The transition from pregnancy to parenthood

I still remember those days when I was heavily pregnant; feeling like I was constantly carrying a beach ball sized weight on my abdomen and giving death glares to strangers in the street for simply glancing my way. I honestly thought that I could not feel any more exhausted than I did then…

Spoiler alert! I was wrong.

When you tell people that you’re expecting, or even that you’re trying, no one tells you what it’s like when you take your screaming bundle of joy home with you. Well, unless it’s said in the patronising manner of “You wait until they’re born”. But here it is. A recent first-time mother (AKA me!) is here to tell you exactly what to expect when you’re expecting. 

In my experience there are 5 stages to pregnancy and beyond.

The first is the joy (and/or apprehension) of finding out you’re expecting. Within this stage, you are excitedly telling everyone about the bundle of joy you’re expecting and getting generally prepared (or so you may think!) for what’s to come.

The second stage is the MISERY of being heavily pregnant, hormones raging and experiencing the sleep deprivation (for some, for the first time).

The third stage is my favourite, overwhelming happiness. This is the first 24 hours of your child being born. The feeling you get the first time you hear that little cry, is better than any drug known to man. When people say they have never felt love like it, they aren’t lying (although for some it may not be straight away you feel that, and that’s okay).

Then comes the fourth stage. THE EXHAUSTION. When people say that you can sleep when the baby sleeps, they’re lying. It does not work like that. You will be sterilising everything when they sleep, especially if you are expressing to breastfeed. This is the moment for me, I realised I was not longer the main character. My baby was premature, and I had to have an emergency C-section, and even with having just had major abdominal surgery, I was still expected to provide everything for my baby on my own (When my husband was working). He had to be fed every 2 hours. In that time, it took him approximately 1 hour to feed, I spent 15 minutes expressing, and 15 minutes sterilising. That left me 30 minutes to sleep before the next feed. This was my new reality.

The final stage is the fifth stage, acceptance (the stage I’m in now). In this stage I am still exhausted from having a baby, but he has begun to sleep through the night, and if I’m honest, you just get used to being tired all the time.

For those in stage 4, you will get through it, it feels like the end of the world, and you wonder how you’ve managed to survive the day on an hours sleep, but as parents we get through it. I mean, people have more babies, so it must get easier, right?