My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

AIBU to include NICU pictures in a baby photo book?

113 replies

redwellybluewelly · 15/04/2013 19:53

Please be gentle with me!

DD was in a coma on life support shortly after she was born for a week, we only have one grainy photo of her before transfer, she was then in for a bit longer getting better and came home at two weeks old. Since then she has gone from strength to strength but there have been re admissions.

So. DC2 is due in two months, DD is obsessed with babies and also pictures of herself. I thought I'd make a photobook for her of her as a baby that she can flick through when I'm feeding dc2 but also because she would love to take it to nursery and also show people.

Anyway. Speaking to a friend (with children) and she said that putting in any photos from NICU would be creepy and weird, but to me they are an important part of DD being a baby.

I wouldn't put in the close up coma ones where she is on life support (you can't actually see much baby) but maybe the ones of her first breastfeed (NG tube in) or where DH is standing by the NICU crib wuth the million and one machines keeping her going.

Am I being unreasonable? )

OP posts:
Report
shugfish · 16/04/2013 13:55

From my own experiences I think it may also be very important to your daughter to have these pictures to look at when she's older.
I was very unwell as a infant and had open heart surgery and a long PICU stay. There are no photos of that time (pre digital cameras and in the time of very expensive film) I managed to get hold of my old notes recently and found the initial cardiology referral letter, discussions over how and when to operate, my inpatient stay notes and all my follow up outpatient letters. It was fasinating to read and gave me some understanding of that time in my life. The ability to look back at pictures may help your daughter understand her beginnings when she's older. Those notes really made me appreciate how lucky I am to be here.

On another note redwelly I just wanted to say how positive you seem to be with everything you have going on in your life. Your posts always make me smile

Report
AprilFoolishness · 16/04/2013 13:57

Miaow - my DH was away so when I came round from my GA a lovely nurse took my iPhone and ran down to NICU to take a picture of my twins. I wasn't very with it, but I remember holding it and looking at them for ages as I came to.

They also had a digital camera and printer in both the NICUs and printed images off for us, so when DS was transferred away I had a picture of him in a little card in my room, one of the first New Baby cards I got.

Report
formicaqueen · 16/04/2013 13:59

put it in.

Report
Owllady · 16/04/2013 14:01

I can't quite believe what some people think is okay to come out with!Shock
of course it isn't weird and creepy

Report
ShadowStorm · 16/04/2013 14:03

Miaow - the SCBU DS was in had a digital camera and printer - the neo-natal nurses gave me a couple of photos they'd taken with that. (This was about 20 months ago)

Report
silverangel · 16/04/2013 16:19

I got given photos off DTs too, 20 months ago, when they were in NICU. They are in their baby books, I don't like to look at them too much (they are all bruised and swollen and one was on a ventilator) but I wanted them in there. We've also kept their teeny tiny id bands, cpap dummies, little 'shoe' things they had to keep canulas in etc.

We had photo books done for granny and nanny for their first christmas and there are loads of SCBU photos in there - its when they had their first cuddles with them - and their NGT's are in and some of them they're under under the light boxes with their eye masks on and covered in wires. It would be odd to pretend that didnt happen IMO.

Report
silverangel · 16/04/2013 16:20

of FTs, not off...

Report
itsnothingoriginal · 16/04/2013 18:40

So sad to read about the babies who didn't make it home on this thread Sad

I wish I'd taken pictures of DD in NICU/SCBU as I was too upset and traumatised at the time.

Now she's older she wants to know why she has a disability and I wish I had the pics to show her and talk her through it.

YANBU your friend clearly has not thought through how important those pictures are for you and your child.

Report
phantomnamechanger · 16/04/2013 18:54

OP, no doubt your friend would think I am beyond creepy - I have pictures and footprints and handprints from my precious stillborn DD3 who we knew was not going to come home with us. They are all we still have of her, and are in a treasured box with all our condolence cards and a pink cuddly rabbit I bought for me to fall asleep crying into Sad

Report
ipswichwitch · 16/04/2013 19:28

Phantom :( sadly that would make two of us - we have photos, hand/foot prints etc of our gorgeous DS who was stillborn, and I treasure them all. His twin brother was on Scbu for 3 weeks and we have tons of photos of him (some on the wall at home) in his incubator with feeding tube. There is nothing weird or creepy about it. It would be stranger to pretend it never happened imo

Report
blondefriend · 16/04/2013 19:39

I've gone a little step further than that so your friend will think I'm completely bonkers. My ds was in GOSH for 3+ months, travelled to Germany for treatment, was ventilated in intensive care, had 2 major operations, was ng tube fed until 10+ months, was in and out of hospital until 18 months and is now a wonderful bouncing 2.5 year old. :)
I took 100s and 100s of photos and made a photo book purely of his life through his condition and coming out the other side. I gave one copy to GOSH and they made it into a DVD (I had to go in and do a voice over) and they now use it for education and support for other parents with children with the same, rare condition.
That wasn't the original plan but my OH and I clicked the camera at every opportunity. He was our precious son and these experiences are part of that. My dd was also in scbu at birth (but only for 1 week) and she loves the photos. She knows which lines are for checking the heart, which ones fed her, which ones gave medicine etc. She's never been scared or frightened by them. She even ng-tube fed her dollies for months.

Disability and differences are not something to be ashamed of or hidden but to be shared and celebrated. Her comments are hurtful to those of us that have had SCBU babies but must be heartbreaking to those who have disabled children as they seem to indicate that anything less than perfect shouldn't be photographed and shared.

Report
MiaowTheCat · 16/04/2013 20:15

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

bordellosboheme · 17/04/2013 11:09

Grin blond friend good for you Grin lovely example.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.