Perfect P on her first day at home |
Naturally, she'd done a poo, so we tackled her first 'at home' nappy change. Which went well. Kind of. Whilst nappy free she'd done a wee, all up her back, all over the mat and our living room carpet. I should've taken this as a sign for things to come really, but hey! We press on.
She was soon due a feed and from what I remember, it was pretty successful. That first night, however was when things really went south. I just couldn't get her on the boob properly (or so I thought) as you see, we'd had it ingrained in our minds that a '"good" feed was 20 minutes on each side but P wanted feeding little and often and only fed for 5 minutes at a time. I sat up with her, hand expressing in to her mouth, absolutely convinced I was going to starve her to death. Even after multiple midwives telling me we were doing absolutely perfectly and despite P only losing 2% of her birth weight at her first weigh in (which is incredible), this was something that absolutely consumed me and by day 3 I had thrown in the towel. I'm going to do a dedicated blog post about our breastfeeding journey but this is something I regret hugely, even now at 20 months on.
Poorly Mummy & jaundiced P |
The first 10 days were a blur of too many visitors, P being constipated from the switch to formula and Luke administering blood-thinning injections as I was still quite poorly post-birth. I lied to plenty of midwives when they asked how I was doing at appointments. "Oh you know, tired, but I'm okay, I'm loving being a mum!" I'd respond.
The reality was, I was as far from okay as I have ever been. I have an extensive history with depression & anxiety and by now my mental health was absolutely spiralling. I hated being a mum and worse, I hated Penelope. Despised her even. Christ, that's absolutely gut wrenching to say, but it's true. I didn't want to be around her, I didn't want to hold her, feed her, just being left in the same room on my own with her sent me in to all kinds of panic. I don't even think I changed her nappy for the first 4 weeks. Luke was struggling too and he was trying to keep himself afloat whilst holding us both together. For a while we literally lived in our bedroom, fuelling ourselves with Red Bull and pink iced ring doughnuts, binge watching The Simpsons or old episodes of Top Gear on Netflix. That was our 'safe space', a distraction from our own minds in between the feeding, burping and nappies. If I didn't have to think about being Mummy then I could pretend I wasn't one, right?
5 days old - 25th August 2018 |
I wished my beautiful, perfect, precious 2 week old bundle dead. I couldn't do it, I wasn't cut out to be a mum, I just wanted all this to go away and my life to go back to how it was the previous year. I wanted HER to go away, she'd be better off without me anyway, right? I was the worst mum in the world. Or at least, I felt like the worst mum in the world. What if I just disappeared? Surely Luke and P wouldn't miss me anyway, P deserves a better mummy. Yet, I still lied to everyone around me, I was fine, isn't being a mum the best thing in the world ever ever ever? I didn't tell anyone, instead I bottled it all up, absolutely riddled with guilt and shame, terrified that somebody would find out and take my baby away from me. Wait, isn't that what I wanted?!
Well, wasn't that paragraph an absolute rollercoaster? I'm crying over here behind my laptop, absolutely heartbroken recalling those awful, awful feelings. I look at P now, as a toddler approaching 2 and I am so overwhelmed with love and pride, she is everything I could've dreamed of and more. I never did seek professional help for how I was feeling when she was tiny and I absolutely should have done. I wouldn't have been judged for being mentally unwell, I'd have been given support to overcome the cloud that was preventing me from being the best mummy I could. See, I never did get that 'newborn bubble', my mental health completely robbed me of it.
5 weeks old - 25th September 2018 |
At the time of writing this, Penelope is 20 months old and whilst I do still struggle with my mental health in general, those early thoughts and feelings are a distant memory. She is my little best friend and although she tests me and pushes me to my limits sometimes, I can can truly say I love being a mum, HER mum. It feels like she's been in our lives forever and I wouldn't change her for anything.
Just know, you're never alone and it CAN get better. If you are struggling, post-natal or otherwise, never be ashamed of admitting you need extra support. Reach out to someone you trust, my inbox is open to anyone and everyone who needs someone to talk to. I will also leave some links below to various mental health resources.
MIND
SAMARITANS
MENTAL HEALTH MATTERS
NHS MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
Bec, this is heartbreakingly beautiful. I know this must have been so hard for you to share! Lots of love xxx
ReplyDelete❤❤❤ such a difficult time, but we got through it
ReplyDelete