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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

So hard having a baby

104 replies

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 13:37

I know I'm unreasonable. Everyone told me having a baby is hard. But dear god, I was not prepared for it. I'm sleep deprived, depressed, bored, and overwhelmed all at the same time. Baby is 12 weeks which I was told is this magical time when baby gets easier. She must be having a growth spurt though because she's suddenly not sleeping and feeding ALL the time. I feel like a dairy cow.

Boss at my old job told a woman who announced her pregnancy that her life is over and she'll never sleep again. I thought he was such a dick (and he was otherwise a really nice guy) for saying that. But I see it now. He was right.

My baby is gorgeous but how do people do this? Maybe I’m not cut out for this. My poor baby.

It doesn't help I have no one other than DH. No family. And friends are all childless and in work, so they just want to meet in the evenings which I can't do. I've met nice mums at mum coffee groups and they're nice but they all have their own lives, don't think I'm making any friends there.

OP posts:
SurpriseTwinPregnancy · 17/11/2024 15:32

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 14:52

Thanks everyone. It really is just the sleep deprivation and an overwhelming sense of responsibility. I'm constantly looking out for the baby, what she needs, etc. Even when I leave her with DH to go for a nap, I keep thinking i can hear her cry and it takes me a while to wind down.

I had forgotten about this feeling, especially with DC1. I couldn’t “sleep when the baby sleeps” because I didn’t know how long it would be for and knew it wouldn’t be long before she needed me. Also, I was too much of a nervous wreck to relax most of the time.

OrangeSlices998 · 17/11/2024 15:42

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 14:54

It really helps to read other people feel the same. I feel a lot less alone and i'm glad i posted. I've also had a strong coffee and some food, that helps too.

I don't know why but all the mums I know LOVE IT. And I feel like a failure because I don't.

I’m pregnant with my 3rd. I almost guarantee you they’re lying or not being honest - it’s impossible to enjoy every moment and every mum of a young baby like yours has rubbish days and nights that never seem to end and find it all so exhausting and overwhelming. Some people just hide it!

charltonred · 17/11/2024 15:43

I think I wrote a similar post when I had a newborn, also have a very hands on husband and it made me feel worse because I couldn’t understand why it was still so hard. I really
didn’t enjoy the early baby stage and I think that’s ok, it’s brutal.

In terms of sleep deprivation I’d go to bed at 8pm. Husband would feed baby between 10-11 and then come to bed. I would then do any wake ups between 12-6am but baby wouldn’t usually wake until after 2am. Which meant I’d usually get 8-2am undisturbed. Husband would sleep 12-6am undisturbed. He’d then get up with baby if we’d had a bad night so I could have an extra hour. It worked for us. Neither one of us was ever absolutely exhausted, the tiredness was manageable this way.

Baby classes were the best thing I did just to get out the house regularly, I also walked 2 hours a day with baby in pram while listening to podcasts. Spent a lot of time browsing supermarkets and shopping centres to pass time out of the house. If you have an Everyman near you they do screenings you can take your baby to. It doesn’t feel like it but it DOES get better. You adapt and it gets easier at the same time.

Also just to add I was actually diagnosed with PND after struggling for 12 months and I really wish I’d gone to the doctors a lot earlier.

Beezknees · 17/11/2024 15:45

You WILL sleep again, I promise. I have a teenager and he sleeps more than me.

I didn't particularly enjoy the baby and toddler years to be honest. It was purely about survival until he was potty trained and could talk!

charltonred · 17/11/2024 15:45

Sorry just read your update on baby not having bottle so please ignore my post.

Cryingatthegym · 17/11/2024 15:47

I was talking about this with my aunt just yesterday. Your first baby is such a shock to the system. There's nothing wrong with you OP, it's a huge adjustment. I spent the first 6 months of my DDs life thinking what the fuck have I done. After the first year it started to get enjoyable. Hang in there.

FormerlyPathologicallyHappy · 17/11/2024 15:53

JasmineTea11 · 17/11/2024 15:10

I know some won't appreciate me saying this, but since it's a scientific fact I'm going to; BF your baby the best thing you can do - right now - for their short and long term health.

In the first six months it is how you seem to spend most of your time. It's tiring and boring. I wish podcasts had existed then! If you can stick it out, you can be really proud of that.

You ex college was a dick though, because you will get a good nights sleep again, just not for another 18 months! It's a slog, and what you're feeling is normal. At least get your DP to look after DC for a bit, so you can nap at the weekend.

My cousins best friend told him, on the day his first child was born “last night was the last night of sleeping with no worries”

3 adult kids in cousin agrees, at the time he thought well that’s very pessimistic.

Scottishskifun · 17/11/2024 16:15

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 13:46

Yeah DH does loads, including getting up at night to do nappy changes, soothing etc. It almost makes me feel worse because other women have husbands who do nothing. If they can cope, why can't I????

The bar shouldn't be at floor level for a husband to not do any actual parenting!

I completely get it I was begging my boss to come back at 8 weeks she refused and I'm glad she did as after the 4 month mark I did actually start enjoying time with DS1.

You are still in the absolutely relentless stage I p1romise it does get easier but you need to fqocus on getting through the now.

Go to bed early after evening feeds leave DH in charge downstairs til 10/11 and you get a good nap in. Reframing night time helped me a lot. I didn't see it as not getting sleep just how many naps I could have. I have no idea how this helped but it did as actually an hour and a half nap was good, 3 hours was epic nap.

Get out in the day for walks even if you don't want to I don't know why fresh air helps either but it does! See if there are any local mums who don't mind a chat or WhatsApp group or use peanut or similar.

Scottishskifun · 17/11/2024 16:20

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 14:54

It really helps to read other people feel the same. I feel a lot less alone and i'm glad i posted. I've also had a strong coffee and some food, that helps too.

I don't know why but all the mums I know LOVE IT. And I feel like a failure because I don't.

I'm going to be honest here they are absolutely lying to you! And quite possibly themselves a lot!

There are some great funny accounts on Instagram of mums in real life worth a look up.

A lot of women feel they should love it and therefore say they do. It's a bit of faux par to say actually this is bloody tough why didn't anyone warn me! So women lie with a smile on their face scratch the surface and you will find they feel exactly the same at different points.

You are not a failure, your baby is very much wanted and loved it's just fucking tough and relentless at times.
P.S yes I was that mum in a baby class who was brutally honest about it being shit despite loving DS1 with my whole being.

WhereIsMyLight · 17/11/2024 16:47

I’d say 12 weeks is when it starts getting incrementally easier but you don’t suddenly wake up and it’s easy. I’m not sure that ever happens! They actually start becoming a baby now rather than just a potato that cries, shits and vomits all the time. They start to pick things up and do the basics of play, start to show preferences for things and start to develop their own little personality. 4 months was easier for me because routines started to become a bit clearer and at 6 months, baby was out of our room and weaning gave a bit of structure to the day.

I would say generally it’s just small steps and the occasional big leap. It got a lot easier for me when I went back to work. I had a lot more love for DC when I actually had the chance to miss them. Then back to incrementally until about 18 months. DC is a toddler and whilst they are challenging, I am enjoying this stage so much more than the newborn.

The library was a god send for me. I didn’t really like baby classes. The library had baby classes that I could go to if I wanted but I could also just go when it was quiet. I would pick up a ‘blind date with a book’, most times I didn’t read it but I liked unwrapping the book when I got home and seeing what I got. If I didn’t read it, no worries I’d not bought it. Having to take books back would often be enough to force me out of the house but if I absolutely couldn’t get out (or too disorganised to find the books) I could renew online. I swear the librarian also had a sixth sense for when I needed someone to make adult conversation with me and when I needed someone to just let me by myself.

AnonyMouse80 · 17/11/2024 17:16

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 14:54

It really helps to read other people feel the same. I feel a lot less alone and i'm glad i posted. I've also had a strong coffee and some food, that helps too.

I don't know why but all the mums I know LOVE IT. And I feel like a failure because I don't.

You’re definitely not alone.

I found having a baby very very hard and I honestly did not enjoy maternity leave much. I couldn’t even say I loved my baby until he was 4 months old.

In many ways I still do find parenting hard even now (he’s nearly 3) but it really is much easier now than it was and I can feel it getting easier still and increasingly I enjoy more of it.

We can have conversations now, he tells funny jokes, we have lovely bedtime cuddles and he tells me what he liked about his day, he’s got a great imagination (we’ve got a lot of bears in our house) and he loves life.

And mostly we get decent sleep these days!

I just think becoming a mum is a huge adjustment and we’re all different in how long it takes us to adjust xx

Arrwedancers · 17/11/2024 17:31

It's extremely hard and nothing can prepare you for it, even working with and minding other people's dc, you have no idea until you have your own child. It does get easier though op, I don't know about the magical 3 month mark as all dc are different although it does seem to happen in stages, you just don't realise it until you look back. I now look back on the earliest years with my dc and wonder how on earth I did it, everything you describe is what I felt. I did get through it however and before I even realised it they're all grown or growing up. It will pass and there will be some happy moments along the way op, but it is certainly not the fairytale people are sold prior to becoming parents. You'll get through these early days as well and your dc will think you're the best thing that ever was.

BalletCat · 17/11/2024 17:33

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 14:54

It really helps to read other people feel the same. I feel a lot less alone and i'm glad i posted. I've also had a strong coffee and some food, that helps too.

I don't know why but all the mums I know LOVE IT. And I feel like a failure because I don't.

My baby is 5 months old and I absolutely love it.

I can tell you I love it because I get enough sleep and I have a passions which brings me half an hour of happiness/freedom a day so I still have part of my old life/self. If those two things falter, I am suddenly not loving it and feel how you describe.

Is there anything you can do to get those two things in your life?

I sleep in until 10.30 am to catch up on sleep I didn't get in the night to make sure I'm getting my full quota every night, is this something you could do? I am dreading going back to work because I won't be able to do this anymore but at least during maternity leave I'm sorted. Maternity leave is the perfect time to spend half the day in bed!

I have a horse whom I adore and although I don't get much time to ride anymore, the half hour a day I spend at the field resets my mood and gives me the patience to get through the next 24 hours until I'm back again. Even though I have baby in the sling so she's still with me and I'm still responsible for her, the fresh air, big open space and peace and quiet gives me the feeling of freedom and the horse snuggles make me happy and in that moment, I'm still the old me just with a baby strapped to me.

If I don't get my feel sleep because we have to get up and out early, or I don't get to spend time at the field for a few days, I feel very cranky and trapped and like my needs don't matter and then I most certainly am not loving it. Half hour in the field sorts me right out and I'm back to loving it so I am adamant that these two things are what keep me sane.

Can you get out and enjoy the great outdoors and a bit of wilderness for a bit of escapism? Or get your partner to give you half an hour a day to go for a walk on your own or do something you used to love but don't get time for now?

Ok another note 4 months was the turning point for me when it got noticeably easier so not too much longer hopefully x

Olika · 17/11/2024 17:36

It's hard the way you cannot even imagine until you have your own baby. I was so sleep starved plus had EMCS so I was really struggling for months. And I had to do it mostly by myself as DH worked nights and slept days. My DD is now 2.5y and I cannot imagine wanting another one even if I was younger to be able to have more kids.

YankSplaining · 17/11/2024 17:57

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 14:48

Bottle is unfortunately not an option. Baby has a dairy and soy allergy so we're restricted on formula choices. I tried expressing but it was so much more work and then baby still wanted to be on the boob for comfort, it just wasn't worth it. Will try again when he's older.

Are you unable to afford the formula the baby wouldn’t be allergic to, or is it just a lot of money? Depending on the state of your mental health, it might be worth spending the money if you can afford it.

I ended up being briefly hospitalized in a psych ward because I wouldn’t quit breastfeeding, and I needed to quit breastfeeding so I could go back on my regular medications for depression, anxiety, and ADHD. When I finally switched to formula, I was stunned by how much better my life became. My daughter (around seven months at the time) took ten minutes to eat instead of forty, and going places without her felt like I’d been released from prison. Going back on my regular meds was like the part in “The Wizard of Oz” where the movie changes from sepia to full color. As long as the baby is fed and healthy, it’s more important for a baby to have a well mother than to be breastfed by a mother who feels miserable, depressed, and isolated.

When my older daughter was the age of your baby, I started reading books to her because she couldn’t do much interactively. I picked books that I enjoyed reading out loud and did voices for all the characters. It wouldn’t necessarily be fun for everyone, but it was fun for me. It helps to find an activity that you can do with your baby there that you actually enjoy.

Edenmum2 · 17/11/2024 18:00

It's hard to love this stage, you're just surviving really. Wait until she turns into a proper little person who can run around and make you laugh. It's awesome, I promise.

In the meantime, it's great that you have a supportive DH, just make sure you utilise him for catching up on sleep as much as possible. You're in the trenches, I'm sure you're doing a brilliant job.

Makingchocolatecake · 17/11/2024 18:07

If you feel like a human cow try combi feeding and get prescription formula. You will sleep through again. Why can't DH have baby on an evening so you can go out? Keep going to groups or look on FB mum groups until you find someone you click with, took me a long time. Get some earplugs for your naps. I didn't like the baby stage either but it gets way better when they start walking, even better when they talk.

GreatScroller · 17/11/2024 19:47

You’re right it’s bloody hard and if you have no sleep and are constantly feeding with little support it can be too hard. I can safely say whilst my 4 and 8 year old can be extremely difficult some days and in many ways harder than the baby stage I can hand on heart never do the baby stage again. I just found it relentless and the feeding and no sleep too much. The number one thing I would 100% do if I could go back would be to get my partner to do some sort of night feeding with a bottle. I bf both and was useless at expressing and loooing back I wish I just used formula for the first or second night feed. It was so exhausting and I didn’t do myself any favours. They both refused the bottle but I should have persevered because it would have really helped! Even mentally it would have helped. My first did eventually have a bottle at 6 months old but my second never did but I didn’t really try at all with her. Just basically I wish I spoke up a bit more to my partner what I needed help with, he tried but I’d be a bit of a martyr 🤪

feeling lots of empathy and sending well wishes it will pass for sure , but it doesn’t take away from how hard it is right now ❤️

Edingril · 17/11/2024 20:00

But why would you think it was any different?

OrangeSlices998 · 17/11/2024 20:01

Edingril · 17/11/2024 20:00

But why would you think it was any different?

How is that helpful?!

RareMaker · 17/11/2024 20:03

For many people, Inc me. Its a really shitty time.

It does get better I absolutely Promise you. Don't have too many expectations. It's not all good, the house can be a mess, you don't have to go out all day x

wyeaye · 17/11/2024 20:11

I hated it too for all the same reasons as you OP. I couldn't believe how hard it was. I had no family help though and my husband worked away a lot. Perhaps I would have coped better if I'd had support.

Anyway I decided not to have another as couldn't face going through it all again.

Mine is 9 now and great, truly an amazing person who I can have good conversations with and he has a great sense of humour too.

Honestly I look back and I'm astonished at how quickly the time has gone by.

What I can say is you WILL get through this. It's all so new at the moment and your life probably feels like it's been decimated. It took me a long time to feel like I was enjoying any of it tbh. Probably when he started talking and sleeping. Getting sleep will itself make a huge difference to your state of mind.

Negangirlxx · 17/11/2024 20:15

My baby is 2.5 weeks and I am fully in the newborn trenches. It’s so, so much harder than you could ever imagine it to be, especially when you’re only getting about 4 or 5 hours of sleep at most, and running on fumes. I’ve never been so tired in my life. I fully dread the nights. She sleeps so well during the day, but at night it’s a whole other story. I hate it when people tell me how “easy” their baby was.

I would sell my left tit, for a full night’s sleep, in total and utter silence. I mean, who knew newborn babies made so much noise in their sleep? The grunting, squealing, squeaking, and snorting keeps me awake, so “sleep when the baby sleeps” isn’t always possible! 😫 Every day feels like Groundhog Day, and it’s just torture. I hope it gets better soon, cos I can’t live like this for the next few years.

Fordian · 17/11/2024 20:22

I've cut straight from your OP to reply: I loathed pretty much everything about my DS1's first year. We were on our knees. He screamed the house down. Til I did controlled crying (at 7-8 months), I don't think I got more than 1 hour's continual sleep from his birth til then.

It was horrible. I never hated him, but I wondered wtf was all this parental joy? Why my life was nothing more than stopping this screaming jag or preventing the next! I shudder now. It was horrible.

However, 6-8 months in, we had found some equilibrium. We had a challenging baby. We coped.

Cue DS2, exactly 2 years younger. We were a comedy duo. He'd wake up for a feed, DH would bring him to me, he'd feed for 20 minutes then FALL ASLEEP! What is this alchemy? Where was the 2 hours of screaming the house down? As we paced the darkened house? Followed by 20 minutes sleep, then scream, feed for an hour, on repeat? ASLEEP? What? Then for four HOURS??

We discovered on DC2 what most people's experience was like. Ours, like yours, is an outlier. That doesn't make it easier to cope with, but it might make you feel a shred of comfort that you've been dealt a 'difficult' hand. You're not failing, you just have more to cope with.

They're now 25 and 23 and neither scream the house down...

Petrie99 · 17/11/2024 20:25

InOverMyHead88 · 17/11/2024 13:46

Yeah DH does loads, including getting up at night to do nappy changes, soothing etc. It almost makes me feel worse because other women have husbands who do nothing. If they can cope, why can't I????

In reality they are probably coping the same as you. Or the change felt less. Or their baby sleeps better. The list goes on. I thought I was prepared but found it SO hard and also questioned why. I went into DH at 6m crying and saying I should go back to work because I had no idea what I was doing and baby would be better off in nursery. It really does get easier. 12 weeks is where sleep actually went worse for us, up until 7m sleep was a shitshow. But nothing lasts. I would absolutely second finding ways to make your days yours still, eg watching your things on TV whilst they don't care, walks with coffee and podcasts or music while they nap. Bath to yourself whilst partner takes baby, or a few mins lie in. I did start seeing friends in evening, despite exclusively BF, just for an hour or two. I didn't make any friends from classes but did enjoy going and meeting people there.