Thursday, October 11, 2012

Cruel Joke



Any parent, regardless of their newness to the community, will tell you that parenthood is not easy. I know I will have my share of difficulties but these first few weeks have been interesting so far. 

Beside the lack of sleep, there are other things going on physically that make dealing with and adjusting to a new baby challenging. As a woman, parts of your body have stretched and undergone changes that you can’t begin to understand despite all the reading you might have done. You feel like different parts of your body will fall out of their usual place. So you walk around trying to keep everything together as best as you can. 

One of the best ways to do that is to get sleep. However with a baby that wants and needs to be fed every 2 to 3 hours, it’s difficult to get the kind of sleep to which you are accustomed. So you sneak those naps in and you feel better momentarily. You continue to walk around like a zombie, except that you aren’t looking for brains. You just want some sleep. You can barely keep your balance because the body underneath you seems to be giving way from under you. 

With lack of slumber everything seems more confusing and more difficult than usual. You can’t figure out why the baby is crying even though there are only so many options (burp?, diaper?, hunger?, temperature?). You struggle to make sense of this little bundle and you seek out advice. And every bodies counsel seems to contradict the words you previously got from someone else. You can’t rely on your rational thinking because the synapses that usually fire have gone on strike. 

On top of that you encounter contraptions, such as the car seat or the stroller, that are far more complicated than they need to be in general. When you add the fact that you have no more coordination, they become the most daunting tasks in the arsenal of mommies and daddies. 

Despite this all, it makes you melt when you see your baby smile. Should your tiny one coo at you, then everything you just went through disappears. Moments when your baby isn’t crying seem like tangible pieces of heaven and it is all worth it. At least until the next time you are startled awake and are tumbling over your own feet.

1 comment:

M said...

I love this description of new parenthood and the effect of sleep deprivation on your ability to function, walk, and figure out contraptions like the stroller (agree those are all too complicated!).