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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To consider DNA testing?

89 replies

Irrationalanxiety · 06/04/2018 16:13

Our beautiful baby was born two weeks ago and I have been suffering with anxiety ever since, as everything seems too good to be true.

One irrational fear I cannot let go was set into motion by the fact that our baby doesn’t really seem to look like either of us. We can’t have managed to take the wrong one home (I believe it has happened!) as there are distinctive birth marks and I don’t remember leaving the baby unattended.

This led me to cast my mind back to a function I attended which culminated in a party in a hotel room. I drunk too much (and haven’t drunk since) and don’t remember the end of the night but did wake up in the room with several others. I have no reason to believe that anything happened - in fact those present said it didn’t. At the time I had the fear so badly before asking anyone that I took Levonelle the next day. I was around cycle day 10 of a 30 day cycle.

Two weeks later my period arrived early, and I conceived that cycle. My due date was determined over the course of several early scans due to bleeding and remained consistent to within a couple of days from six weeks through to the twelve week scan. It was a week behind what would have been calculated from LMP but this was expected due to my slightly longer cycles. Our baby was born the day after due date at 40+1.

It’s therefore surely impossible that I had conceived five weeks earlier, BEFORE my period, EVEN if something had happened which I’m sure I would never have done and EVEN if it had and the MAP had failed.

But, I had read online that embryonic diapause (delayed development) is frequent in some mammal species and there is an article citing one possible anecdotal case in a human woman, whose egg seneed to implant five weeks after IVF transfer. It didn’t seem hugely scientifically sound to me though and is the only example I can fine, although researchers found that the same phenomenon can happen if fertilised eggs of species who do not exhibit diapause are placed in the wombs of species who do.

At around this time I began taking ubiquinol (co-enzyme Q10) and my paranoid fear is that somehow this combined with the artificial hormones in the MAP triggered a response from my uterus which led to the egg being frozen in development until it implanted six weeks later when the HCG showed on a pregnancy test.

Or - of course this is nonsense and I conceived five weeks later as normal during one of the many times partner and I DTD during my fertile window.

I KNOW rationally it’s impossible for anyone other than DP to be the father, EVEN if I’d slept with someone four weeks earlier, which I didn’t anyway!

But this thought is taking over to the point that I am in tears each day and feel like I will lose my wonderful DP. Everyone says babies look like their fathers and I can’t say our’s does - in fact I constantly analyse features against other people who were there that night previously.

If I ask for a DNA test it would of course upset my DP and I think totally unnecessarily, but I am in absolute despair not being able to lay this to rest.

Would it be worth me seeing my GP about the anxiety instead?

Thank you if anyone has managed to read all of this! Any advice gratefully received

OP posts:
IAmWonkoTheSane · 06/04/2018 16:15

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

MrsTerryPratchett · 06/04/2018 16:16

Talk to your GP. Please do it soon.

Buscake · 06/04/2018 16:16

I think you should make an appt to see your GP about your anxiety. Just after having a baby is an incredibly vulnerable time for your mental health Flowers Congratulations on your baby

ChazsBrilliantAttitude · 06/04/2018 16:18

Forget the DNA test and get yourself checked for PND. You are looking for problems that don't exist. I suspect this is because you feel anxious anyway and need something to focus your anxiety on. If you were not worrying about this then you would be worrying just as much about something else.

Please go and speak to your GP and be kind to yourself Flowers

Justwaitingforaline · 06/04/2018 16:19

Yes, see the GP for your anxiety instead.

DD looked nothing like me or her father when she was born. At the age of 3, she is starting to look like me but still looks nothing like him.

Irrationalanxiety · 06/04/2018 16:21

Thank you. I will - you are all absolutely right. I know this really but I have such a fear of losing everything

Just humour me - do small babies often have quite thick eyelids? Our’s is beautiful but I’m sure this is the main feature that seems unlike us and like one of the “party goers”

OP posts:
x2boys · 06/04/2018 16:22

Yes I think you should go to the Gp I had horrible post natal anxiety I fixated on cot death I was a mental health nurse and i.knew exactly what was wrong bit I couldn't stop the intrusive thoughts Flowers

FlakyToast · 06/04/2018 16:23

The thing is... sometimes. Having a baby.

Well, it just makes you fucking mental. I look back at the first month after my first dc was born and I was bonkers. Properly bonkers. I won't go in to the details... but christ. Blush Completely bonkers. It's not the end of the world though. It does pass. They won't take your baby away because you get help, they have seen it all before. You just get a bit of extra help and monitoring and recognising you need help is proof that you're a good parent.

As to the hotel story, I@m a bit concerned about that as it sounds a bit dodgy. Especially if you felt it necessary to take something. Do you think you were assaulted? Obviously this wouldn't have lead to some delayed pregnancy but it could be why you're struggling too.

Flowers
MrsTerryPratchett · 06/04/2018 16:26

Just humour me. Babies often have swollen looking eyes when they're tiny.

Now humour me and get to the doctor.

FadedRed · 06/04/2018 16:26

What the previous posters said, you need to see your GP. Anxiety is very common (almost normal tbh) after you have had a baby, but this level of anxiety is above and beyond when it is worrying you so much. Flowers
You will also probably find that, if you had some family baby photos, that your baby is the spitting image of Great Aunt Nelly/Great Uncle Frank.

GeekyBlinders · 06/04/2018 16:28

Babies all look much more like Winston Churchill than they do either parent, as a rule! Please see the GP, it sounds like some of the things I was thinking when I started with PND.

Pennywhistle · 06/04/2018 16:31

Go and see your GP and discuss. I know if feels like you are being rational about this but really you aren’t.

To set your mind at rest, I have twins. When they were born DD looked just like me and DS looked nothing like either of us or anyone else in the family.

He’s been the absolute spitting image of his Dad since he was 2yo.
Babies looks sometimes change quite a bit overtime.

My DH doesn’t look anything like either of his parents but he is the spitting image of his Mum’s great uncle.

All will be well.

Flaskfan · 06/04/2018 16:33

when i had my second dc i totally started to get where the idea of changeling babies came from. Dc just wasn't who I'd pictured I my head, whereas i knew dc1 all along. Dc2 just didn't feel like mine. Obviously she is and i can't imagine being without her, but it was a very strange time and i think it was probably pnd.

Snowysky20009 · 06/04/2018 16:33

Calm down and stop looking for something that isn't there.

Yes babies can be quite 'puffy' when new. Our ds2 did for a little while. I couldn't seem him looking like either of us, then he got to 3 months and started looking like every member of dp's family! There's one photo of him with my SIL and you'd think he was hers. No trace of me in him at all!!

FlakyToast · 06/04/2018 16:33

Newborns are all kind of swirly and weird looking. Anyone who claims they looked like a parent is coasting on new parent hormones. They all basically look the same, even accounting for race and hair they're practically all the same weird squidgy tiny, big headed clone of each other.

None of my three looked like DH (or me) when they were born and I have no paternity doubts whatsoever. Older now you can see both of us to varying degrees in all of them.

FingerlingUnderling · 06/04/2018 16:36

My DD has epicanthic folds akin to someone from a Sami background. We have viking stock on my side but from hundreds of years ago. She has navy blue eyes and really pale skin that does not burn and does not tan. She has a short curved forehead whilst me and DH both have high foreheads. This is not at all like me and DH, but she's definitely ours! I think sometimes our DNA plucks out characteristics from long ago or creates new ones. It does not mean your child has a different father. The odds are epically high if you having delayed conception.

DeathStare · 06/04/2018 16:39

There is nothing anyone is going to be able to say on here to reassure you. And the DNA test is unlikely to reassure you either (you'll just start thinking about mistakes that could happen in the testing process) That's what anxiety is like. Please go and talk to the GP.

Dobbythesockelf · 06/04/2018 16:42

You need to see your gp. As for babies looking like their dad, I never think babies look like anything other than babies. My dd didn't look like either of us until she was 18 months and now she is all me.

Knittedfairies · 06/04/2018 16:44

You don’t need a DNA test OP; you need help from your GP.💐

Pennywhistle · 06/04/2018 16:46

Newborns are all kind of swirly and weird looking

Very true! Adorable, but weird looking.

Vandree · 06/04/2018 16:46

At 2 weeks newborns dont really look like anyone. They are just squished up red balls of limbs and squalls. When people say they look like either parent/grandparent/auntie/uncle they dont really. Not just out of the womb. A lot of times mothers cant see the similarities with themselves either. My niece is a carbon copy of my SIL, if you saw 2 pictures side by side they could be the same person. My sil insists her dd looks like her dh instead, but she really honestly and truly doesn't.

I think you need to take the advice on here and see your gp as it sounds like your anxiety and worries are PND. I know you think you are being logical right now but you aren't.

TreeClimbingMonkey · 06/04/2018 16:48

Please talk to your GP.

Ds1 didn't look anything like myself or Dh and even my lovely MIL blurted out that it didn't look like either of us. Despite knowing 100% that there wasn't any chance of this baby being anybody else's but Dh and I it still made me take a minute to think about whether I had brought the wrong baby home because surely that is the only explanation.

Or the rational part says all babies are just squishy little humans who may or may not look anything like their parents when they are born. I look nothing like my own parents but look like I could be my Aunty's daughter. My two sons look nothing alike even now. Ds1 looks like Dh and Ds2 looks exactly like me when I was a little girl.

Go and talk to your GP. As others have said having a baby can make you have terrifying thoughts and feelings.

Charolais · 06/04/2018 16:49

Our son looks nothing like anyone we know in either family and he’s almost 30. We did the 23&me for other reasons and he’s all ours. He’s just a throw back I guess.

UnaMagdalena · 06/04/2018 16:52

I remember feeling strange doubts that my x was my dc1's father which was ludicrous as I hadn't had sex with anybody else. She had much paler colouring than I'd expected and I looked at her and didn't see him. I snapped out of it though. If it wasn't him I don't know who I thought it was!! I think it's some throw back from caveman times.

mimibunz · 06/04/2018 16:53

Flowers Just here to support and encourage you to see your GP.