Skip to main content

Advice Too Serious for a Baby Shower

This post is a lot more about my feeelings (as Audrey would say) than I usually discuss in this blog but it needs to be written. It probably doesn't need to be written for any of my readers; perhaps it only needs to be written for me. It's about my experiences with Soren as a new baby and the valuable truth I want to remember when I have another new baby.

A lot of my friends are pregnant with their first child right now and so this spring has been the baby shower season for me. Baby showers are a great opportunity to give gifts and advice, so I've been thinking a lot about the gadgetry I was most grateful for and the knowledge I wish I'd had when Soren was born.

Picking out a baby shower gift is easy. Scott and I knew immediately what material possession made having a baby 10xs easier: our sling. We went without diapers and bottles and didn't use our bassinet or stroller for months. But we would never have survived the first week without the sling we carried Soren around in. So it's easy to know what gift I should give my friends who are expecting.

On the other hand, framing useful (yet appropriate) advice for another woman is hard, and maybe shouldn't even be tried. I know that in all the showers I have been to in the past month, I have made a complete fool of myself trying to articulate (in my tactless, too-loud, overbearing way) what I wish I'd known when I became a mother. I don't think I ever got across what I wanted to say and I know I've said a lot of things I didn't mean.

So here it is, as succictly as possible: I wish I'd known how Satan would attack me as soon as I brought home my new, perfect child.

Becoming a mother was the realization of my divine potential and Soren was a miracle. With my change of role came an opportunity for increased love and joy beyond anything I had ever known before. I caught a glimpse of it when Scott placed our tiny boy in my arms the very first time. I felt such tenderness and wonder. I felt peace--the kind of peace so strong it made my heart burn and my body tremble.

Of course such a wonderful, divine gift would anger the Adversary. Of course my new responsibility to cherish and protect, to nurture and love this innocent child of God would be under constant attack. It only makes sense, but I didn't think of it then. I wasn't expecting it and so I was unprepared for the guilt, the self-loathing, the jealousy, and the anger. Those feelings were the way that Satan attacked me and with them he tried to drive me away from my husband, my child, and my God.

In the first two months, I often felt an overwhelming maelstom of negative emotions that threatened to burst from me as hateful words and irreperable actions. In the darkest hours of early motherhood, I sometimes wanted to scream at my baby, to blot out his crying, to leave him in the snow, or to shake some sense into him. That is the ugliness and reality of the devil's terrifying power.

And here is the glorious power of a mother's love: when I was exhausted and in pain and weary of the screaming, there was only the dam of my love and God's love to hold back the storm so it did not touch my dear one. That powerful love not only invited blinding joy in the sweet moments, it also was strong enough to resist the horrible temptations of the bleakest times.

I wish I could tell every mother that feeling the negative emotions associated with post-partum stress and/or depression is not failure. To feel that way is human. To control it is divine.

I wish I could tell myself and my friends that while Satan's attacks are real and potent, God is also real and He trusts them. When the dark hours of mothering come--and they will--we can be sure that love will triumph.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Thank you so much for this post. I can't tell you how many times I felt the same way when we first had Kyle. I'm ashamed to admit that sometimes, those feelings have resurfaced as we've begun our journey into toddlerhood and Kyle's tantrums have become more and more common. But, just as you said, to experience these feelings are a part of being human...and it's completely possible to overcome them with the help of the Lord.

I don't think this advice is too serious for a baby shower. Many times the hardest thing to hear is the most important. Every mother needs to know she's NEVER alone, even during her darkest times.
Katherine Wolf said…
We have a history of post-partum depression in my extended family, so there's a good chance that when I have kids I'll have it too.

I have no doubt that you're an awesome mother. I miss you.
Alexis said…
hey - you used to be my visitng teacher so I think it only appropriate that I find this wonderfully spiritual and applicable message from YOU (via Meghan E).
Thanks for articualting this ... I dare go no furthur into my appreciation for I am not as succinct write as you!
Mrs. Jaybird said…
I haven't been keeping up on this blog because I forgot you changed the URL! I was keeping an eye out for your other one and after a few months, I got suspicious.

Thanks for posting this. It really is the best advice you could give any new mother. I know it's something I really, REALLY struggled with and my husband literally DRAGGED us to the ER for a psych evaluation. After a blessing from him and another nurse there, we decided to turn around and go home.

It really isn't easy. It was the most difficult thing I have ever done--more difficult than keeping up running for 8 months, more difficult than taking 12 credit hours this summer on top of a part-time job and a house to run, more difficult than anything I could ever remember doing.

But with this knowledge, I think I'm ready for whatever the Adversary will throw at me next time.

Popular posts from this blog

What Works for Us: Room Time

I've decided to do a new series of posts on how I make parenting work for us. Every parent does it differently--which is great!--but I have a hard time keeping my discoveries to myself. The things I do may not work for anyone else but I want to record them and remember them. Hopefully, it will also help me vent my soap-box-y-ness so that I'm not always imposing my ideas on other people. That will be what "What-Works-for-Us Posts" are about. One of the things that we have always done, but has made a HUGE difference in the move from one to two children, is Room Time . When Soren was 6 months old, I started having him play alone (in a safe place) every day for a few minutes. At first it was only five minutes in the port-a-crib but we quickly worked up to fifteen, then thirty. At that time, I used those precious minutes to do housework or relax on the couch. When I was pregnant with Carl, Soren would play alone for about an hour in his room and I would usually tak...

Surrounded by Love

One of my greatest worries about having four children was that I would not be able to welcome and love my new baby as well as I had the others.  Now that he is here, I feel that he is perhaps the most welcomed and best loved of all my sons.  More on that in a moment. I struggled to bond with Leif in utero, in part because pregnancy was old hat to me and in part because life was busy with too many other things.  The new miracle  growing inside of me was the most normal thing about my life.  There were a few good moments that helped me prepare mentally: doing guided meditations during Christmas vacation, my blessingway on January 6th, and a really good conversation I had with Scott about my hopes and worries.  But mostly, my mind was elsewhere. And then there was the birth.  I should have known that it would be a totally unique experience and that it would prepare me for this totally unique child. Needless to say, I'm crazy about the little guy. ...

ABCs

A couple of months ago I was trying to encourage Soren to draw. For 15 or 20 minutes every afternoon, we would sit at the coffee table with paper and pencil. I would draw stick figures and doodles; Soren would watch, his own paper untouched. After a couple of days repeating my usual pictures over and over, I ran out of ideas and started writing the letters of his name. One day I wrote and drew pictures of all the things I could think of that began with S: Soren, snake, superman, spider, stars, etc. The next day we focused on the letter O. It gave me ideas for drawing, which kept Soren entertained even if it wasn't fulfilling its original purpose. A couple more weeks went by and I didn't put any effort into reinforcing the letters. So I was very surprised when, one day while reading a naptime story, he pointed to the page and said very distinctly, "ess". He was, in fact, pointing to an S. And he was very excited about it. So, instead of reading the book, we sp...