Nobody said it was easy. . .

I’ve just spent another day sat on the sofa trapped underneath a feeding baby. When, after several hours, I finally seem to fill him up he sleeps, but wakes the minute I try to move him off my lap. And so I sit, playing endless games of Candy Crush or refreshing my Twitter feed for the hundredth time. 

Barry has been doing a fantastic job of getting Toby up, dressed and fed, of playing with him, of deflecting his never ending requests for apple. I try and encourage Toby to sit with me for a cuddle, or get a book for us to read together, but it seems that while mummy is constantly hidden by a baby who never seems to move from her knee, Toby prefers to keep his distance. Sometimes he can be persuaded to give me a cuddle before he goes off to nursery for the afternoon but often a quick ‘bye’ from the doorway is all I get. 

And so I sit some more, I sit while my husband brings me sandwiches, and biscuits, and cups of tea that I drink luke warm for fear of spilling them on the baby. He goes shopping, does laundry and spends what seems like hours of everyday keeping on top of the endless washing up. 

In the early evening I usually manage to snatch 15 minutes to put Toby to bed, after Barry has done the hard part of getting him ready, and then he spends the time I’m with Toby trying to comfort a crying baby who won’t be comforted because daddy doesn’t have boobs to provide milk on tap. 

After some more sitting, and eating my dinner from a plate precariously balanced on the edge of a feeding pillow, I spend the night trying to catch snatches of sleep in between moving a baby from one side to the other and sleeping without moving, constantly tense in case by letting my baby sleep next to me I some how end up hurting him. If we’re lucky Toby stays asleep, but if not I have to listen to him crying for me whilst his daddy does his best to calm him and get him back to sleep. 

And then the morning comes and we start all over again. 

Barry goes back to work on Monday and I have no idea how I am going to get myself and the two boys up, dressed and fed, entertain Toby all morning and then get him to nursery in the afternoon. I anticipate a lot of tears from all of us. 

We didn’t come into this situation with our eyes shut. We knew having another baby, when Toby was only just two, would be difficult.  

Nobody said it would be easy…I just didn’t realise it would be this hard. 

  

6 thoughts on “Nobody said it was easy. . .

  1. Aww I’m so sorry. I’m sending great big virtual hugs to you. Mark went back to work this week and it definitely has been hard but when the help isn’t there it’s amazing how you will just get through it! Then as soon as he comes home again you wonder how you managed on your own all day!!!!
    Hope the sling is helping you guys out!!
    Xxxx

  2. I have blanked the first weeks of T’s life from memory as it was so hard and tbh I am thankful that A didn’t go to nursery back then – it was all about TV and PJs all round! It will get easier. You will get through it and like Chantelle said, it’s amazing how you manage when the other half isn’t there. Thinking of you x

  3. Cherry was just over two when Tiger was born and it was such hard work for the first year really as she just didn’t react well to his arrival, probably not helped by him wanting to feed all day. She used to try and kick him, hurt him which was awful too! It really is hard but I promise it will pass in no time, I would really recommend some kind of sling or carrier, I had a Moby then an Ergo and it meant I could stick Tiger in who would sleep for hours in there whilst I go on with every day things. Hope you’re okay, it’s definitely not easy but once you start seeing siblings bond it really is worth it đŸ™‚ x

  4. It does get easier i promise you. I remember the first day on my own I really do. Can I suggest a sling that really helped, sling the baby who wants to sleep on you and then you can do things with the older one xx

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