Smorgasbord Mommy
Speaking of pounds, the lactation consultant scarred me into embracing childhood obesity as she sat at the end of my hospital bed while burping my newborn into a bobble-head coma and calmly described how fast breast milk churns through a little one’s system, causing them to hit infant starvation within ninety minutes of the last feeding.
“Their belly’s the size of a marble,” she said, winking at me although I had no idea why. “Your job’s to make sure that marble’s constantly refilled, and it takes sixty minutes to fill it.”
Coming from a family where hospitality means stuffing guests to the gills then requiring them to do jumping jacks so they can pack in more, the four words “infant starvation” and “ninety minutes” formed in my head a death sentence.
If I did not fill up my child’s “marble” for an hour every hour and a half, I could just imagine her little tummy sinking in, her cheeks hollowing out, and her eyes fluttering up in her head like an old-fashioned doll turned upside down.
It was a race against time. It was a race against infant starvation. It was a race to see how quickly I could lose my sanity along with my shirt.
Anytime Adelaide opened her mouth, I tried to fill it. It didn’t matter if she was yawning, screaming, or attempting her first smile, Mommy knew best, and Mommy knew that Baby Girl’s marble was going on ‘E.’
Due to the priority of turning my child into a glutton, visiting relatives — bearing pastel gifts and Saran-wrapped meals — were placed so far back on the burner, they couldn’t even feel the heat. I nursed while doing everything but taking a shower, and I only avoided that because I feared Adelaide’s marble would fill with water instead of milk and she would begin preferring a gallon of H2O over me.
Whenever I changed her diaper, which was in direct proportion to her number of feedings, I would pinch the tops of her legs to check for ounces lost or gained and would never admit how chubby she was getting until I went to pick Adelaide up from her bassinet and my arms spasmed beneath the unaccustomed weight.
Still, three weeks into motherhood, when I corked a pacifier into my daughter’s squalling mouth for five minutes of extra sleep and awoke two hours later to find her lids still skittering with dreams, I was ridden with guilt. I pictured the lactation consultant winking while saying my daughter’s marble had now shrunk to the size of a pea. I woke Adelaide up and fed her until I imagined her marble expanding to a golf ball. I knew that if I didn’t, she was going to spend the next three decades explaining to her therapist how she was neglected by her mother when she needed her the most.
After that night I inadvertently missed a feeding, I began having stress dreams that my daughter was trapped somewhere inside our down comforter. I would scream and thrash while pummeling the pillows in search of her (a really good thing she wasn’t in there). Completely “aware” of my surroundings, I wouldn’t fully awaken until my husband yelled to look over and see our daughter swaddled and sleeping despite her mother’s frantic screams.
(I really slept like a log after that; my husband, for some reason, had more trouble hitting REM.)
Today, a Saturday, I have been up since a quarter to seven but my hair’s still slicked in a headband meant to cover the grease around my temples and I am wearing a bathrobe that bears traces of spit-up from two weeks back. My daughter is sprawled across my lap while using certain aspects of my anatomy as her personal pacifier. Each time I get up to do something luxurious like brush my teeth or make the bed, she clamps down hard with her newborn gums, forcing me to sit back down or get maimed.
I glance over at the mantel clock: I’ve got four hours to complete a to-do list four cubits long. I look down at my daughter, at her pudgy cheeks and don’t-even-think-about-it eyes. I’ll give Precious here fifteen more minutes, and then I’m getting to my feet.
Perhaps reconstructive surgery is not so bad.
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randomthoughtsfrommidlife
Oh, you bring back the good old days. I was told that if you feed them more often than 2hours, you start a vicious cycle. Your body needs rest to produce.
It's hard for first time nursing moms because they have to rely on blind faith that their child is getting enough to eat. They have no visual reassurance of ounces in a bottle.
I'm sure you're doing great. We all freak out a little bit at first. By the time your fourth one comes around he or she will have to stand up and sing the Star Spangled Banner to get a bit to eat.
Kalen - Kentucky Cupcake
I didn't nurse, so my experience was different, but my midwife had 5 kids and when she was trying to help me with breastfeeding she said, “We have lost our ability to trust human nature. Unless your baby is sick or premature, it has the ability to tell you when it is hungry. Don't let it go more than 5 hours at night in the early weeks because you'll lose your milk or more than 4 hours during the day because they'll get their days & nights mixed up, but other than that, you can trust your baby will tell you when they need to eat.”
It made a lot of sense to me, and I think sometimes they want us to succeed in breastfeeding so badly that they overdo it, making it more intense than it has to be. But other times they don't push it enough, leaving us with milk supply issues and formula supplementation. It's a fine balance. Sounds like you're doing just fine. And remember that a starving person doesn't sleep very well.
Congrats on nursing successfully, Jolina!
Jolina Petersheim
I do think I introduced a vicious cycle, Christine. Well, it's not vicious exactly, but with my next child I am going to try to relax when it comes to the nursing routine. I'll just let her demand to be nursed, but I want demand THAT she nurses. We're both figuring it out, though, and I am loving the intimacy that breastfeeding provides.
Jolina Petersheim
That's “won't” not “want.”
Jolina Petersheim
I am going to adopt your midwife, Kalen! She sounds lovely! Sadly, because my labor went so long that I had to be admitted to the hospital, I didn't get to have my midwives with me after Adelaide's birth; therefore, the hospital's lactation consultant worked with me and not the wonderful ladies I was familiar with. I am sure their advice would have been similiar to that your midwive provided, and I wish I could go back and resleep that time I was waking my newborn daughter up! Wow. Hindsight was definitely 20/20 in that case. At least I'll know better next time! Thanks for stopping by, busy momma!
Cecilia Marie Pulliam
The first child is always an experiment. Actually, each child is in a sense as each is different, however, with experience, we have the confidence to improvise when needed without going into panic mode.
You sound wise enough to filter out the things that don't pertain to your daughter. It will get easier.
Jolina Petersheim
I have heard that just when you think you've got parenthood figured out, you have a new child who must be raised completely differently. I will just take each child as he comes, I guess. Thanks for the heads up, and it is already getting easier! 🙂
Petra
I can definitely concur with that – I have six and they are all so different. My 6th one disproved so many theories I thought I had down pat… which is why I don't generally read any parenting books by anyone with only one or two kiddos. 🙂
Petra
p.s. I'm on my 2nd 16 year old, and you have to go through a couple of those too before figuring it out. I've just learned to apologize a lot… seems to work. lol
Jolina Petersheim
Oh, good, Petra! I've got apologizing down pat! 😉
cynthiarobertson
Wow, does this ever remind me of those first days. I was a nervous wreck and thought my baby would starve. She didn't, of course, and neither will Adelaide. Every two hours is often enough, and that will grow longer and longer in between, until it's every 4 or 5 hours. In the meantime, remember to take care of mommy. Eat good and drink lots.
Glad you still have your excellent sense of humor, despite the sleep deprivation 🙂
Jolina Petersheim
I have found that laughter can get a person through so much, and it definitely comes in handy now! 🙂 Good news, too: Adelaide slept for a three hour stretch last night and a friend suggested to give her a bottle of breastmilk right before bed to hold her over for an extra precious hour. We shall see if it works!
Petra
This was hilarious! You sound like a wonderful mom, keep up the good work. 😉
Jolina Petersheim
Thanks, pretty lady. You are the standard of “wonderful mom,” and I hope I live up to it! Xx
Petra
It was evident while you were still pregnant, only from reading some of your blog posts, that you'll do just fine – 🙂
Julia Munroe Martin
This was absolutely HILARIOUS and yet so true to life. I remember feeling those exact same things and the crazed state they can lead to! Lucky little Adelaide for having such a devoted and fun mom — many good times to come! 🙂 p.s. I just love her name, so lovely!
Jolina Petersheim
Thanks, dear Julia; I love her name, too! I can tell that many good times are yet to come just by how often Adelaide is starting to smile! 🙂
Melissa Crytzer Fry
Hmm. This is why cat babies are preferable, I think : -). Kidding! But I'm with everyone else… you're doing great, and Addie already knows it. Hang in there, girl. I'm feeling tired FOR you.
Jolina Petersheim
I love cat babies, too, Melissa! I spent the first decade of my life packing one around. Perhaps it was training! 😉 About the sleep deprivation, I don't know how it works out, but in the morning I am always okay again. I really sleep DEEP in between her feedings, though, so that might be some of it. Randy says I snore like a freight train, even when he rocks me gently to get me to stop, I don't even know it! Good thing I know he loves me!