On a side note, did you know that pneumonia is a risk from abdominal surgery like a c-section? I didn’t. So they like to make sure you use your lungs so as soon as you can feel your legs again, they’ve got you up and walking. I got a reprieve since I had been awake for 24 hours. Like I said, though, I couldn’t put her down, so the nurses borrowed her for a few hours. I think I woke up around 7 am and they had me using one of those breathing thingies that you blow into until you cough. Except coughing was THE WORST with my brand new 8 inch incision. They said if I didn’t do it then I had to walk to make me breathe faster. So I did. I wasn’t allowed to carry her through the hallway though, and since I wouldn’t put her in the bassinet (that I could push through the hallway), I made hubby hold her while I walked to the juice fridge and back.
Anywho, the purpose of this three-part (maybe 4, we’ll see how it goes) story is about how being a parent is harder than I ever imagined. So baby girl lost 12 ounces while we were in the hospital, which when you only started at 5 pounds 12 ounces is pretty significant. They refused to discharge her until she started steadily gaining. We were there for 6 days, which I think helped me tremendously. I don’t know how they expect women to breastfeed successfully when they’re discharged before their milk comes in after the colostrum. I didn’t get the hang of it until the day we left, with a full team of nurses and a lactation consultant right there to help out for every single feeding. Without that kind of help, I can see why women give up. The mom guilt is real though. I was staunch in my belief that she would never have a sip of formula in her life before she was born. Then I was trying to feed her and she was losing weight, the inside of her little mouth felt so dry, and I wasn’t giving her enough yet. She’d been alive for 3 or 4 days and I already felt like I was failing as a mom. I also feel like her latch was never quite right, which contributed to later issues.
My milk came in after half a day of supplementing with formula and in a few days she gained the 4 ounces she needed for us to go home. Going home is terrifying! I’ve been checked on every hour for the past 6 days and now I need to go home and take care of a baby like I know what I’m doing?! Who’s going to tell me when to take the percs and the Tylenol? Who am I going to ask to show me a proper swaddle for the fiftieth time in a row? Who is going to tell me everything will be okay?! We do it though, obviously, because insurance doesn’t cover living in a hospital for fun. We bring our baby home.
We’re greeted by a ten pound lasagna as soon as we arrive because our neighbors are awesome. I plunked on the couch, held my baby, ate some lasagna, and hubby took her so I could sleep. The cat woke me up when she walked on my incision. But that’s neither here nor there. For some reason it doesn’t occur to us that babies should have bedtimes. I mean, she slept constantly anyway, but developing the routine is supposed to start early. Oops. Because I held her. I would doze off holding her, wake up, keep holding her. It’s 10 pm, 11 pm. Still huddled on the couch clutching my precious tiny human. I didn’t eat or drink unless hubby brought me food or water/seltzer. I only got up to pee and that was only if I felt like I was going to burst. I might have showered a few times. I know I went outside at least twice because there are pictures. But I wouldn’t do anything because I never. Put. Her down. Hubby went fully back to work after five or six weeks. He works for himself so I was lucky enough to have him as long as he could stand not working, though he did work here and there during the first few weeks. I still huddled on the couch, never letting go of baby girl unless I had to pee or thought I would faint from hunger. This went on for 12 weeks.
At my 12-week post-surgery checkup, my doctor was showing me pictures of his awesome vacation. Amazing hotels, watching hurricane Harvey go by, champagne, wine, this crazy sushi place that serves you 21 courses of whatever the chef wants. I tried my best to act like I cared about any of it. I was trying to keep up with the banter, smile and laugh in all the right places. I was evidently not convincing. He told me that based on previous visits he had concerns about me and wanted me to go for a psychiatric evaluation just in case this was (dun dun dun!) postpartum depression. I didn’t think it was necessary and he said, “of course you don’t!” He then picked up the phone, dialed a number, handed me the receiver and told me to give my intake information and make my appointment. “Don’t try to cancel it. They’ll tell me and I’ll just make you reschedule!” If all doctors were like Dr. M1, the world would be a much better place.
I had no idea what I was walking into, mostly because when it was explained to me I wasn’t listening because I didn’t care. The first appointment I went to was a simple psychological evaluation. They determine whether or not you need treatment. There is the option of no treatment, outpatient therapy, partial hospitalization, and full hospitalization. I was sure my evaluation would result in me being sent home after wasting their time. Outpatient therapy being recommended at worst. I was very surprised when they not only recommended the partial hospitalization (called the Day Program), but didn’t even put me on the waiting list and had me attend the remainder of the sessions that same day. Yikes.
I guess the Day Program is not something available country-wide. Women and Infants hospital is the only location I know of and people are sent to the program from hours away. Maybe farther, I don’t know. I have heard about a similar program being developed in New York and I sincerely hope that’s true because this program was essential to my (ongoing) recovery.
This is how it works: You are expected to arrive every day for 9 am. You get to bring your baby. There is group therapy that is held in segments like classes. For example, from 9-9:30 we discuss the goal(s) we set from the night before, whether or not we accomplished them, and if not, how we can accomplish them in the future. The goals are usually simple. Show up the next day, or be wearing different clothes, or make sure I take a shower, or go for a run. Then 9:30-10:30 could be learning about self-care, what it means, why it’s important. Then the next is about how to maintain healthy relationships, etc. It changed every day, but the basics were always discussing how to cope with life. There was obviously a lunch break (with meals provided because most of us couldn’t manage to eat if food wasn’t put in front of us) and more sessions until 2 and then we’re dismissed for the day. If you don’t show up, they call you and ask where you are and why you’re not there. I had to take a day out to bring Fb for a checkup, but I let them know ahead of time. There is a nursery with lovely staff to keep an eye on your baby if you need a break.
At some point during the day you’re pulled from the group for your individual therapy session. I loved these. It made me feel validated. If medication is involved at all, it’s followed up with a psychiatrist. Through these sessions I was told that I was presenting postpartum depression, anxiety, and OCD. I was also diagnosed with Bipolar II after a few months with Dr. H. I’ve always struggled with these things, but being a new mom made it completely unmanageable. I couldn’t put Fb down, I wouldn’t eat, I didn’t shower, it was a miracle if I brushed my teeth. I would stare at her to make sure she was breathing and I couldn’t sleep because I was SURE she would be dead when I woke up. There were no what-ifs. It was when, in my mind. Then the intrusive thoughts were just unbearable. If you’re not familiar, intrusive thoughts are those weird moments where you think something horrible and follow up with, “why did I just think that?!” I had them about smacking her little head on our coffee table, putting her in the refrigerator, accidentally stepping on her (since we mostly just change her diapers on a pad on the floor). I couldn’t just brush them away and say it was weird. I would watch them in my mind over and over again thinking about what a terrible person I am, a horrible mother, an awful wife, the worst daughter. It’s not that I actually wanted to do these things, it was just a moment where the image passed through my head. Intrusive thoughts are usually related to OCD. I’ve had them my whole life but post-baby they were exponentially worse in so many ways.
So they have you following this routine for as long as they feel you need it. Typically it’s 2 weeks. Some are there longer, some are there less. I went for 2 and a half weeks. I feel like being accountable to someone and having to leave the house every day did wonders for my mental health by themselves. When they discharge you, they have you come for a follow-up to make sure you’re going to the outpatient therapist they helped establish for you. They also continue your psychiatric visits until baby is about a year old when they transfer you to a non-hospital psychiatrist. Fb is 11 months old and we have FINALLY found a drug regimen that works, that I can afford, and that doesn’t have crazy side effects.
I stopped seeing my therapist when I went back to work after 16 weeks. I initially went back three days a week and I felt so guilty for loving being away from the baby. I was sort of regular me again, doing my thing, being awesome at my job. Previously I had been some level of workaholic and I’ve always been a perfectionist so being back in my element was such a relief. I’m not in my element as a mom. How do I take a shower when I can hear her crying? How am I supposed to make food for me when she cries if I put her down? Like I said, she’s 11 months old and I am still struggling with this. My husband reminds me of what we said in therapy, if I can’t take care of me how can I take care of my baby? She’ll be ok if she cries for 3 minutes while I make a sandwich and grab a glass of water.
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