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Things the Parenting Books will NEVER tell you!

91 replies

Cooki3Monst3r · 08/12/2014 23:11

I thought it would be fun to start a thread on those secret, unspoken little woes of parenthood that no book will ever tell you about!!

If you could, what would you tell your pre-baby self?

I would tell myself that those little foibles my babies developed at 10 weeks that seemed so cute at the time - DD playing with my hair, DS stroking my eyelashes - are abso-fucking-lutely NOT cute 2 years down the line when you've got a bald patch and bleeding eyeballs!

(is it just me that gets mauled by their kids?)

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Redling · 11/12/2014 21:43

It's not hell. The books tell you in bald terms the demands of a baby without being able to possibly convey that wiping up yellow cheesy smelling poo, having a wide awake baby at 3am cooing at you, and endlessly dangling an elephant toy above their heads saying 'can you reach for elephant?' may sound like shit but ultimately is nothing compared to how much you love them.

If you are cross with your small baby because they are not fitting into what you have planned for the day, perhaps think again and plan the day around their needs. That baby group, shopping trip, NCT mums coffee date etc isn't so important. You will get to the end of the day feeling much better and that the day hasn't gone 'wrong'. This is probably not the case with a second child who has to come with you, but you may as well be easy on yourself with the first!
Broken sleep is still sleep. Count the hours you've slept in total, or don't count at all. Dont obsess about the amount of wakeups.
focus on the good things every day. Has the day been about the 3 massive struggles for a nap and that random 15 minute cry, or is it about the giggling and smiling and learning to blow bubbles?

Don't be waiting for a time when your life is 'back to normal'. What is that?!

Don't plan what 'kind' of mum you'll be, because you can't know until you meet your baby, you'll be the kind of mum they need. Do what works day by day and be willing to change. There's a lot of talk on MN of the kind of mums people are, like BF mums, FF mums, routine mums and attachments mums are some kind of tribes and are all of a type of person. You'll be happier if you pick and choose what just gets you through the day all as happy as possible!

TiedUpWithString · 12/12/2014 17:25

It's normal to want to murder someone who wakes your baby.

It's ok to leave them to cry for 10 minutes while you shower and dress. It really is. As long as you have them with you so you can see them.

Everyone sits in the car when their child has just fallen asleep 2 mins before arriving at home.

Every parent ruins a potential nap time by squeezing the baby when they are in that silent pre-sleep reverie and saying OOH YOU'RE SOOO CUTE! But never does it again.

Every day is a day you and your child have never down before.

TiedUpWithString · 12/12/2014 17:27

Tut. Never done before.

Interested in this thread?

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TiedUpWithString · 12/12/2014 22:16

Whoop ah! Killed that thread Grin

Cooki3Monst3r · 12/12/2014 22:23

Lol tiedup

Never mind sitting in the car after baby has fallen asleep, I have been known to take the opportunity to have a nice long nap in Waitrose carpark on more than one occasion.

Insightful realisation today: No one told me I'd be sooo tired that sometimes I would cancel the day's plans because I wouldn't feel safe driving the car. And that's when the littlest one is nearly 3!!

I totally blame my mother. She never, EVER, told me any of this stuff.

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ocelot41 · 13/12/2014 07:16

Yes to murdering those waking up sleeping babies Tiedup! Especially door to door salespeople who ring the bell after 7.30pm when it has taken yo over 45 mins of patting and shushing to get them off, you were just looking forward to your first bit of downtime of the day and a nice hot meal, and when there is a frigging notice on the door saying 'please don't ring, sleeping baby'. Disembowelment is too good for them.....

Oh and Ice cream vans that come at nap time...Angry

Cooki3Monst3r · 13/12/2014 09:59

I wonder if Icimoi from the Farage thread could tell us if waking a sleeping baby is good enough defence for man slaughter? Especially if it's a) bed time, and b) a bloody note on the door!! I hope you gave said salesperson a suitable rollicking ocelot?

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ocelot41 · 13/12/2014 10:04

I think I cried furiously at them IYKWIM....I had a poorly, teary, refluxy baby so them's were very long, hard days and then very long, hard nights. That little window between off to zzz around 7/7.30 and first wake around 9.30/10 was the only peaceful time in the day. Really, hell had no fury....

vladthedisorganised · 15/12/2014 13:29

Sounds weird, but it took me a while to realise that the small bundle had a personality that would - probably - fit in with mine. So it was perfectly OK to use long words instead of the 'absolutely essential' baby talk that was met with a blank stare, accept with much reluctance that she just didn't need a lot of sleep instead of spending two hours of hell and screaming murder because she HAD to be in bed on the dot of 7, play my own music in the car rather than 'Baby Loves Nursery Rhymes', and so on. Whatever anyone else says, your child will not spontaneously combust because you haven't enrolled them in Tiny Tumblers or Mini Netball or the Junior Triangle Orchestra by their second birthday.

She's mad as a box of frogs, but otherwise fairly well adjusted...

roundtable · 15/12/2014 13:49

That there are some really competitive and judgemental parents who will judge you on how well your baby/toddler/child sleeps/eats/tantrums/dresses/speaks and so on and on and on...

Redhairmum · 16/12/2014 15:24

This thread has really made me giggle....almost woke dd (16 weeks) who will only nap whilst being held..
Would tell myself to focus on discovering who the wonderful little person ds was/is from day 1, NOT to stress about why he wasn't following the book.
Would also set up home supermarket delivery whilst pg, make a baby rota with dh (ie who does what), although more of an issue now dc2 here. buy shares in huggies wipes, accept that I will always have a HUGE handbag, filled with everyone else's stuff, oh, and that I will use every phrase that I hated my mum using on me....that every instruction needs to be said 10 times to a 3 year old to be heard.

TantrumsAndBalloons · 16/12/2014 15:42

Mine are older now. 17, 16 and 11

I wish someone told me when I had 2 under 2 that you won't really remember all this stuff- all the tantrums in Tesco and the screaming at 3am and the house that looked like a pig sty and the greasy hair because you don't have time to wash it.

What you will remember, when they are growing up and starting to make their own way in the world and learning to drive and thinking about going to uni hundreds of miles away are the days that really mattered. The first time they really laughed at something. Their face when they first tasted ice cream. The year they "got" Christmas. The day you spent making snowmen.

If I look back at when mine were toddlers I think I put so much pressure on my self to try and be the "perfect" parent and I don't think the perfect parent exists.

I think if you can look at them as they grow up and they are nice people, you can laugh with them and cry with them, if you can see they have half a clue about what life is about Grin, they are caring and compassionate then you have done a bloody good job. Grin

roundtable · 16/12/2014 19:08

That's lovely Tantrums Xmas SmileFlowers

harrowgreen · 17/12/2014 19:58

squizita - I said BF was harder than FF. Not that it should be done under any circumstances, no matter what. Please read properly before jumping onto a soapbox.

Cooki3Monst3r · 19/12/2014 01:22

Redhair I now have a small handbag!!! Well, smallish. DC2 is now nearly 3 and sometimes I can go out with just purse, phone, keys, one nappy!!!

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Greenstone · 19/12/2014 18:39

Ooh yes the ice cream van/cold caller wake - ups. The rage.

My revelation is that small children, even perfectly nice small children, have cold dead hearts when it comes to their mothers ' wellbeing. They really do not care if you're having the day from hell or are sick or exhausted or up to your armpits in their screaming infant sibling's shit. They'll just go right on ahead with that tantrum, thank you.

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