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More Than Mom Motherhood

#IHadAMiscarriage: Ways To Cope And Rituals That Can Help In Grieving The Loss

“I could barely feel my feet on the ground.”
Jessica Zucker remembers the painful physical and psychological aftermath that accompanied her pregnancy loss at 16 weeks back in 2012. She describes it as an elongated nightmare she was unable to wake from.
“The resulting grief was unfathomable,” the Los Angeles–based psychologist tells HealthyWay.

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Zucker (Image Credit: Elliana Allon)

Last month, singer Carrie Underwood opened up about her own struggle with multiple miscarriages—a subject that’s often treated as taboo by society at large.
Approximately one in five women will have a miscarriage in early pregnancy (typically defined as a loss prior to 20 weeks gestation), and 1 in 100 women will experience a stillbirth each year in the United States. What these numbers don’t account for, however, are those pregnancy losses that go unreportedand that leave behind an indelible mark.
“It is a loss different than any other,” says Talya Knable, a licensed clinical professional counselor from Baltimore. “You are left to grieve this person you never had the chance to meet, but perhaps felt closer to than any other person you have ever known.”
HealthyWay
Elliana Allon

Even after opening up, many are faced with the unbearable burden of learning how to process this singular kind of grief. We’ve reached out to women who were willing to share their stories. Here is what they had to say.

Grieving in Silence

Angela Roeber, a mother who has gone through five miscarriages, vividly recalls the isolation she felt after her first pregnancy loss. One particular moment that stands out for the 39-year-old involves calling her mom crying and telling her about her miscarriage.
“I know I caught her off guard as she didn’t even know I was pregnant,” says the Nebraska resident. But instead of receiving the consolation she craved, Roeber’s experience was normalized. “I remember her telling me, ‘It happens, Angela.’”

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Andy Art/Unsplash

“Not really what one would like to hear in the moment,” she admits.
“We don’t hear a lot of people talking openly about miscarriages as we do with other losses in life, and it can make women feel incredibly alone,” says Julie Gurner, PsyD, a clinical psychologist in the greater Philadelphia area.
But even when people do speak out, they can be quickly silenced.
[pullquote align=”center”]As women, mothers, wives, we put a lot of pressure on ourselves. We don’t allow for much grace.”
—Angela Roeber[/pullquote]
“I don’t think my family understands my pain,” Roeber explains. “They haven’t had the same experiences. I don’t think they see it as losing five babies—instead, they see five miscarriages.”
According to Mayra Mendez, PhD, LMFT, a licensed psychotherapist in Santa Monica, California, when a miscarriage occurs, people try not to talk about it. But, she stresses, the loss of a fetus is no less impactful than the loss of any other loved one.  
As women, mothers, wives, we put a lot of pressure on ourselves,” Roeber says. “We don’t allow for much grace.”

Give yourself permission to grieve the loss.

Roeber says she internalized all those years of bottling up, and that it later manifested as seemingly random outbursts.
“I had a lot of anger towards God, and that fury came out to everyone in my family.”
[pullquote align=”center”]“Women often feel that the loss ‘should be’ glossed over or that the intensity of their pain isn’t valid. …Grief is a process that cannot be rushed and must never be diminished.”
—Mayra Mendez, PhD, LMFT[/pullquote]
Knable points out that one of the key factors that may make miscarriages such a singular grief—truly different from any other—is that many women experience this loss prior to most people in their lives knowing that they had something to lose. “It’s important that women take time to emotionally mourn the loss of their baby,” she says.

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Tia Aprilitasari/Unsplash

“Women often feel that the loss ‘should be’ glossed over or that the intensity of their pain isn’t valid,” notes Mendez. But, she explains, “grief is a process that cannot be rushed and must never be diminished.”

Working through grief is a process.

“Grieving the loss of an unborn baby is a complex, multifaceted experience that changes over time and varies from person to person,” Mendez affirms.
Often women put pressure on themselves to be perfectly put together quickly, Gurner adds. “Miscarriages can be a devastating loss—be good to yourself, go easy on yourself, and give yourself the time you need to grieve.”
Here are a few methods for coping, shared by experts and women who have been there:

The Healing Balm of Shared Experiences

A woman who experiences a miscarriage needs support and a safe place to talk about her feelings. It’s important to have a forum to speak freely with trusted people, Mendez insists, and to gain perspective that supports clear thinking and prevents misplaced guilt and blame from taking root.

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Julia Caesar/Unsplash

“It helps when I read other stories from women who have experienced similar events,” says Roeber. “I know they understand, and I know that I am not alone.”

Self-Care for the Mind and Body

Attend to healthy eating and exercise routines, Mendez advises. “Indulge in reading that book that you have been eyeing, go see that movie or play that will free your mind of stress for a while.”

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iStock.com/eternalcreative

Recovery from the miscarriage will also involve physical self-care, she says, and more importantly, management of emotional health and traumatic stress.

Embracing the Grieving Process

Denying, dismissing, or explaining loss and sadness away impedes grief resolution. This, in turn, can lead to profound and enduring symptoms that may require a higher level of intervention.

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iStock.com/

According to Mendez, if depression and despair remain as powerful six months after the miscarriage experience as they were when the loss was new, then professional help is necessary. “Unresolved grief can become a more serious condition of depression that calls for treatment.”

Staying Connected

Mendez emphasizes we shouldn’t isolate from our partners and families. Rather, it’s important that we continue to communicate and share our thoughts. “Join forces and use the experience to strengthen and bond the relationship further,” she notes.

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Pablo Heimplatz/Unsplash

Discuss plans for the future and acknowledge that the grief process is not solely the experience of the woman.” She shares that “men grieve the loss of a baby as well, albeit differently.” Overall, she asks that we keep in mind that working through our grief is a process that will take a great deal of time and reflection.

Ritualizing and Memorializing

For some, participating in a ritual such as creating a memory book, planting a tree, or lighting a candle can be a way of honoring their loss. “A mother’s love can’t be measured in weeks,” says Roeber, who wears a charm bracelet with the birthstones of all the babies she’s lost.

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Marcelo Matarazzo/Unsplash

That said, she’s adamant that everyone should find their own way of processing their grief. “No two people are the same, and I am convinced no two situations are the same.”

Finding a voice in the darkness.

Four months after her miscarriage, Zucker lived on pins and needles when she discovered she was pregnant again. She describes it as an exercise “in mind-numbing uncertainty”an ongoing oscillation between hope and anxiety.
“I was emotionally whiplashed,” she says.
The world seemed lopsided and nonsensical. “I wondered if this traumatic event and my resulting cracked heart would drain the poise out of me for good.”
It was then that Zucker found herself catapulted into what she calls a “new galaxy of empathy.” While she had worked with women for over a decade in her private practice, she discovered a new breadth of understanding from her own lived experience with tragedy.

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Elliana Allon

“I was humbled and honored to suddenly, in a corporeal sense, be able to empirically grasp the profound pain of reproductive loss,” Zucker shares.
Two years after her miscarriage, in 2014, she launched the #IHadAMiscarriage campaign and took her pain to pen in a New York Times essay that reverberated across the country.
Zucker says the act of writing has been a ritual and a central catalyst in her grieving process. “As a psychologist, I feel like I should probably say that therapy was the most helpful part of my healing process, but I really think that I wrote my way back to health.”
HealthyWay
Elliana Allon

That said, she doesn’t dismiss the vital role therapy has played in supporting her process. It provided a much-needed haven for her to fall apart, she says, and to explore the crevices of pain, anxiety, and relational disappointments.
“But as I wrote about my experiences, I found understanding and with it a community.”

#IHadAMiscarriage: A Campaign That Breaks the Silence

This October’s Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month, Zucker’s campaign is focusing on rites, rituals, and representation.

HealthyWay
Elliana Allon

“Without standardized rituals, women and families are unsure where to take their pain, how to find peace within it, and sometimes begin to question whether or not they have the ‘right’ to grieve,” says Zucker.
But one thing is for sure, women want to acknowledge their losses, she explains, “and the way they do that—the way they each mother their dead children—is different.” For every grieving parent decorating a gravesite or getting a memorial tattoo, she says, there’s one who prefers not to lend any more tangibility or permanence to their loss.
As part of her goal to inspire women to find meaningful ways to represent their experiences of miscarriage, Zucker highlights the need for our culture to embrace a framework that allows for grieving and honoring ourselves and the babies we’ve lost.
She asserts that in moving away from the antiquated silence whilst moving toward a culture of openness, representing our stories becomes tantamount. “Women want to feel heard; they want to feel seen; they want to feel understood.”

Zucker and Mexico City poet and artist Jessica Lakritz collaborated to stage a breathtaking photoshoot that includes women who’ve experienced miscarriage posing with inspirational poetry written on their skin.
Zucker said this project is part of her efforts to destigmatize speaking out about pregnancy and infant loss.
“The photo and video shoot captured the importance of this by way of expressing on our bodies our reproductive histories,” Zucker says.
HealthyWay
Jessica Lakritz

“I couldn’t have asked for a more potent salve than that of perfect strangers’ vulnerability,” she added. “Connecting through heartache gave way to hope.”

Replacing Silence With Storytelling

In regard to pregnancy loss, Zucker notes that too many well-meaning strangers and loved ones say things like: “Everything happens for a reason,” “At least you know you can get pregnant,” “Be grateful for what you have,” “God has a plan,” and “At least you weren’t very far along.”
“Unfortunately, we live in a world brimming with platitudes,” she says.
[pullquote align=”center”]“I want women to feel—not just intellectually know—they are not alone and that there is absolutely no shame in loss.”
—Jessica Zucker, PhD, on coping with miscarriage[/pullquote]
“When we are met with comments like these, it can be tempting to shut down or worse,” she adds, “to feel ashamed of our grief.” In addition, women often fall silent in their grief because of how complicated it can be to justify or understand it.
As a way of empowering women, the signs in Zucker’s campaign are free to download from her website so they can be used as grieving families create their own rituals. “I want women to feel—not just intellectually know—they are not alone and that there is absolutely no shame in loss.”

Zucker envisions a future where generations to come won’t struggle with the silence, stigma, and shame that is currently so prevalent in our society. “The less alone we feel in our pain, the sooner we embrace the complexity of grief and perhaps trust that we will at some point emerge.”
“In sharing our stories in this way, we encourage others to do the same,” she emphasizes. “Or at the very least, we convey to women worldwide that they are part of a global community. We are not alone.”

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29 Things My Mom Taught Me (And 5 Things She Wasn't Right About)

With all due respect to all of your moms, I have to claim the mantle of having the best mom in the world. (Yes, I know a lot of us think that! We are the lucky ones.)
I’m obviously no longer a child, but I tend to listen to my mom and still think she’s right about most things. In fact, I call her to consult on almost all major matters in my life. So I got to thinking: What are my favorite things she taught me?
There are only a few things we really disagree about, so most of her advice here is sound and can be passed on to any child (or adult!).

29 Things My Mom Taught Me

  1. Recycle everything.
  2. Always make homemade desserts. (Store-bought ones are unacceptable.)
  3. You must eat salad after a main course.
  4. Take your kids to see live theater.
  5. Buy books (but wait for the paperback).
  6. Keep in touch with old friends.
  7. Eat dinner together every night—with whom you’re “together” is up to you.
  8. Learn another language.
  9. Write well.
  10. Show up for people.
  11. Be loyal to your friends.
  12. When someone is sick or hurting, call them.
  13. Try again.
  14. Drink tea in the afternoon.
  15. Enjoy good wine.
  16. If you like a shirt, buy it in four colors.
  17. The person who cooks doesn’t clean.
  18. Talk it out—with a friend or a spouse.
  19. Use cloth napkins.
  20. Stand up for things you believe in.
  21. Say “I love you” all the time.
  22. Let your kids be who they are.
  23. Invest in high-quality clothing.
  24. Make time for exercise.
  25. Put wet laundry in the dryer for at least 10 minutes so it doesn’t wrinkle.
  26. Read, read, read.
  27. There’s no shame in watching trashy TV.
  28. Walk whenever and wherever you can.
  29. Take notes.

5 Things My Mom Wasn’t Right About

1. Tea bags need to steep for more than three seconds.

My mom has a thing about dipping her tea in hot water for so little time that there’s no way it tastes like anything other than…hot water. It’s gross. I am a firm believer in steeping tea for a long time for a really dark, deep taste.

2. Not all religion is bad.

Okay, this one is rather heavy and controversial, but my mom is fervently anti-religion. She grew up in a communist home, but in adulthood I’ve taken great comfort in some aspects of Judaism. I’ve had to come to terms with the fact that we will never see eye-to-eye on this—and that that’s okay.

3. T-shirts do need to be thrown away when they have holes in them or are totally faded.

My mom still wears T-shirts from the 1990s. Since she is a writer who works from home, she rarely needs to fully put herself together. This means that when my sister and I recently helped her clean out her closet, we found a lot of shirts with frayed necklines…that she didn’t want to throw out. Not okay.

4. There’s no need to keep newspapers.

My mother has devoutly been holding onto newspapers for as long as I can remember. Every few months she clears out the massive pile from the closet. Why not just recycle them the following day?

5. It’s not good to hold grudges.

My mom is really good at holding grudges, sometimes (?) for good reason, which has made me think it’s okay to hold grudges. Not so. What’s the point? You are only making yourself miserable. Let it go.

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Babymoon Do's And Don'ts: How To Get The Most Out Of A Pre-Baby Trip

My husband and I had two weddings—the first was a tiny ceremony with 15 guests in upstate New York. The second, almost eight months later, was a big affair in Brooklyn. For the second one, I was almost five months pregnant.
When I got pregnant, we lived in Vienna, Austria, but we’d always planned to have our wedding in New York City, where I’d lived for over a decade. I missed my friends horribly and wanted as many people to come as possible. So we traveled to our own wedding—and spent almost a month in town.
The result wasn’t exactly a traditional babymoon, but it was exactly what we needed: time to reconnect with old friends, visit my old haunts, and have time together outside the stress of our new life abroad.
This is all to say: A babymoon can be anything, as long as it’s time set aside for the two of you before the madness of parenting sets in. You can tailor it to your needs and desires. Consider it a Last Supper à deux.

Why take a babymoon?

Why not? is the real question. If you can afford it, it’s totally worth it.
I definitely think it’s important to connect just with your partner right before the madness and complete loss of privacy begins,” says Isaac Butler, dad of one in New York City, who traveled with his wife to Montreal before their daughter arrived.
[pullquote align=”center”]“It’s a time for the couple to focus on themselves and their partnership before another being will enter their world. Since this will change the dyad forever, they can recall the connection they felt during babymoon when having difficult times.”
—Vanessa Katz, PhD, clinical psychologist[/pullquote]
The destination is not the most important factor. Yes, it can be a chance to go to that place you’ve long dreamed of visiting and you know will be a pain with kids—Paris! London! Venice!—but it can also just be a weekend staycation where you can be tourists in your own city or town.
What’s important are the moments spent together: “It’s a time for the couple to focus on themselves and their partnership before another being will enter their world,” explains Vanessa Katz, PhD, clinical psychologist in L.A. “Since this will change the dyad forever, they can recall the connection they felt during babymoon when having difficult times.”

When to Take a Babymoon

Most couples take off during the second trimester when nausea has (usually) abated and before travel becomes impossible. The American College of Gynecology and Obstetrics states that traveling after 36 weeks is no longer safe.

Babymoon Planning Guidelines

Make it simple.

“It was important that the logistics be easy: wake up, get on train, get off train, you are there,” says Julie Dawson, who traveled from Vienna, Austria, to Venice, Italy, with her husband during her second trimester. “It needed to be a place where you could plan or not plan and there was always plenty to see; a place where you could eat excellent food and drink fizzy wine (for the papa) all the time. We love looking at the photos today—also I remember thinking it would be a horrible place to visit with a stroller—too many bridges with stairs—so figured we wouldn’t be back for a long time, which seems to be coming true.”

Make it romantic.

While romance might be the last thing on your pregnant-mama mind, leaning into the intimacy of a vacation with your partner before baby is a great way to connect, while it’s still just the two of you. Think back to what you enjoyed when you first started dating, and recreate that on your babymoon. “It needs to feel like a real getaway [that] offers stuff you love. For us it was eating, relaxation, and nature,” says babymoon-goer Jessica Latiff.

Consider bringing friends—really!

A babymoon doesn’t have to be full of one-on-one romance, though. It can also be a time to just enjoy life—kidless. A great way to do that is to spend time with your closest pals—who won’t mind if you head to bed at 8 p.m. We went to Guerneville [in Sonoma County, California] and rented a cabin,” says Molly Benson, who decided to extend her babymoon invites beyond just her partner. “Some friends came for a few days too. We rented a boat and paddled for four hours and took our dog on the boat. It was ridiculous and fantastic.”

How to Babymoon Safely

Don’t travel too far.

This is by no means a rule, but most pregnant women are not eager to sit on a plane for 10 hours. (That said, many are keen to use their passports for the last time in a while!)

Keep it moving.

Whether you’re on a plane, train, or car, make sure you get up to move your body. This is especially important on planes where you can get blood clots. Consider wearing compression socks.

Keep your OB in the loop.

It’s not a bad idea to have your OB weigh in on travel plans—or at least let her know you will be away and where you plan to go.

Check out medical facilities in your chosen destination.

Obviously this shouldn’t be an issue if you’re going to a big city, but this is worth looking into if you’re going on an adventure or abroad. If your OB gives the okay, well, you’re probably okay, but it’s best to be prepared.

Do you have travel health insurance?

Insurance companies can be really nasty when it comes to maternity coverage while traveling. Check in with your insurance provider, and consider buying additional travel health insurance.

Babymoon Destinations: Where to Go (and Where to Avoid)

Where you go is, of course, entirely dependent on you! Here are a few tried and true suggestions.
[pullquote align=center]You won’t vacation like this for a while, so enjoy it.[/pullquote]

Babymoon in a City

Montreal, New York, Nashville, L.A., Paris, Venice, Rome, Buenos Aires, Rio—you choose. The point of going to a city is that you’ll have ample opportunities for all the things that will become difficult with kids: long, leisurely brunches; wandering (quietly!) through museums; sightseeing; concerts; plays. You get the picture. None of this is particularly kid-friendly, and it’s great.

Babymoon in the Country

Fresh air, peace and quiet, no distraction? Bliss. “We went to upstate New York because it was within driving distance. I was high risk,” says Kelly Smith. “My only requirement was that it had to have a pool. I stood or floated in that damn pool for like, five or six hours a day for four days. It was glorious.”

Babymoon at a Resort

Who doesn’t want to just lie around at the beach and/or a spa? From the beaches of Florida to the quiet of Stowe, Vermont, to the cliffs of Big Sur, all the way to the Turks and Caicos, hitting an all-inclusive is a true way to indulge. True, you can’t partake in the limitless alcohol, but the constant array of delicious food and spa treatments is heaven for a mama-to-be.

Babymoon Packages

Don’t want to plan anything? No worries! Plenty of companies now offer babymoon packages, mostly at resorts. The advantages? Some include early check-in, massages, room service, and other upgrades on the cheap(er).

A Word of Warning

Don’t go anywhere where there is a threat of Zika. Zika is carried by mosquitoes and can cause serious birth defects. You can check the Centers for Disease Control for up-to-date travel advisory warnings.

Babymoon Tips and Tricks

Get travel insurance.

What if the nausea doesn’t abate by week 14? You might not want to travel across the world.

Think smart.

Don’t go on a cheese tour if you won’t be able to eat 99 percent of the cheeses. Same goes for a wine tour.

Once you’ve booked it, don’t worry about the cost.

Don’t ruin your last chance in a while to indulge yourself by obsessing about the money you’re spending. You won’t vacation like this for a while, so enjoy it.

Stay on top of your symptoms.

Chances are you’ll have the time of your life, but it’s important to be mindful of how your body is feeling. Check in with your OB if you feel like anything is awry.

Turn off that phone.

This is a time for you and your love! Set social media aside and enjoy the sweet time together.

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How To Find A Babysitter Your Kids Will Love (And You Will Too)

If there’s one thing just about every parent on the playground will agree on, it’s this: If you can find a babysitter who you trust and your kids love, you hold on to that sitter’s number harder than your kid holds on to his favorite stuffie when you say it’s time for the toy to take bath.
No matter how easygoing you are, it can be tough to find a good babysitter who makes you feel like you can actually relax when you’re out of the house. And you’re not alone in this struggle: A recent American Red Cross survey determined at least 55 percent of parents have had to stay home from an event because they couldn’t find a sitter when they needed one, and 30 percent said they’ve rejected a potential babysitter because of safety concerns.
But you don’t have to give up on chasing down that rare unicorn non-parents call “date night” or ever holding down a job just because you can’t find someone you can trust to spend time with your kids. The right sitter is out there! Here’s how to find one.

How to Find a Babysitter: Where to Start

Before you can start scheduling sitter interviews (yup, they’re a thing), you need to figure out what you’re looking for!
Some questions to ask yourself:

How often will I need a babysitter?

A neighborhood teen may be able to pop over one night a month so you can sneak out for dinner with your partner. But if you need someone who can pick your kids up from school, help them with their homework, and get dinner started before you get home from work, you may want to look for a college student or someone who is retired and looking for something to do in the afternoons.

What do my kids need?

If you’ve got a small infant, you’ll likely want to steer clear of young teens and find a babysitter with experience caring for small children, such as a childhood development student at the local college or another parent who happens to stay at home. If your child is in elementary school and already able to make a PB&J sandwich and wipe their own heinie, a local teen may be the perfect person to hang out with them for a few hours on a Saturday afternoon.

What will I need a babysitter to do?

If you’ll need a sitter who can drive your kids home from school, you can automatically cross that 14-year-old across the street off your list!
[pullquote align=”center”]Figuring out the what is a big first step in helping you find the who in your babysitting search.[/pullquote] 
If you’re hoping that your sitter will be up for teaching your child a skill such as swimming, you might decide to hit the local pool to see if the lifeguards are looking for extra work.
Figuring out the what is a big first step in helping you find the who in your babysitting search.

Where to Find a Babysitter

The Banks family had it made when Mary Poppins flew into town just when they needed a nanny. Unfortunately babysitters with magical umbrellas are in short supply these days, so you’ll have to stick to these tricks to find a babysitter.

Use a babysitting agency.

Whether it’s an online service such as SitterCity or Care.com or a more traditional agency that exists in a brick-and-mortar location, babysitter agencies are like matchmakers for parents. They recruit qualified babysitters and match them with parents who need their services.
They can be a quick way to find someone you love, but you should still do your own due diligence, says Florence Ann Romano, a former nanny and founder of The Windy City Nanny.
“Make sure you are doing your own research on whomever they are matching you with; in other words, stalk them on social media!” Romano says. “See what they have on their Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, etc.”
You can also have a professional background check run on your potential sitter or ask the agency to provide details of how deep their checks went.
“Don’t rely just on the agency to do a background check that is surface level,” Romano advises. “Some of these agencies don’t dive deep enough, and I have seen it happen before that they won’t catch, for instance, a DUI on someone’s record but will clear them for service!”

Ask your friends about their babysitters.

They may be willing to share the numbers of trusted sitters who they’ve already vetted, or they may offer up names of their own kids (who you like and trust) who’ve taken babysitter certification courses.
If none of your friends have sitter names to offer up, they may be willing to do the job themselves. A local parent in your area might be able to use a little extra cash, making her the perfect choice. Or you could offer to set up a sitter swap situation: One parent or set of parents watches all the kids one night, and you return the favor a few days later so they can get their own night out. The kids get playdates and the parents get real dates—everyone wins!

Try a babysitting app.

Sites like Care.com and SitterCity have apps, and they’ve got the more traditional agency model behind them, but they’re not the only game in town these days.
Sitting Around, for example, can hook you up with other parents in your community who are interested in creating a babysitting co-op. Although there’s a fee for membership, the babysitting itself is free.
Sitter and Bubble let you view the sitters of other friends (so long as they also use the app), so you can find sitters that your friends like without having to actually…well…talk to your friends.
TaskRabbit, on the other hand, was designed as an app to connect folks with people who need help on a variety of errands, not just babysitting. That said, babysitting makes the list, and you may find your perfect sitter with a few swipes.  
Kango, meanwhile, offers not just babysitting but ridesharing too, so you can find someone who will do that daycare or preschool drop-off.

Hit your local college campus.

Whether you go the old-fashioned flier route or call the childhood development department to see if they can suggest any students looking for jobs, a college in your area may be prime pickings for babysitters.

Ask coaches and teachers.

Your daughter’s karate sensei, your son’s hip hop teacher, their soccer coach—they all work with kids, and they’ve likely got a few good names up their sleeves. Whether it’s current or former students or maybe even someone on their staff, you get the added bonus of knowing that someone you already trust with your child has vouched for your potential babysitter.

What to Look for in a Babysitter

Once you’ve gotten a few names, it’s time for a job interview. Hey, you’re going to pay this person to babysit your kids, so why shouldn’t they have to undergo an interview process?
Romano suggests at least two in-person meetings, one that involves just you and the babysitter, then (if they pass muster) another with your kids involved.
“The first time, meet them for coffee outside your home and get to know them,” Romano suggests. “Then, if you like them, bring them into the home to meet your kids; do a trial morning/afternoon. Observe him or her with your kids.”
Sara Schaer, co-founder and CEO of Kango, suggests asking your potential sitter a round of questions, including:

  • Do they have experience and affinity for a particular age group? If you have an infant or a toddler, make sure you specifically ask if they have experience with that age group, Schaer advises.  
  • What is their motivation for babysitting? Some babysitters are just in it for the cash, but you’ll want to find someone who genuinely likes spending time with kids.
  • What is their safety training? Ask if your sitter is CPR certified and if they’ve taken any other babysitting courses, such as those offered by the American Red Cross.
  • How would they handle an emergency? Schaer recommends that you provide an example of an emergency that might crop up and ask them to provide a solution on the fly.
  • Do they have a clean criminal record, and are they willing to be background checked (including fingerprinting)? “Candidates who have an issue on their record will often remove themselves from consideration if they know this is a potential requirement,” Schaer says.
  • Do they drive, and if so do they have a clean driving record? This may not apply to all sitters, such as a young teen, but it’s a must if you’re hoping to find a babysitter who will drive your kids around town.
  • Do you have any references? It’s not enough to just ask for references; you need to follow up! Checking references is a must, Schaer says.

What to Pay a Babysitter

Once you’ve lined up the perfect sitter, let’s face it, you’re going to have to figure out how much to pay the babysitter who’s spending time with your kids.
You certainly want to pay them enough to make the job worthwhile (and keep them coming back), but how do you know if you’re underpaying or overpaying?
According to the American Red Cross survey, about half (51 percent) of Americans rely on unpaid babysitters, and nearly a quarter (24 percent) pay between $6 and $10 an hour for someone to watch their children. Ten percent pay between $11 and $15 an hour, while 4 percent pay between $16 and $20 an hour.

Babysitting Pay Rates Around the Country

When HealthyWay asked parents across the country to share just how much they’re laying out every time a babysitter shows up on their doorstep, the numbers were just as varied…but so were family situations. Some folks pay teenagers significantly less than they do adults, while others paid teens more than they would the grandmotherly lady down the street.
Stamford, Connecticut: $20 per hour to watch a 3½-year-old, including school pickups.
Atlanta, Georgia: $12 to $14 per hour to watch four kids ages 3 to 7.
Cleveland, Ohio: $10 an hour to watch a 9-year-old.
Chicago, Illinois: $15 an hour for an older lady to watch two kids, ages 2½ and 6 months. $12 an hour for a teenager to watch the same kids.
North Charleston, South Carolina: $10 per hour to watch one 4-year-old.
Western Washington State: $10 to $15 an hour for a preschool teacher who babysits on the side.
Los Angeles, California: $22 an hour for an experienced nanny to watch one kid regardless of age.
Still struggling to come up with a good rate? Care.com offers a babysitting rate guide based on zip code and experience of the sitter.

How to Help Your Babysitter

Of course, you want to find a babysitter who can help you with your kids, but if you want to really make sure your kids have a good experience, it’s on you to help your sitter.
Part of that is how you greet your sitter when they walk in the door, says Rachel Charlupski, founder of The Babysitting Company.
“Parents should also not expect their children to warm up to the sitter if the parent is cold and not friendly with the sitter,” she says. “We always recommend parents being very animated and welcoming to the sitter.”
Sitters also need to be prepped, Charlupski says. You can’t expect them to come into your house and know the rules of your home or read your mind about your expectations.
Schaer suggests being up front with your babysitter about what you expect out of them, and be aware of what’s not considered “normal” duties for a sitter.
[pullquote align=”center”]“Predictability and familiarity are reassuring to kids … so parents should make every effort to ensure that.”
—Sara Schaer[/pullquote]
“Quality, engaging, and age-appropriate childcare; safety; courtesy; compliance with parent instructions and household rules; good judgment; and honest, proactive, and professional communication with parents can all be expected,” Schaer says.
But any of the following are not considered typical “job expectations” of a babysitter, and you’ll need to make a deal with your sitter if you want them done as well:

  • Stand-alone extensive housecleaning beyond tidying up and cleaning any areas used during the sitter job
  • Caring for a different number of children than originally stated or an unreasonably large group of unattended kids
  • Babysitting for a completely different duration than requested (e.g., several hours past the initially stated end time)
  • Excessive medical responsibility (parents/guardians need to authorize medical treatment)
  • Tutoring or academic work if not explicitly included and agreed on first
  • Pet care if not explicitly mentioned and agreed on in advance

Before leaving your children alone with a sitter, you’ll also need to write out a complete list of information that they might need during their time with your kids, including:

  • Guidelines and limits for outings, screen time, and homework
  • Meal information
  • Bedtime rules
  • Allergy information and/or other medical conditions
  • Behavioral triggers or routines
  • Likes and dislikes
  • Contact numbers for parents, as well as pediatrician and other emergency numbers

“Predictability and familiarity are reassuring to kids (in addition to quality care and safety), so parents should make every effort to ensure that,” Schaer notes.
Romano offers up this final piece of advice: “Don’t compete with the sitter. Remember that they are another person to love and guide your child. It’s another person to shape them and inspire them. Choose wisely! If you do, it will be a beautiful thing.”

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The Maternity Leave Advice All Moms Need To Hear

I remember the first morning I was left alone with my 3-week-old daughter. My husband took off for work, and after weeks of support from my parents and sister, I was completely on my own.
My first question was: Will I eat today? Followed closely by: Will I ever get to put the baby down? Will I ever shower? Do the laundry? Shop for groceries? Leave the house? What will I do with all the hours? And, of course: Will I ever sleep? It all just seemed…insurmountable.
Maternity leave can be a beautiful and daunting time. For most American moms it is alarmingly short, if you even get to take it. After all, the U.S. is one of the only countries in the world that doesn’t have a national paid leave law.
But assuming you do get to take maternity leave, by the time you’ve finally started to get the hang of it—and are maybe sleeping for more than an hour at a time—you’re headed back to work, often with very conflicting feelings.
So how can you make the most of it?

Why take maternity leave?

There is a myth that mothering and breastfeeding are “natural.” For some women this is true; they slide into it with total ease. But for a lot of new moms, it’s a struggle. It takes practice and time—just like any new job!—but we feel like we should know what we’re doing from Day One.
Maternity leave gives you the time to bond with your baby and to learn how to mother. (This is, of course, a lifelong job, but you get a crash course those first few months.) It’s an opportunity to get to know your particular munchkin—what helps her sleep, what helps him burp, what she likes and dislikes. It also gives you a chance to focus your entire mental and emotional energy on this baby—not to be pulled in multiple directions. (There will be plenty of that in the future.)
First-time moms often have all sorts of other ambitions for that time: I’ll cook! And bake! And finish my book! And redecorate our living room! The truth is that a new baby is all-consuming, even though it often feels like you’re doing…nothing.
“Maternity leave is not a vacation,” says Sonya Rasminsky, MD, a psychiatrist in Orange County, California, who specializes in women’s mental health. It can be grueling, exhausting, and disorienting.
“I never thought it would be a vacation—but my husband did!” says Eve Udesky, a social worker in New York City and mother to 9-week-old Nathan. “However hard you imagine it’s going to be—it’s harder. As much as people talk about things much more because of online forums and social media, there were things I was shocked to learn that my mom friends hadn’t talked about.”
There’s primarily the issue of your own physical recovery to contend with. “Usually after such a traumatic physical event you’d be lying around and people would be taking care of you!” Udesky says. “But you’re taking care of someone else!”
Udesky lives in a New York City walkup, so she couldn’t even think about getting the stroller up and down the stairs in the first 6 weeks. “It was winter and I had all these fantasies about us going outside. I’ll just bundle him up and get going! It was a miracle if we made it out of the house!”
Maternity leave can feel like time out of time—not just because you’re just as likely to be up at 3 a.m. as you are at 3 p.m.—but because whatever schedule you were on gets blown out of the water. Your job? To roll with it.

What does a “successful” maternity leave look like?

Like all things motherhood related, what your maternity leave looks like will vary and will depend largely on your circumstances.
Kathy, an American living in Vienna, Austria (who asked that we not use her full name), has taken three two-year maternity leaves in the last decade. (Perks of living in Europe!) This meant that she would have the luxury of time to figure things out before returning to work, but she emphasizes that the key to a positive experience is the same regardless of how much time you have at home: “Get support or childcare in place to take breaks away from the baby; establish a routine that includes exercise and connection to other moms in a similar situation.”
First and foremost, however, is the most important component of a successful maternity leave: establishing a good feeding routine. This will make everything else easier, as you can start planning your days around when your baby is (likely) to eat. If you are nursing, make sure you hire a lactation consultant if you’re finding it challenging; there is no shame in asking for help.
For everything else maternity leave–related, we spoke to moms who have been and are currently in that postpartum period.

How to Do Maternity Leave: Tips From Moms Who’ve Been There

This, too, shall pass.

Both the bad and the good—really. Ever heard the expression “the days are long but the years are short”? Nothing quite sums up motherhood as well as that. The days can feel endless—boring and lonely and challenging all at once—but they won’t always. And those wonderful moments when the baby first laughs or smiles? You’ll probably long for them when she’s off at preschool.

Sleep when the baby sleeps.

Okay, some mothers find this to be the most annoying piece of advice: “Sure,” they say, “I’ll just lie down in the middle of the grocery store when the baby falls asleep in the stroller.” Fair enough! But if your baby does sleep in his/her crib or on you—sleep! You never know when you will have another chance. Everything else can wait.

Lower your standards so you can accomplish (and celebrate) small goals.

“Things have to slow way down with kids, and that means lower standards, tardiness, and expecting and welcoming the chaos,” Kathy says. “Otherwise that goal of getting everyone out becomes untenable.”

Get out every day.

Even if it’s just a short walk to get yourself a coffee. This might not seem feasible in the first few weeks of maternity leave, but once you’ve started to heal, it’s really important to get some air, move your body, and reconnect with the world around you. “I just had to change my mindset and say, ‘Just do it,’” says Udesky. “I couldn’t wait for the moment to be right. You just have to go. If he’s crying, you can go home. If he needs to feed, you can go home.” Strap that baby in or push her in the stroller. The more often you do it, the easier it will get.

Make plans.

It can be hard—the baby isn’t always on your schedule, but that doesn’t mean you should be a prisoner in your own home for your entire maternity leave. Make a date to have a cup of tea. Go to the park and sit on a bench. “I treated myself to mommy–baby yoga classes,” says Udesky. “It gave me someplace I had to be—and be with other moms.”

Join a moms group.

We know, we know—not all moms groups are great. But! They can help you meet that one friend who makes everything a little easier.

Don’t sweat the small stuff.

When I was on maternity leave and bemoaning the state of my apartment (in short, it was a wreck), my sister said, “If there isn’t underwear on the floor, you’re doing fine.” There often was underwear on the floor, actually, but you get the idea. One day it’ll be really easy to pick up the underwear (and everything else) again. Right now is not that time, and that’s okay.

Set up a meal train ahead of time.

Are you part of any community—a synagogue or church, a preschool, a club—that can help you in the early weeks of maternity leave? Those groups often have meal trains ready to go. If not, ask some friends if they’d be so kind as to make or buy some dinners for you. Alternately—if you’re up for it—before you go into labor, make loads of soup you can freeze.

Seek out support.

We’ve all heard the proverb “It takes a village to raise a child.” Women used to have loads more support: sisters, aunts, mothers, grandmothers. We aren’t meant to be so isolated, but many of us are. Do all you can to avoid being alone during maternity leave.
Can a family member come over a few times a week? Can you afford to hire a postpartum doula or a babysitter? Can your partner amend his/her schedule for the first few weeks/months? Can you get help with nursing from a lactation consultant?
I have a hard time asking for help, even from my husband,” says Udesky. “But finally he said to me, ‘You have to feel okay waking me up at night!’ I thought that I’d just power through.” She found that having him take the baby out of the house occasionally so she could nap was very helpful. “Accepting help from people can be really hard, but you have to do it.”

Seek out help.

Baby blues are normal—in fact, most women experience them to some degree or another. But if you’re feeling so sad or anxious that you’re unable to function, seek out professional help. Postpartum depression and postpartum anxiety are real, and you don’t deserve to suffer with them. Your first line of defense should be your OB-GYN or primary care doc who can help you find a psychiatrist.

How can I take care of myself while also taking care of a newborn?

“Put your phone down,” says Kathy. “Connect with your baby during caregiving routines instead of rushing them. Get away from the baby at least once every few days, even if it’s to the grocery store. For me, the act of cooking was really relaxing because it was a task that had a definitive outcome, whereas baby caretaking felt endless. If my husband was home I insisted he take over so I could cook.”

How can I transition back to work?

The most important thing is to go easy on yourself. This will be complex, and emotions will run high. For most American women, the transition comes too soon. “I’m so sad about transitioning back to work,” says Udesky, who will return to work when her baby is 12 weeks old. “I’m happy I do something I care about, but I feel like we’re just getting to the point where we’re enjoying each other, and I’m not panicked.”
When I went back to work the first time and confided in my sister that I was stressed, she said, ‘Sometimes you’re just there to get your ticket punched.’ Some days that’s all the office will get from me,” says Kathy. “On others, I’m a warp-speed machine who can’t afford to waste time because I have to pick up the kids in the afternoon. Know that there will be side-eyes from some colleagues, but just move along.”

Final Thoughts on Maternity Leave

This may seem crazy, but the thing that helped me most in those early weeks of maternity leave—when I was crazy with sleep deprivation and feeling really incompetent—was one simple line uttered by my midwife: You can put the baby down.
I was telling her I didn’t know how I would ever eat again—let alone shower, brush my teeth, or (God forbid!) put on makeup—and she just looked at me ever so kindly and said, “It’s okay if she cries. You have to take care of yourself, too.”
Udesky concurs: “Give yourself a break. Whatever you’re doing is good enough—in fact, it’s much better than you think.”

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More Than Mom Motherhood

Later, Baby: What You Need To Know About Freezing Eggs

In the final season of The Mindy Project, Dr. Mindy Lahiri (played by my fave, Mindy Kaling) opens her own fertility center and targets her business toward young women, encouraging them to say, “Later, baby,” and freeze their eggs for the future.
In the episode, her first clients, all college-age women, gather in a slumber party–esque setting to discuss fertility. It’s not too far from reality: Egg-freezing parties are gaining popularity across the U.S. as more women consider delaying a family for a slew of personal and professional reasons.
Until pretty recently, freezing eggs was still considered an experimental treatment, a sort of last resort to save a woman’s fertility. But in 2012, the American Society for Reproductive Medicine approved wider use of egg freezing and no longer considers the procedure to be experimental—allowing women to preserve and extend their fertility.
So should you freeze your eggs? Here’s everything you need to know about freezing eggs before you decide whether to put your eggs on ice.

Why would I want to freeze my eggs?

“As a family law attorney for more than 15 years, I was never quite sure if I wanted to start a family,” Evie Jeang, founder of Surrogacy Concierge, tells HealthyWay of her decision to freeze her eggs.
“I did not have the time and had not found the right person,” Jeang continues. “I felt that if I went on maternity leave, I would lose a partnership opportunity because I chose to have a child. I was 30 when I first froze my eggs, and at that time, people thought I was crazy. As you get older, doctors and studies show you that your eggs become less viable. So I decided to freeze my eggs again at 35, when my career was a little more established.”
“I wanted to extend the time I have to decide on when I want to have children,” says Stacy Bean, who also made the decision to freeze her eggs. “My husband and I are getting a bit older, however we’re still extremely focused on our careers and not quite ready to have a baby. Freezing my eggs gave us a bit more time to focus on our careers before moving on to having a family.”
While we’re told that modern women can have it all and no longer have to choose between kids or a career, Jeang and Bean made the choice to delay having a family for the sake of their careers.
A report recently published in The New York Times revealed that while most opposite-sex couples are likely to have similar earnings, after a woman has her first child, the pay gap between spouses almost doubles (and not in Mom’s favor). What’s more, women who have children between the ages of 25 and 35 are almost never able to regain equal pay, even if they go back into the same field.
Though this study just looked at couples in opposite-sex relationships, all women—regardless of their sexual orientation—who have kids are affected by the gender pay gap. Other studies have shown that women with kids make less than their childless peers (both men and women) in general.
Depressing, right?
An amazing career is just one reason a woman might consider delaying kids and freezing her eggs, though.
Freezing your eggs “offers an opportunity for a woman to act as her own egg donor, should she need it in the future,” says Briana Rudick, MD, director of third party reproduction at Columbia University Fertility Center and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Columbia University Medical Center. “Freezing eggs allows a woman to delay childbearing so that she is free to pursue career, life, whatever she desires.”

What is the egg-freezing process like?

The egg-freezing process isn’t exactly easy. In fact, it’s a lot like IVF treatments (so if you don’t like getting shots, brace yourself).
“The process of egg freezing (also known as oocyte cryopreservation) starts with [the] first day of menses,” explains Alin Lina Akopians, MD, PhD, a fertility specialist at the Southern California Reproductive Center (SCRC). “Patients visit a reproductive endocrinology and infertility (REI) specialist on either the second or third day of menses for evaluation. Evaluation generally entails a transvaginal ultrasound to check the ovaries and blood work to check the hormonal status. The patient is then started on a short course of birth control pills for approximately 10 to 12 days. The purpose of birth control pills is to ensure synchronous growth of follicles.”
What this really means is that doctors want to be sure you have the best chance of egg retrieval, and the birth control pills help sync egg follicle growth for maximum egg production. After a two-week cycle of birth control, you’ll be ready to officially begin hormone injections to stimulate egg production, a process that typically lasts about two weeks.
“Our bodies make only a small amount of those hormones so that we grow only one egg every month (our bodies don’t want us having many babies at once),” explains Rudick. During the egg-freezing process, “we have to override that with higher doses of those hormones so that we can get many eggs to grow at once. The hormones are called gonadotropins, FSH and LH.”
Once the hormones start working, you’ll start taking a suppressant medication like Cetrocide about halfway through the egg-freezing cycle. It seems counterintuitive, but this “antagonist” medication actually stops the body from ovulating too quickly during the cycle. If the eggs are released too soon, they can’t be retrieved and frozen.
During the final phase of the cycle, one to two days before egg retrieval, you’ll receive a “trigger” medication that basically tells your ovaries it’s go time. This injection is sometimes the pregnancy hormone hCG. Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) overrides the sex hormone suppressant so that the ovaries can release eggs. The time between injecting hCG and retrieval is critical; wait too long and the eggs may be irretrievable. That’s why most doctors will harvest your eggs within 35 hours of administering the hCG.
The actual egg retrieval is considered surgery, but it’s minimally invasive. Still, you’ll probably be sedated for the procedure, so make sure you have a pal to drive you home and bring you post-op cookie dough ice cream.
The whole procedure should only take about a half hour to complete. The eggs are deposited in a test tube immediately and handed over to an embryologist, who will be freezing your eggs.
You can expect light bleeding, cramping, and soreness for a couple of days after an egg retrieval, but in most cases, you’ll be back to normal the next day.

How do real women feel during the egg-freezing process?

“The process was easy once I got the hang of it,” says Bean. “At first I was a little intimidated by the injections and making sure I understood exactly what to do and how to do it all. However, the staff at SCRC made that process very easy. They walked me through everything and were there whenever I had questions—even in the late hours of the evening. After the first night of injections, I felt very comfortable.
“I went through two rounds of egg retrievals and felt pretty good through both cycles,” Bean continues. “The first time I didn’t feel any different in regards to mood swings, etc. My only issue was bloating (which was to be expected). My second round I was a little bit more emotional/moody but had less bloating. I think every round is different, but generally speaking, during both I felt just fine. I was able to go about my days like normal and no one knew that I was even going through the process.”
For Jeang though, the process wasn’t as easy.
It was painful for me since I never liked needles or shots, and I was having an allergic reaction with the hormones,” she shares of her egg-freezing experience. “Still, I was lucky to know that I had options. Not all women are armed with this information and there is still a lot of educating that needs to be done—to healthcare providers, employers, etc.”
Egg freezing will be different for every woman, but if you feel that something isn’t right during the process, be your own advocate, and let your doctor know how you’re feeling.

How do you get pregnant using frozen eggs?

“Once a patient is ready to conceive, we recommend them to try on their own initially,” says Akopians.
If you have difficulty conceiving naturally, your doctor will recommend a round of in vitro fertilization (IVF) using your frozen eggs (which is why you froze them in the first place!).
Before an IVF cycle, women who are planning to use their frozen eggs will take estrogen and progesterone supplements to ready the uterus for implantation. Once your frozen eggs are thawed, they’ll be mixed with sperm (either from the intended father or a donor). It takes less than a week for fertilization to occur, at which point the fertilized eggs (now embryos!) will be inserted into your uterus.

What’s the success rate of egg freezing?

There are two methods of freezing eggs: slow cooling and vitrification. Slow cooling has been the traditional method of egg freezing. During the slow-cooling process, eggs are subjected to cryoprotective agents (to prevent ice damage) and increasingly cold temperatures before finally reaching a freezing point of anywhere from –22° to –85° F. Once the eggs are at an optimal frozen temperature, liquid nitrogen is added for preservation.
Alternatively, vitrification is a flash-freezing process in which eggs quickly reach freezing temperatures and are subjected to much higher levels of cryoprotective agents before being submerged in liquid nitrogen. Because vitrification has been shown to have much higher success rates, it has become the preferred method of egg freezing for most fertility centers.
Still, the actual success rates of pregnancy using frozen eggs varies.
Successful pregnancy using frozen eggs depends on how old the woman is when she freezes them and how many eggs she has frozen, says Rudick. “The overall success rate once we generate embryos from those eggs is similar to that of regular IVF (controlled for age). However, some of the eggs may not survive the thaw, and/or have a slightly lower fertilization rate—but once we get embryos from those thawed eggs, they tend to do as well as regular IVF.”
Ideally, though, Akopians recommends freezing your eggs before you reach the age of 35 for the best chance of conception.
“Pregnancy rates decline as women get older, and the first evidence of this decline is seen in the early thirties. Similarly, the outcomes after oocyte thaw and embryo development [are] largely dictated by the age at which the oocytes were frozen, which is why we generally recommend women to freeze their eggs before age of 35 in order to have the most optimal outcomes.”

How much does freezing your eggs cost?

Well, freezing your eggs isn’t cheap. Typically, it can cost between $5,000 and $10,000 for an egg-retrieval cycle, plus an extra $500 to $1,000 a year to store your frozen eggs. Then, when you’re ready to use your frozen eggs, just one round of IVF can cost between $15,000 and $20,000.
If you’re lucky, your employer may help cover the cost of freezing your eggs as a work perk. Unfortunately, though, most insurance providers do not cover freezing eggs, but some insurance providers do cover the subsequent IVF treatments once you decide to use your frozen eggs.

What else should I know about freezing my eggs?

The most important thing to know about freezing your eggs is this: It’s your decision to make.
Should you decide to use your frozen eggs, egg retrieval and the subsequent rounds of IVF cycles are no picnic. And the varying success rates show that frozen eggs may not always result in viable pregnancies. Still, if you’re on the fence about kids for professional or personal reasons, freezing your eggs is one option to safeguard your fertility for the future.

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How To Help A Friend With A Preemie Baby

Your best friend’s baby arrived—way too early. Weeks or maybe even months ahead of schedule. The baby is tiny and in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), and your friend—who is essentially living at the hospital—is terrified. In other words: She needs you more than ever.
I spoke with three moms about their experiences with premature babies. Here, Ashley Patronyak, Laura Millendorf, and Juliet Ross—New York City moms with two kids each—give us the lowdown on how to help a friend, what to say, and, most importantly, what not to say.

But first: What is a preemie?

A premature baby, often known as a preemie, is one born before 37 weeks’ gestation. An early birth is often accompanied with a slew of complications, which are, of course, exacerbated the earlier the baby is born. In other words, a baby born at 31 weeks will usually be smaller, less developed, and more at-risk than one born at 36 weeks, but this depends entirely on the circumstances around the birth and what problems led to preterm labor.
Other than being quite small—often well under 5 pounds—a preemie baby might have trouble in a number of vital areas: difficulty breathing and regulating temperature and a lack of reflexes to suck or nurse. A preemie baby may have heart problems (low blood pressure or heart complications), brain problems (because of possible brain bleeds), blood problems (anemia and/or jaundice), and gastrointestinal problems (because the system is underdeveloped). The immune system is also compromised.
Preemies often develop into typically healthy kids, but some can suffer long-term effects—anything from cerebral palsy to hearing or vision problems to impaired learning to compromised immune systems.
In other words, if your bestie has a preemie, she’s going to need your support.

HealthyWay asked the moms about the circumstances of their preemies’ preterm birth.

Laura: I had an abnormal placenta, which didn’t allow for proper growth, so I was hospitalized at 32 weeks’ gestation when my son’s growth percentile was dipping lower and lower (they had been following it since 25 weeks). At 35 weeks they took him out, but he wasn’t the size of a normal 35-weeker, which was the issue. He was 4 pounds, with virtually no body fat, and was unable to keep himself warm, so had to be in an incubator in the critical care nursery for weeks before gaining enough fat and weight to go home.  
Ashley: I began having preterm labor somewhere between 21 and 22 weeks. There wasn’t a definitive explanation for why it was happening, but it was generally written off by my doctors as stress related. So, one of the first unhelpful things I was told was that I needed to relax and “take it easy.” I became pregnant in the very beginning of a still-casual relationship, right before I started my first semester of grad school in a city that was still fairly new to me. I was working long hours at a physically taxing job and was struggling to make ends meet. There was simply no room in all of that to relax or take it easy. I was in and out of the hospital to stop labor and eventually got a new less-stressful, better-paying job, but it didn’t help my symptoms. I was put on bed rest sometime around 30 weeks and had my son at 34 weeks 5 days.
Juliet: My pregnancy was complicated due to placenta previa with bleeding, and baby and I were monitored frequently. Around 30 weeks, the rate of growth declined and it became clear that at some point my baby would be able to grow better outside of me than inside. Once doctors saw restricted blood flow in the umbilical cord, it was time for me to have the baby. He was delivered at 36 weeks, very small for gestational age at 3½ pounds. They gave me medicine to speed up his lung development before he was born, so he was able to breathe well on his own. However, he required a lot of medical support to gain weight, and although he was only a little early, he has experienced a lot of the same challenges in his life that many earlier preemies face.

What are things you should definitely not say to parents of a preemie?

Do not speculate about why this happened.

“The worst thing someone said to me after the birth was speculating that the reason my son had been born with these issues was because I had consumed coffee during my pregnancy,” Laura says. “Asking or musing out loud about why the preemie might have been premature is just a bad idea. It’s not your job to figure out why, and if you want to know, just ask an open-ended question like, ‘Do the doctors have any idea what might have caused the early birth?’ But unless you’re an OB-GYN, do not speculate about why this happened and spout pseudo-science about why you think this happened.”

Do not say he’s not “really” a preemie.

“Because my son was born at 35 weeks, people said this a lot,” Laura says. “They had no idea that he was only 4 pounds and his skin was basically transparent, and if they hadn’t done a C-section that day he would have been a stillbirth because his oxygen levels were dipping.”

Do not tell us to count our blessings.

When my son was born, he was a hulking giant compared to the micropreemies around him, and only spent a week in the NICU,” says Ashley. “But it was extremely unhelpful anytime someone told us we were lucky or to count our blessings. I think any parent who’s been through an emergency early delivery and whose child has survived has already taken stock of each and every blessing many times over, and fortune falling in your favor in terms of relative health, size, and gestational age doesn’t ease the deep gnawing fear that something could still go suddenly awry or the anxiety from leaving your baby in the hands of strangers, no matter how qualified they may be. It’s also very difficult to think of things on a scale of luckiness, knowing that the parents and babies around you are suffering too.”

Don’t talk about the baby’s weight.

“The worst thing anyone said was, ‘You’ll never have to worry about him being fat!’” Juliet recalls. “Close runner up: ‘It’s great to have nurses take care of your newborn in the NICU and you get to sleep through the night!’ It also wasn’t helpful when people said, ‘but now he’s okay, right?’, because I knew that what they wanted was for me to reassure them. I resented the demand to comfort other people outside of my immediate family. And I did not know if he would be alright.”

What can you say to best support parents of a preemie?

If someone is unsure what to say, rather than pointing out a baby’s size—‘He’s so tiny!’—err on the side of a compliment,” says Ashley. “‘She’s perfect’ or ‘He’s gorgeous’ are far less likely to trigger parents’ fears as they wait for their baby to reach size and health that they can leave the hospital, and perhaps even guilt or shame, because they may still be wondering what went wrong, if it was their fault, and what they should or could or would have done differently.”

How can I support my friend with a preemie?

Practical To-Dos for Preemie Parents:

  • Buy them preemie clothes. “Most people get lots of baby clothing gifts,” Laura says, “but if you end up having a preemie, suddenly you find that you don’t own anything that fits the preemie, because nobody plans for a preemie and hasn’t bought those sizes.” Juliet concurs: “It was so special when people sent clothes that fit my baby. I still have a lot of them, and now my daughter puts them on her dolls. They remind me of how far we’ve come!”
  • If the parents have any other kids at home, take care of those kids. Offer to take the kid out for pizza and a few hours at a playground, or come over and do bedtime with the kid.
  • Help with pumping. Pumping is not something I expected to be doing around the clock with a newborn,” says Juliet, “but like many preemie moms, I pumped for my son before he was able to nurse. People sent their favorite pumping bras and advice about cleaning pump parts.”
  • Offer to walk their dog in the evenings. The world doesn’t stop just because a preemie was born. That means that furbabies might not get the time and attention they’re used to, so if you can step in, it’s appreciated.
  • Send them a gift certificate for a cleaning service. Cleaning the house will likely be low on their list of priorities. This is a thoughtful way to make their home feel more like a sanctuary than another point of stress.
  • Send pre-cooked meals. Note that this does not include gift baskets with jams and cornichons and cookies, which offer little nutrition.
  • Offer to go to the grocery store for them. On that same note, preemie parents may want to cook food on their own to add some normalcy to their days. If they have the ingredients on hand, that’s one less stop they have to make after leaving the hospital.
  • Start a meal train or send a gift card to a restaurant near the hospital. Leaving a preemie in the hospital is hard, so most parents want to be as close as possible. Letting them have an hour or two at a restaurant nearby can feel like a godsend.

Emotional To-Dos for Preemie Parents

  • Cool it with the milestone chatter. Remember that preemies don’t always meet their milestones exactly “on time” because the preemie has to adjust. So if your preemie-parent friend is stressed about milestones, remind him/her that it sometimes take a couple of years for a preemie to fully catch up and to try not to compare them to non-preemie parents and babies.
  • Do not shame a preemie mom for using formula. “Formula literally saved my son’s life because it supplemented my breastmilk,” says Laura, “It gave him enough calories to gain weight when he was losing weight rapidly as a preemie.”
  • Show up for your preemie parent friends. Don’t just assume they want to be left alone; don’t feel too awkward to reach out. Keep them company at the hospital or at home.
  • The more you and others can band together to help relieve stress—including the stress of having to make more decisions or ask for help—the better! “When my son was in the NICU and newly home, I was unable to deal with making more decisions or with the everyday details of life, so just having someone come over to talk or bring food was huge,” says Ashley.

Finally, keep a preemie safe by respecting the parents’ health rules.

Preemies are particularly vulnerable to illness, so this one is extremely important to abide by. It’s so crucial to preemie parents, in fact, that all three moms had plenty to say on the topic.
Laura: When I finally had my son’s bris, I put up signs outside the front door telling everyone to use hand sanitizer upon entry. People who haven’t been through this with a vulnerable kid don’t always get it. Your kid’s cold might mean my kid’s hospitalization. My son was hospitalized at 6 months because he was still so small that a respiratory virus left him struggling to breathe. So please don’t bring your toddler with “just a cold” over to my apartment, and please don’t touch my kid’s face unless you’ve sanitized. I’m not a helicopter “keep them in a bubble” type of parent by nature. But preemie immune systems and respiratory systems are no joke. If you don’t vaccinate your kid, don’t come near my child.
Ashley: If a preemie parent says they can’t have visitors, respect that. Their child may be in especially fragile health, or they may just be exhausted and unable to focus on anything else. When we brought our son home, we were told not to take him in public for at least two months, barring doctor visits. We were very careful about visitors. If you aren’t up on your vaccines or you’re getting over feeling sick, starting to feel sick, or have been in contact with someone ill recently, put your own wants aside and don’t go near a premature baby (or, for that matter, any baby!) until you can do it safely.
Juliet: I demanded that everyone who wanted to kiss my baby get a flu shot and whooping cough booster. I also required a lot of hand washing, and some people thought I was nuts! The NICU gave out little signs you could attach to the stroller that said, “wash your hands before touching mine,” and I got a lot of sidelong glances in response. My son needed the extra protection of our clean hands—that had been made very clear to me in the NICU. I also understood that a baby under two months who gets a fever has to go to the hospital, and I had had more than enough of the hospital!

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More Than Mom Motherhood

Always A Mom: Relearning To Love Mother's Day After My Son's Passing

Mother’s Day. It’s roses and balloons, poems and sweet little notes. It’s kisses and hugs. It’s the beautiful little ceramic box my then-9-year-old son got me in Brooklyn (with the help of my mom, visiting from France) reading, “A mom’s love is the best gift of all.” It’s the beautiful note he wrote, saying “Happy Mother’s Day … but mostly, it’s my birthday!”
Mother’s Day. It’s music and laughter and kindness. It’s signs everywhere: outside, inside, on TV, on the web, on social media, on restaurant boards, on shop windows. It’s that day—one full day—where the bond between your child and you is here, for all to celebrate. For you, for your circle, for society.
Mother’s Day is recognition: You. Are. A. Mother.
Until it stops.
I lost my beautiful 17-year-old son 6 years ago. Since then, Mother’s Day has been blades in my heart and daggers in my soul, to say the least. (And not only on the actual day, but for weeks prior.) It feels like a constant attack: There is no escape, and wherever you try to turn your head, you are faced with another commercial, another social media post that says, well, it is happening. Without your child.
HealthyWay
Where are you? Where do you fit? Where do you fit without disrupting people, society, and norms? Without disrupting the order of things? Where do you fit when there will be no balloons, kisses, hugs, or flowers? When there is just you and the constant reminders of the absence?
In 2010, a mother created International Bereaved Mother’s Day. It’s “intended to be a temporary movement [and] … a heart-centered attempt at healing the official Mother’s Day for all mothers.”

CarlyMarie, who started International Bereaved Mother’s Day, says on the website, “I believe that we can do this and that sometime in the near future there will be no need for this day at all because all true mothers will be recognized, loved, supported and celebrated.”
My friend Irene Vouvalides, who is a board member of the support group Helping Parents Heal, gave me good advice when she told me, “We celebrate Mother’s Day as we celebrate the bond created by mother and child. We are mothers, always, regardless of whether our children walk this earth or not.”
My son’s birthday is on May 11, so it usually falls a few days before or after Mother’s Day; sometimes his birthday is on Mother’s Day itself. The first years after his death, this has compounded my pain in ways that I can’t put into words. I was unable to step outside to listen to children’s laughter, to hear the music, the noise, see the full restaurants, the cards and flowers and balloons and kisses.
Irene told me that through the few years since our children died, she is finding that Mother’s Day has become “less tortuous and more peaceful.” Every year now, she buys something for herself in her daughter’s name. This year, I will do the same.
I used to say, “We are still mothers.” This year, I am saying, “I am your mother. Here. Yesterday. Always.”
It’s still a process, but I’m starting to understand and accept that we can still honor Mother’s Day. Even though our children are no longer physically present, our children—my child—are still here.
I love you, Keanu. I blow kisses to the sky today and on this Mother’s Day, and I thank you for being my amazing son, today and always.

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All I Want For Mother's Day Is A Night Alone

The only thing I want for Mother’s Day this year—and every year—is a night alone in a hotel. I want to revel in the absolute silence of a child-free bedroom. I want to order a $36 room service hamburger and not have to share it with someone under the age of 5. I want to go to sleep between sheets that someone else has washed. I want to sleep until I wake up, after which I will enjoy a boiling hot cup of coffee and read The New York Times from cover to cover.
In short, the only thing I want for Mother’s Day is to pretend I’m not a mother.
Before the keyboard critics rush to accuse me of being an unloving, negligent mother, let me state for the record that I love my children—but I don’t love being with them every single second of every single day. Any woman who says that she can’t imagine needing a break from her children probably doesn’t have them.
If you have even an inkling of what the average day is like for a busy mom with one, three, or 15 kids—essentially being a short-order cook and a maid and a worker bee and a chauffeur and all the other stuff you can possibly think of—you’ll understand why the one thing I ask for every Mother’s Day is a night away from my family.
To be perfectly honest, the thing I need a break from the most is the constant touching.
Before I had children, I didn’t understand the term “touched out.” In fact, my high-school self—the one who threw herself at any male human with a pulse—would think it was totally insane that someone wouldn’t want to be touched all the time. Flash forward 20 years or so to a life that’s filled with small humans clinging to my person from 6 a.m. (on a good day) until 8 p.m., and then sometimes a large human trying to touch me in all the wrong places from 8 p.m. on. These days, I can’t even handle wearing synthetic fabrics because they’re too clingy.
It’s not just the touching, though. It’s the talking, too, and the constant interruption that has precluded me from finishing one New York Times article, let alone the whole paper, for going on six years. Sometimes I just want to read about the tragedies happening around the world while drinking a cup of coffee that hasn’t been microwaved five times. And that’s why I always tell my husband to forgo the jewelry, flowers, or other fancy gifts, and just book me into the closest hotel for a glorious 24 hours away from all of my loved ones.
Experience has taught me that I have valid reasons for taking a yearly sabbatical from motherhood, and not a single one of them is because I’m a selfish narcissist, thank you very much.

After just 24 hours alone, I feel recharged.

Having the opportunity to think only about my own needs for one day makes me better able to handle the non-stop demands of my family when I return. My daily meditation practice assists me in staying patient and present most of the time, but sometimes even mindfulness and ohms are powerless to combat the frustration of never being able to pee without an audience.

If you don’t ask for what you want, you’ll get what you don’t want.

Mother’s Day can easily transform from a day that’s about you to a day that’s all about your mother, mother-in-law, grandmother, and stepmother-in-law. My first Mother’s Day, I spent the day attending three separate brunches before the day ended in tears: mine and my son’s. Don’t be a martyr and end up feeling cheated out of your day.

Vacations are good for your health.

Actual scientific research shows that taking a break from your usual routine provides countless benefits, including reducing stress and increasing productivity. Take a break from the full-time job of motherhood, and reap the benefits of your time away.
I know it might not sound festive, especially when you’re caught up in the excitement of new motherhood and think that your baby is the most magical and wonderful thing in the world. But just wait, mama. Wait until you haven’t showered for six days and you can’t remember the last time you ate a meal without simultaneously holding a baby. Sure, your kid may be the “reason for the season,” but I guarantee that you’ll feel a whole lot happier about your choice to breed after a good night’s rest, an overpriced room service meal, and a Netflix binge.
 

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Weaning 101: Everything You Need To Know Before You Stop Breastfeeding

The first time we tried breastfeeding—when my kid was only minutes old—he chomped down on my boob like he’d been doing it for months. A few hours later, the lactation consultant proclaimed that he was the best nurser she’d ever seen in labor and delivery.
Literally hours after the LC lavished this praise upon us, things unraveled in the breastfeeding department. After only a couple minutes of nursing, my son would fall fast asleep, and none of the tricks they teach you to wake them up—like tickling their feet—worked. My child snoozed right through every nursing attempt.
From then on, nursing was a struggle. I tried everything. I took fenugreek tablets. I ate oatmeal. I pumped every two hours like clockwork no matter when I nursed. And still, breastfeeding was hard. My baby was in the bottom 10th percentile for weight at his 2-month check-up, which made me cry. And then I cried again when he got his shots (it was a hard day).
I started supplementing with formula after that appointment. Like magic, my kid started guzzling down bottles and putting on weight. When my period came back at five months postpartum, my already lagging milk supply plummeted. I decided to go ahead and stop breastfeeding my son even though I had really wanted to breastfeed until he was much, much older.
We’ve all heard “Breast is best,” but sometimes medical conditions, early breastfeeding mistakes, stress, and other factors can make breastfeeding a huge burden rather than the joyful bonding experience it’s meant to be. And even if you didn’t experience any issues but you’re just ready to stop breastfeeding, that’s okay too!
If you’re ready to stop breastfeeding, welcome to the judgment-free zone. This weaning guide is full of nothing but positive information and helpful tips to stop breastfeeding, so that baby and mom can get on with living their best lives with as little stress as possible.
Ready to take back your boobs? Here’s everything you need to know to stop breastfeeding.

Stop breastfeeding…and stop feeling guilty!

One of the hardest decisions I’ve ever had to make was to stop breastfeeding. I felt bombarded with judgment: from other breastfeeding moms, from my pediatrician, and worst of all, from myself.
Now, three months later, I still feel guilty about stopping breastfeeding “early,” even though my kid is happy and healthy.
“The whole ‘Breast is best’ saying takes this [feeling of guilt] to a whole other level where moms can start to feel like it’s all or nothing, thinking that they need to breastfeed exclusively and perfectly for the whole first year (and beyond if they so choose) or else they are a bad mom and their child is doomed,” says Heidi McBain, a licensed therapist in Flower Mound, Texas, who specializes in women’s issues.
She says, “This mentality doesn’t leave room for moms who may need to stop breastfeeding before they are ready because of an illness or work or a myriad of other issues, or simply because they don’t like breastfeeding and are ready to stop for personal reasons.”
So what can you do to leave the guilt behind when you decide to stop breastfeeding?
There are several things you can do to protect your own mental health when you decide to stop breastfeeding, McBain tells HealthyWay.
“Surround yourself with supportive, positive people, especially other mothers who have been in your shoes,” says McBain. “Also, let yourself feel how you are feeling and don’t just stuff these feelings down because they are hard and uncomfortable.”
For me, that was one of the hardest parts of weaning, especially because we stopped breastfeeding sooner than we expected to. I only knew other moms who seemed to be breezing along in the breastfeeding department, and it made me feel like a total failure. But several weeks later, a friend reached out to me because she was also struggling to breastfeed, and it felt wonderful to finally know someone else understood what I was going through.
One of the most important things you can do when you’re trying to stop breastfeeding is take time each day for your own self-care. Lately, before my kid wakes up, I’ve been doing a 15-minute morning routine of dry brushing and a short yoga flow to center myself and get ready for the day. It’s a small act of self-care, and it really does set the tone for the rest of the day.
Sometimes though, self-care isn’t enough to get you through rough patches as a new mom. If you’re struggling with feelings of guilt, grief, or hopelessness during weaning, know that you’re not alone.
“Postpartum mood disorders—depression, anxiety, OCD, et cetera—are more common than most people realize, so any time mom is just not feeling like herself and feels like something is off or just isn’t right—depressed mood, excessive worry, intrusive thoughts, et cetera—she needs to reach out for support as soon as possible, starting with her doctor or a maternal mental health specialist,” says McBain.
Together, you and your healthcare provider can work to address the underlying issues that may be affecting your mental health as you try to stop breastfeeding.
Because you know what’s really best? A happy, healthy mom.

A Guilt-Free Guide to Stop Breastfeeding

I hope you brought your freshly sharpened No. 2 pencils, ladies, because you’ve just entered Weaning 101 (no expensive textbook required).
“Weaning means changing the relationship a mother has with her child,” says Amanda Ogden, RN, BSN, an international board-certified lactation consultant and co-founder and director of lactation services and education at the mama ’hood. “Once the mother has decided the time is right, and really because the work of breastfeeding is solely the mother’s work, the decision to wean is hers to make.” Well, it’s hers to make most of the time.

There are actually two kinds of weaning: mama-led and baby-led weaning.

My decision to stop breastfeeding was definitely mama-led. My little one was only 5 months old, but my milk supply had always been low, and we supplemented with formula early on, so he really didn’t even notice the transition.
But if a baby is exclusively breastfed for a longer period of time, it may be a bit tougher to stop breastfeeding if baby hasn’t given cues that he’s ready. Still, it can be done, and baby will be just fine if mom has to stop breastfeeding before age 1.
“If a mother is leading the weaning, she should do this slowly and replace nursing sessions with a bottle feeding or cup feeding if baby is older,” says DeeDee Frank, a certified lactation consultant at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore, Maryland. “A slower approach actually helps the mother and baby slowly adjust to the decrease nursing sessions.”
Mama-led weaning, if done slowly, can be a gentle way to decrease your milk supply, meaning less engorgement for you and more time to adjust to weaning for baby.
Before you stop breastfeeding, Ogden suggests you take a few minutes to answer these questions (see, I told you the pencil would come in handy!):

  • Will weaning make your life harder or easier?
  • Do you feel sad when you think about stopping breastfeeding?
  • Is your child showing signs that he/she is ready to stop breastfeeding?

If you can answer these questions in a way that makes you feel good about your decision to stop breastfeeding, then you should go ahead and begin the weaning process.
Baby-led weaning, on the other hand, is exactly what it sounds like. If you have an older baby, this may be an ideal way to stop breastfeeding. As baby gets older, he or she may be less interested in the breast and more interested in yummy solids or drinking from a big-kid cup. (If your little one isn’t quite a year old yet, see our tips below for weaning safely before 1.)
If you’re totally over it but your baby still loves to nurse, try night weaning to gently encourage your little one to stop breastfeeding on their own. Skipping those nighttime feedings may result in a couple of sleepless nights as baby adjusts, but pretty soon he’ll be sleeping soundly through the night and may begin to show less interest in nursing during the daytime as a result.

Stop breastfeeding gradually.

The key to successful weaning is a gradual reduction of breastfeeding, says Ogden.
“If there is a situation where a mother must wean abruptly for medical reasons, then she should continue to pump or hand express enough to keep her breasts comfortable but not enough to empty the breasts. …It is easiest on the mother’s body and mood to slowly decrease the number of times per day she is breastfeeding. Weaning too rapidly can cause a rapid shift in the hormones prolactin and oxytocin, which can lead to depression.”
Start the weaning process by only nursing when your baby or toddler initiates breastfeeding. If you breastfeed for comfort during nap or bedtime, or when baby is just fussy, try using other comfort methods to soothe your fussy tot.
“When I weaned my boys, I missed my instant soother too, and I had to find new ways to soothe them,” says Nicole Johnson, founder of The Baby Sleep Site. “Cuddling and reading on the couch (we started reading at 4 months old), hugs, kisses, laying down in the bed while not nursing, and lots of touch can help. …By retraining our own behavior, we can change expectations, so nursing isn’t the only thing your baby looks to you for!”

Routine is key when you stop breastfeeding.

Once you figure out what comfort measures work in place of breastfeeding, use those as part of a regular routine so that your child understands nursing is no longer an option.
This can be especially hard when baby wakes up in the middle of the night expecting his 3 a.m. feeding (see night weaning, above). But there is good news! For starters, breastfeeding is something only mama can do. But now that you’re weaning, if there’s another caregiver in the picture, they can get in on the middle-of-the-night soothing action too (and you might be able to catch up on some much needed ZZZs).
If you’re comfortable with co-sleeping, you might also decide to snuggle baby in bed with you when he wakes for a nighttime feeding. The safety baby feels while lying close to you may be enough to soothe him back to sleep. However, if you’re not comfortable with bedsharing, there are other comfort measures you can try to get baby back to sleep.
“We also recommend using a replacement object, also known as a lovey, which could help soothe baby back to sleep,” says Johnson.
A lovey could be anything: a soft square of blanket, one of mom’s old shirts, or a small stuffed toy. Just make sure it’s something you can replace easily. Lovies are notoriously easy to lose, and heaven help the parent who can’t find it at bedtime!
There are different ways to introduce a lovey, but basically your baby will begin to associate bedtime with the lovey instead of nursing and use the lovey to self-soothe when they wake. Lovies can also be wonderful during stressful situations, like baby’s first flying experience or long car trips.
Whatever you decide to do, make sure it’s part of a regular routine so that baby comes to expect the new routine rather than a nursing session when you stop breastfeeding.

Avoid engorged breasts when you stop breastfeeding.

Remember when your milk came in, and like the Grinch’s heart, your breasts also grew three sizes that day?
That was engorgement. Your breasts were probably really swollen, hard, and downright painful. And in those first days, you probably only felt sweet relief when baby nursed.
When you stop breastfeeding, you can expect your breasts to engorge again because, just like your baby is waiting to nurse, your breasts expect to be emptied at the same times each day.
To minimize engorgement, wean slowly. You may still need to pump a bit even if you’re not nursing, but only pump to relieve the pressure, not to drain the breast as you would during a normal nursing or pumping session.
If your breasts do become engorged when you stop breastfeeding, there are a few remedies out there that can help suffering mamas.
If you’re into natural remedies, stuffing cold cabbage leaves into your bra really does help with engorgement. Plus, you’ll have a healthy snack for later!
When my breasts became engorged, I used Lansinoh Thera°Pearl 3-in-1 Breast pads, and they were a lifesaver! I loved that you could just pop them in the freezer, and they really helped with the soreness.

Successfully switch to formula when you stop breastfeeding before age 1.

It seems like there are about a thousand different kinds of formula out there, so it can be overwhelming to try to find the formula that’s right for your baby if you stop breastfeeding before age 1.
It’s also extremely important to note that before age 1, baby should only be drinking formula or breast milk, not cow’s milk. If baby is less than a year old, formula or breast milk is the only nutrition baby really needs, even after they start solids, typically around 6 months old (hence the phrase “Food before one is just for fun”).
Successfully transitioning your baby to formula may take a bit of trial and error as you see which formula your baby prefers. For example, my baby only likes the powdered kind of of his favorite formula. We tried the ready-to-drink kind of the same exact formula, and he would not have it. Sigh. Such are the whims of a 6-month-old.
As you experiment, try mixing formula with a bit of breast milk so your baby isn’t totally shocked by the new taste and texture. Gradually reduce the amount of breast milk until your baby is only drinking formula.
Spoiler alert: Formula ain’t cheap. If the sticker shock of buying large amounts of formula each week makes you want to weep, take to social media and ask friends to send you their free samples [linkbuilder id=”4268″ text=”and formula”] coupons.

Can I nurse my baby again if I stop breastfeeding?

“If a mom changes her mind and wants to go back to breastfeeding, it will depend on how long she has been dropping breastfeeding sessions and the age of the baby whether she can recover her milk supply and the baby will want to nurse,” says Franke. “It is possible to return to breastfeeding, but it may take some work, especially if mom has also dropped her milk supply.”
A return to breastfeeding will depend on a couple of factors: How long has it been since baby weaned? Does baby even seem interested in breastfeeding?
According to an article by Anne Smith, international board-certified lactation consultant, re-lactation is easiest with a baby younger than 3 months old. Older babies may enjoy drinking from a bottle or cup and may be unwilling to return to the breast. Still, in most cases, re-lactation can be accomplished with the help of a certified lactation consultant. If you’re interested in breastfeeding again after weaning, contact your local La Leche League chapter for guidance from certified lactation consultants and moms who have been there.
Okay, mamas, put those pencils away. Weaning 101 has concluded, and there’s no test. You all passed with flying colors. So go on, moms, take back your boobs (and don’t feel guilty about it, either). Because we all deserve bite-mark free breasts, nipples that aren’t chafed, and to stop breastfeeding guilt-free—if that’s our choice.
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