What should go in your baby bag, for you and your baby.
Libby Cain.
Libby is a nurse, midwife, lactation consultant and childbirth educator.
blog
What should go in your baby bag, for you and your baby.
Libby Cain.
Libby is a nurse, midwife, lactation consultant and childbirth educator.
The early stage of labour is called the latent phase, this is the preparation phase and it is important to let it unfold at its own pace, trust your body, it knows how to do this.
By Libby Cain.
Libby is a nurse, midwife, lactation consultant and childbirth educator.
A newborn baby's skin is very fragile and delicate, as it can take up to a year to form the protective acid mantle of healthy adult skin. Baby's skin is also 20-30% thinner so is particularly sensitive to drying, rashes, and reactions to skincare products.
Libby is a nurse, midwife, lactation consultant and childbirth educator.
For breastfeeding women who suffer from blocked/plugged ducts or recurrent episodes of mastitis are often advised by their midwife or lactation consultant to increase their intake of lecithin.
By Libby Cain. Libby is a nurse, midwife, lactation consultant and childbirth educator.
Thrush can be present in your nipple or your breast and is due to an overgrowth of one type of fungus. It is hard to grow on a swab so diagnosis is often just after considering a mum's symptoms. Unfortunately it is one of the major reasons woman often give up feeding.
By Libby Cain. Libby is a nurse, midwife, lactation consultant and childbirth educator.
Although colostrum is produced from as early as 16-22 weeks it may not be visible until 28 weeks. From this time it is possible to gently squeeze around the areola and see this yellow early, concentrated milk or you may see signs of colostrum-yellow flakes on your nipple.
By Libby Cain. Libby is a nurse, midwife, lactation consultant and childbirth educator.
The one they’d never heard about: Postpartum OCD.
After child birth there is the aged social expectation that new mums should feel elated, be living in a dream world of grateful happiness, and be glowing with an abundance of love for their bundle of perfection.
However, after having my second child, I appeared to have been presented with a nightmare that did not reflect the old-fashioned ideology of a postpartum mind.
Just after we’d welcomed my daughter into the world, my mind decided that instead of counting each tiny finger, and cooing over every tiny snuffle, it would overwhelm me with the fear that my baby was in harm’s way. For many new and experienced mums this fear may have been perceived as ‘normal’ with juggling hormones, sleep deprivation and stress taking the brunt of the blame, thus my concern was dismissed by those around me.
I played it down, secretly attempting to communicate my feelings through subtle jokes, yet simultaneously refusing to openly admit what I was truly experiencing in the hope that it would go away. Soon the negative intrusions became uncontrollable, and I became fixated on protecting my babies from harm. My phone memory became inundated with photographs of cracks in the ceilings and around the edges of the rooms in my house -we had had the living room re-plastered a few months before Sofia arrived and as the plaster dried out it would split slightly, which was to be expected. However, the intrusive irrational fixation that I was solely responsible for preventing the deterioration of my house became my only focus; I firmly believed that my ceilings and floors would fall in and my children would be victims in the rubble.
My entire life revolved around those ceiling cracks. I genuinely do not remember much about the first few months of my daughter’s life, instead being consumed by the constant monitoring, listening and documenting.
I’d been robbed from my family.
Discussing my concerns with my mum, mostly by sharing my poem, “Mugged”, started the ball rolling. She read through the extended metaphors and suggested that the negative intrusions that I was experiencing was not normal and that I should seek help.
We’re always asked about the best advice we have received as a mother. Well, that was it. Get help.
Owing to my perinatal status, my doctors arranged an immediate appointment with the mental health nurse who then set up a referral for a consultation with the Cognitive Behaviour Therapy team. Fortunately, the awareness of perinatal mental health issues has evolved significantly over the last decade, and the stigma of admitting to suffering from a mental illness is slowly lifting. Yet the dread I felt of being judged by the medical professionals was prominent; prominent but irrational. I could not have asked for a more supportive team.
This beacon of hope influenced my poem, “Cracked”. I didn’t know what my diagnosis was or how it would be fixed but there was an underlying hint of positivity now that my army was growing. At that point we were maintaining vigilance.
After my first session of CBT, it transpired that I was suffering from Postpartum OCD.
I’d heard of Postpartum Depression. I’d heard of Postpartum Anxiety. But I’d never heard of Postpartum OCD.
I was baffled. How could I be suffering with an Obsessive Compulsive Disorder? I was not displaying any of the standard symptoms that are often portrayed by the media: repetitively washing your hands; constantly listing series of numbers or words; or being obsessively clean to rid any germs that contaminate our day to day lives.
But my over inflated sense of responsibility, feeling that no one else was competent enough to protect my babies, and the attention that I poured into these uncontrollable negative intrusive thoughts had me fairly high on the postpartum OCD scale. Initially, I assumed that I’d be feeling like this for the rest of my life.
During the CBT sessions, my therapist and I retraced a lot of situations, gave reason to my thoughts, and secured balanced evidence in my head so that, after a few months, I began to control the intrusions. Fuelled by my weekly homework tasks, determination and motivation kicked in; I had lost enough of my life to this bully and I began to build confidence and regained some control.
Research form the Royal College of Psychiatrists suggests that “OCD affects two in every 100 women in pregnancy and 2-3 in every 100 women in the year after giving birth.” and yet postpartum OCD does not share the same exposure or media coverage as postpartum depression or postpartum anxiety. An idea was ignited; I wanted to defeat the tyrant.
Inspired, I penned my most recent, horrendously honest and personal poem, “Postpartum OCD”, hoping to raise awareness of postpartum OCD, arming women with the reassurance of its existence, and therefore preventing the presumption that madness has set in.
It would be lovely to conclude with some form of closure, saying that I’m now cured of postpartum OCD and that I am right back on track. But the reality is that these illnesses can creep back at any minute. I often have relapses and the intrusions get wind of my vulnerability, but they are met by the techniques, strategies and evidence I’m now equipped with.
Leander: Mum of two; full time English teacher; writer of horrendously honest poetry about motherhood; lover of muddy puddles and consumer of copious amounts of camembert.
@postpartumpoet
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAdS9nthhb-AqZ3_tbWEHMw?view_as=subscriber
References:
https://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/mental-health/problems-disorders/perinatal-ocd (06-10-2019)
Mugged
It has snuck up on me,
unexpectedly
robbing my sanity,
increasing my vulnerability.
I’m stepping apprehensively,
guarding incessantly,
thinking irrationally,
worrying illogically:
Mugged by anxiety.
© by Leo’s Mum (2019)
Cracked
And then I cracked
Like furrows of dried plaster.
Before, immaculately seamless,
Now a silhouette of mountains,
foreboding; fearful apprehension.
It doesn’t weaken me.
My structural integrity is still unbroken,
but I see it every day.
I know it is there.
I anticipate its expansion.
But, this time others can see it.
Comforted to know that they can recognise it.
We’re maintaining vigilance.
© by Leo’s Mum (2019)
In life, if someone was screaming at at you, shouting, whining, hitting. If there was constant noise that was stressing your body. If you needed space but there wasn’t any...your body and your mind would tell you to walk away. You’d leave. You’d go, you’d breathe. You’d walk, talk, calm, ground, focus, refuel, recover. It’s an inbuilt, self-protective drive.
There will come a time where all of this is a distant memory. But in the beginning...There will be waves, joy, despair, Anxiety.
I’m sorry I never knew what you meant when you said you were exhausted. Mentally and physically drained of everything. I’m sorry I didn’t know what it meant to have sore nipples and red achy eyes that so badly just wanted to close. I’m sorry there were days you felt overwhelmed, isolated and alone.
By Lou Marx.
“I don’t feel down everyday, so I shouldn’t seek help”.
“She’s got it so much worse than me and she “manages”, so I won’t reach out for support”.
“I should just harden up, I wanted kids”.
“My parents managed, so I should just get on with it and stop complaining”.
By Sarah Noble. Mindset and Mindfulness Speaker.
It’s all too easy to get caught up in the journey of Motherhood. When you are a sleep deprived, emotional, stress ball, your thoughts and mindsets are often not very positive and optimistic. Here’s 10 tried and true (by yours truly), steps to inject some much needed Mindful moments in your busy day.
By Sarah Noble.
‘Birth Choices.
Make it for yourself.
Not to impress anyone.
Not to belittle anyone.
Not to prove a point to anyone.
Do not fear people’s judgement because they’re the ones making the error, not you.’
By @jessie.juggles.two
When you became a Mother, along with that squishy warm bundle, you also acquired a voice, not only for yourself but one for your child until they grow big enough for this world to sit down and listen. Never be afraid to stand up and be heard. You are your child's advocate.
By Lacey Owen
Read more…
Mumfulness, is a term I heard recently, it was actually spelt momfulness, but being in the southern hemisphere I will spell it our way, this is the term to describe Motherhood and Mindfulness.
To be a mindful and conscious Mama can take a lot of work, especially if our to-do lists are long, our energy is low and our multi-tasking has spiralled out of control.
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By Gemma Douglas
Yes, Motherhood is an aspiration, a hope and desire many of us have, for some it happened easily and for others it took years of heartache and stress. Now that we are mothers the word love doesn’t seem adequate enough to describe how we feel about our children, they come first, without question.
Read more…
By Gemma Douglas