological, I thought. Her body would practically force her to fall head-first for our son.
From what I read, it seemed like everything a new mom did while carrying or caring for their newborn lead to the release of oxytocin. Feel the baby kick? Oxytocin! Breastfeed? Oxytocin! Think about your baby? Oxytocin! Look into those beaming baby eyes? Oxytocin!
Even mice pick up on these instinctual cues:
“To understand the role oxytocin plays in a mother mouse’s brain, scientists at New York University School of Medicine first investigated how female mice in general respond to the distress calls of baby mice. Pups emit ultrasonic cries when they are separated from the nest, which sometimes happens when a mother carries her babies to a new location. (Moms change nest locations regularly to elude predators.) When a mother hears these cries, she runs to the lost pup, picks it up, and carries it back to her nest. Other scientists have shown that moms respond even to the distress cries of pups that aren’t their own, readily approaching loudspeakers that broadcast the calls. Most virgin female mice, though, couldn’t care less; they seem completely indifferent to the pups’ cries for help. And yet, some virgin females that have either been housed with a mother and her litter or have been injected with oxytocin will retrieve crying infants.
That discovery led the team’s leader, neuroscientist Robert Froemke, to suspect that oxytocin must help ‘transform the virgin brain into the maternal.’”
Being a biological mother, it seemed, was practically like tossing back a Dixie cup full of happy pills! (You know, aside from the raging hormones and emotional volatility you experience after birth.)
So, when Sona seemed positively smitten with our son before he even formed limbs, I got a little worried.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s not that I didn’t love him as soon as we found out about him. It’s just that I think it was more of a head-centered love than a gut-centered love, if that makes sense. I mean, I knew I would love him, and I loved the idea of him, but I didn’t go wobbly in the knees.
Sona sensed this, too, I think. When I wouldn’t respond the way she expected to a kick or an ultrasound photo, she would say, “I don’t know if you care about him!” That sounds worse than she meant it. What I think she meant was, “Why don’t you love him as much as I do? Aren’t you crazy, madly, head-over-the-heels in love with this to-be baby?!”
She was worried that I wasn’t growing attached to our to-be son quickly enough, and I was worried that she and Finn would have some kind of biologically-driven love-bond that I wouldn’t be able to experience.
During the pregnancy, I fixated a lot on what the moments immediately after he was born would be like, actually. Too many narratives, and too many movies, had led me to believe that there should be an instantaneous, all-encompassing, bigger-than-life love for your baby, starting from the first second you set eyes on his cheese-covered body.
What if I, as the non-biological mother, didn’t experience that? What if my body–or my heart–didn’t respond the way it would have if I had contributed my own DNA?
The weird thing is, my preoccupation wasn’t really about Finn. I knew that, no matter what, he’d feel loved. It was about me. I was worried that I would be missing out on the euphoric surge of goodness that comes with seeing your child for the first time.
And here’s the truth: there wasn’t an immediate love-bond. Don’t get me wrong, Finn came out a little blue and floppy, and I’ve never willed something to wellness as much as I did, standing over the table as the newborn nurse flicked his feet and rubbed his back. He was immediately my son, and I immediately wanted everything in the world for him.
But I wouldn’t say that, in that first day, after experiencing 24 hours of sleepless, exhausting labor with Sona, I was in love with him. And, funny enough, Sona now admits the same.
We were both so tired and delirious that, in that first day, we weren’t able to process much else.
I remember, running out that evening to drive family around and grab some dinner for Sona and myself, thinking, “Should I be feeling differently?” Was I some kind of soulless monster because I didn’t feel immediately and overwhelmingly attached to our son?
Then, in the wee hours of the second night at this hospital, it happened. Finn had just finished breastfeeding, and Sona passed him off to me so that I could soothe him while she drifted off to sleep.
I remember it now as vividly as I experienced it then. I put him on my chest, and he curled up into a little ball, much like he still likes to do. (What can I say? I’m a round, soft gal. I make for a good pillow.)
He wedged his head under my chin, twisted his face to the side so much that it scared me, and settled in.
And that was it; that was the moment I fell in love with my son.
Maybe a flood of oxytocin hit me, too. Or maybe it didn’t really matter, because he was (is) mine, and my heart knew it, even if my body didn’t. (Though, as it turns out, adoptive parents experience the rise in oxytocin levels, too. So, in truth, our bodies don’t care. We love our babies because they are ours and not because we birthed them.)
I guess it would be more accurate to say that that was the first time I fell in love with Finn. There was also the time, a day or two after we came home, that I sobbed while rocking him to sleep in the middle of the night.
Or every time he looks at me like this.
Or gives me stink eye. Or puckers his lips while sleeping. Or does anything, really.
Yet, that first time was when I just knew. What did I know? I’m not even sure I can tell you. But Sona knows it too, now. And most parents come to know it in their own time, I’m sure.
We can carry the fear of not knowing whether or not our babies will love us–or we will love them (like I did). And we can carry the shame of feeling like we didn’t love them soon enough or in the right way or like it was expected, too. None of it does anyone any good, in the end.
But I’m here to tell you: it will happen when it happens–and likely when you’re least experiencing it. And when it does, just hold on. Cause DNA or no DNA, you ain’t never known a love like this.
Photo Dump Friday
Finn is 1 Month Old!
Today marks 1 month with our little Finn. We can’t believe that 4 weeks have already gone by. All parents bemoan how quickly time passes, and now I understand.
Already, we can see so many differences in our growing boy. I look back at photos of him as a newborn, right after we brought him home, and he looks so small–so fragile–compared to the strong, growing baby we have now!
Our 1-month old is a curious, silly kid. He’s SO strong; he can push himself up on his feet, and scoot himself all over the bassinet. He’s already rolled over 3 times, though no one believes us (I swear!). He eats like a champ, though he takes his time during each breastfeeding session. And, for the most part, he’s a great sleeper–especially during the day. 🙂
He’s just started taking interest in the cats, and he seems to have formed a kinship with Xander. He is as calm as can be when getting his diaper changed, loves his Indian baby massages, and always smells like coconut oil.
He still has some baby acne, has a tiny scar on his head from the fetal monitor, and is starting to get a bit of a potbelly. He’s been to 11 restaurant meals, 2 farmers markets, and one Target run. He grunts constantly, and he hiccups A LOT (just like when he was in the womb).
He has the most hilariously serious look on his face when he’s studying you, and he pouts his lips in his sleep, which melts his mommas’ hearts. For the most part, he still sleeps in 3-4 hour bouts. And, even though we know we should get him in the crib soon, we love having him sleep in his Rock ‘n Play right next to our bed.
Happy one month birthday, little Finn. We love you SO much, and we can’t wait to see what each month brings!
Photo Dump Friday
How to Soothe a Newborn: The 5 S’s
Let’s not kid ourselves: I’m only 3 weeks in, still deep in the trenches, and hardly in a place where I can give sage parenting advice.
But I do have one thing going for me: I’m a nut when it comes to research. Just ask anyone who has ever been on vacation with me. They’ll tell you all about my neuroses–how I know every hidden spot on the island, every local restaurant, the best spot to capture Sunsets on Tuesday evenings during the summer solstice–and all well before our arrival. I’m just crazy like that.
My approach to parenting has been similar. That is, I’ve spent a good deal of time scouring the internet, reading books, and watching parenting videos. It’s not that I’m blindly searching for someone else’s parenting philosophy to adopt; it’s just that I like to be as prepared–and informed–as I can be.
This can be crippling, too, of course. And a large part of being a parent is just working from–and trusting–your instincts. It’s important to look in, as well as out. But it’s also important to recognize that you aren’t the first person trying to soothe a baby or get them to sleep through the night or teach a toddler to line dance. (okay, maybe you’re the first person doing THAT.)
Nonetheless, even though we are all experts when it comes to our babies, sometimes we could still use some help.
One of the references that I found early on is Harvey Karp’s Happiest Baby on the Block. The pediatrician who led one of our childcare classes actually recommended this book, saying it saved her life when her baby had colic. When I looked on Amazon and saw that it had nearly 2,000 glowing reviews, I was sold. (Amazon reviews are basically the compass by which I live my life, anyway.)
We actually got the DVD instead of the book (because, lazy). We ordered in weeks before Finn arrived, and kept it crammed in our TV cabinet. When I got home from an outing the other day and found that Sona was nearing a meltdown because our cherubic little boy had been screaming his head off for much of the afternoon, I decided it was time to watch.
Let me preface this by saying that this DVD is dated. I mean, it was quite possibly shot on a Super 8. But don’t let that scare you. It’s definitely worth enduring.
The first thing that made us feel better was that there were “real moms” and “real babies,” and the moms were all exhaustively explaining how much their (mostly newborn) babies cry and how helpless they felt when they couldn’t soothe them. “See, we’re not the only ones!” I said to Sona, who seemed immediately comforted by seeing other moms’ misery.
Karp’s philosophy stems from age-old baby soothing techniques. He employs these techniques during the first few months of a baby’s life–a time he calls the 4th trimester. He argues that, basically, newborns are just fetuses living outside of the womb. In order to make them happy and comfortable, we have to try to make their environment as womb-like as possible.
Enter the 5 S’s: Harvey’s alliterative list of soothing techniques. Here they are:
1. Swaddling: This is really the most important step because, without doing it, the others likely won’t be effective. You start here. We’ve found that Finn LOVES to be swaddled, but he is a bit of an escape artist. And, because he is so dang long (this kid is a basketball player in the making), it’s been tricky finding a swaddle that works for him–and one from which he can’t wiggle his way out of.
First, we tried the SwaddleMe Adjustable Infant Wraps by Summer Infant. We got the small/medium, which is meant for babies that are 7-14 lbs. Well, our 7.14 lb newborn outgrew these in one week, which was a total bummer. I actually think these are the most user-friendly swaddles of the ones we tried. They get very snug on top and the velcro seems to stay fitted. However, they are just way too short–something I’ve seen other moms complain about, and Finn could use his feet to stretch the swaddles out enough to break free.
Next, we tried the Halo Sleepsack Swaddles. I actually like these a lot, as does Finn, and I think they will be great for when he is a little bigger. He likes that he has a lot of room to move his feet, and that roominess prevents him from stretching out the swaddle too much. Plus, they come in microfleece, which is great for our chilly house. However, right now, the top just doesn’t swaddle him tightly enough, and he can always break his arms free. If he even senses for a second that he can get an arm out, forget about it. That will be his project, and he won’t get a wink of sleep.
Finally, I ordered the Miracle Blanket Baby Swaddle. This thing is like a straight jacket. Ironically, it’s the only swaddle without velcro or zippers, but it somehow manages to keep our little wiggle worm snug all night long. It’s the trickiest to get on, but–in our experience–it’s the most effective.
Finn sleeps in one of these swaddles every single night and, if he’s super fussy, during the day, too.
2. Shushing: The inside of a mother’s womb is full of sound. Think about it: the blood is rushing, the stomach is gurgling, the heart is beating. So, despite what we sometimes think, babies actually LIKE noise; it calms them.
There are lots of options for noise: radio static, a hair dryer, a vacuum (Finn slept on my shoulder while I vacuumed the whole house when he just a week old). The one we’ve found most effective is a sound machine. We have them EVERYWHERE. When Finn sleeps in his MamaRoo during the day, we keep the “ocean” noise up as loud as it will go. At night, we have the “rain” setting on our sound machine up very loud. We even have sound machine apps on our iPhones, and we will play it for him if he gets a little cranky while we are out.
Dr. Karp also advocates for very loud “shussssssssh”ing in the baby’s ear. We were already doing this with Finn, but we weren’t doing it loudly enough. Karp says that you should “shush” as loud as the baby is crying; if he gets louder, you get louder. We’ve been trying this, and it seems to work really well. I get right up in Finn’s ear and “shusssssssssh” louder than you’d think I should. It usually calms him.
3. Sucking: Finn loves being on the boob, and he often falls asleep after breastfeeding. Sucking settles babies. So, if your boob isn’t handy, you can also try a finger or a pacifier (neither of those really work for our boob-obsessed guy).
4. Side or Stomach Position: We all know that our babies should sleep on their backs; that’s the safest position. Yet, when they have their cranky pants on, it can help to put them on their sides or on their backs. This really helps Finn when he is gassy; he LOVES having the pressure on his tummy.
After watching Karp’s DVD, and learning that swaddling should always come first, we’ve also realized that Finn likes being on his side most if he’s swaddled. It’s easier for us to hold him that way, too, because he’s like a little package. When his legs and arms are dangling, it’s too distracting (and distressing) for him and for us.
5. Swinging: I’ve intentionally saved the best for last. Swinging–or rocking–babies is nothing new, but what Dr. Karp does is different. He does the “jiggle.” And, let me just tell you, The jiggle has become a life-saver in our house! “Just jiggle him!” is now our favorite phrase.
Karp’s jiggle allows the baby’s head to wiggle back and forth in a motion that, frankly, would probably freak most parents out had a renowned pediatrician not shown them how to do it.
He does it while the baby is in his lap, swaddled, and he does it with the baby in the football hold, swaddled. Jiggling Finn while he’s swaddled and in the football hold has worked best for us. I face him towards me, hold him around his waist, allowing his feet to go behind me, and put his head in my open palm. Then, I just wiggle him. Since his body is swaddled, his head jiggles pretty easily. This usually really calms him down if he’s fussy, and it puts him to sleep at night. The first night we tried it, in fact, was the easiest night of sleeping in his short, 3-week life.
This YouTuber demonstrates the jiggle (and all of the other steps) pretty well at around the 2:00 mark.
Another thing Karp does on the DVD is vigorously shake the baby in the swing. Like most moms, we have been gently swinging or bouncing Finn. Now, when we are trying to get him to sleep in his Rock N Play at night, I shake it pretty vigorously, too. It’s more of a 7.0 earthquake than a soft rocking. And guess what? He loves it!
Of course, these things don’t work all of the time, and you are likely to find a screaming baby in our house any day of the week. But, when he IS screaming, it’s really comforting for us to know that there are reliable ways to intervene.
The First 24
So much happened in the first 24 hours of Finn’s life–and there were SO many feels. Even now, just three weeks later, we’re having trouble remembering everything about that first day.
I want to remember, though.
What I do know is that–like much of the first few weeks–that first day was full of a myriad of emotions for both Sona and myself. We’d been in labor, and at the hospital, for nearly a full 24 hours before Finn was born (as I wrote about in our birth story). We were both exhausted, having slept only an hour or two in that time and have not eaten a real meal since we checked in.
Finn was born at 2:48 in the afternoon. Immediately after the delivery, the nurses took him to pink him up, checked his vitals, and made sure that he was healthy and thriving. (There were a few scares during delivery, and they took him away before we could even delay cord clamping, which we’d requested.)
I must say this: the staff at Evanston Hospital, where we delivered, was amazingly attentive. We cycled through several shifts of nurses and residents during our time there, and they were all kind, patient, and reassuring. During the 24 hours of labor, especially, they proved to be reliable and steadfast.
The 6-8 hours that followed labor, though, were challenging for all of us–but mostly for me. And here’s the thing: I’m not really sure if I experienced the same kind of isolation and general left-out-ness that fathers experience immediately following the birth of their children or if my experience was somehow made more difficult by the fact the I was Finn’s second, non-biological mother.
Nonetheless, in the hours after Finn was born, the focus was, understandably, on Sona and Finn. She was repeatedly referred to as “the mother.” I was able to hold him for a few minutes after the nurses got him cleaned up, but then they quickly took him from me, handing him to “the mother” for skin-to-skin and feeding. And there he stayed–for a long, long time.
(We did manage to sneak in our first selfie before they took him; it’s the only photo we have together from his first day of life.)
Of course, we wanted Sona to do skin-to-skin right after birth, and we were anxious to see whether or not Finn would latch quickly. (He did, thankfully!) But I guess that I expected to get to do skin-to-skin, too. I know I’d seen fathers do it, but I hadn’t explicitly asked. I hadn’t advocated for myself. That was, I think, my mistake.
After about 90 minutes of Sona having skin-to-skin, the nurses helped us pack up for our move up to the maternity ward. I took Finn from Sona, helping her into the wheel chair, but the nurse was quick to tell me that, “The mother carries the baby up to the maternity ward.” So, she took him and gave him back to Sona for the ride up.
The thing is, I think the nurses at Evanston Hospital are spectacular, and I really think they did their very best, making sure that we were all taken care of. I just think that my own insecurities about being the third wheel began to bubble up in those moments after his delivery, and that was likely due to lots of factors, including our exhaustion, the heightened emotions, my mama bear instincts kicking in, and, maybe, a little innocent confusion about how to address TWO moms.
Once we got up to the maternity ward, where we’d spend the next two days, the baby nurses took Finn to the nursery for his first bath. Since Sona had to stay in the room to recover, I was able to accompany him on this adventure, and I was, selfishly, happy to get him to myself.
I’ll never forget those couple of hours, watching Finn get his first bath, holding his little hand, and staring in complete wonder at our little son.
Those moments are particularly special because, as soon as he came back to the room, I had to leave to take our family back to our place, care for our animals, take my first shower in nearly 36 hours, and grab some dinner for Sona and myself.
While I was gone, the nurse came in the room and gave the whole how-you-care-for-baby spiel, which, as you can imagine, I was really bummed to have missed.
I was exhausted from the whole thing, and I was probably more emotional than I would have been had I been rested and fed and, you know, sane.
At around 10:00, I got back to the hospital, relieved Sona’s sister, and–for the first time–the three of us were alone.
Somehow, as sleep deprived and emotionally spent as we were, Sona and I sat up in the hospital bed and ate some take-out sushi while our son slept next to us.
Finn slept pretty soundly his first night, waking up only to feed, as expected. Since Sona was breastfeeding, I was adamant about assuming all other responsibilities. And, even still, I’m usually the one changing diapers, picking out outfits, and soothing Finn back to sleep.
Those are responsibilities I protect fiercely. At first, I did it because I thought it’d be the only way I could bond with him. Now, I do it because it’s the only time I get him to myself, especially with a nonstop parade of friends and family visits.
That next morning, after going through the photos of Finn’s first day and realizing there weren’t any of me with him–or of the three of us–I cried. Looking back, I was just throwing myself a little pity party. There was my warrior of a wife, so sore she could barely move, and I was whining about not being in any photos.
But I think I was just overwhelmed. Being a mom is hard; being a new mom is REALLY hard. I was hit so hard with a full-on crazy love for Finn, and I was terrified that he wouldn’t love me back. Or that he wouldn’t know I was his mom. Or that other people wouldn’t know that he was MY son, too.
Those were all my own hang-ups, of course, but they are hang-ups I imagine a lot of other co-parents experience.
After I had a good cry, Sona–being the saint she is–pulled herself out of bed, grabbed my camera, and insisted on getting some photos of Finn and I doing skin-on-skin.
I needed it in that moment, because I needed to feel like I was one of Finn’s moms, too. Now, three weeks later, that just seems silly. Finn is our son–both of ours–and a photo or two doesn’t change that.
But there were some growing pains in those first few days, mostly born out of a love so big and wild that it couldn’t be tamed. It scared us then, and it scares us now, but it’s so, so good.