I confess that I spend waaaaaay too much time on Pinterest.
It's an addiction.
But sometimes it's an addiction pays off.
I just came across this post from GypsyMama about how to encourage a new mom, and I have to say I was practically in tears as I read it.
- Fold her laundry – especially all the socks
- Leave immediately when the baby falls asleep so she can nap
- Bring chocolate
- Don’t tell her to call if she needs anything, just drop by and help with everything
- Take the big kids out for a play date
- Tell her she’s a hero
- Bring her food in disposable dishes so she doesn’t have to deal with washing or returning them
- Don’t tell her to carpe diem (and don't tell an IFer that 'this is what she wanted for so long')
- Cry with her
- Laugh with her
- Share details of what you love about her baby
- Watch "Up All Night" with her
- Don’t tidy your house before she comes over to visit – it doesn’t help her to think you have it all together
- Tell her a day will come when she will sleep again
- Make her a 2am nursing station on Pandora
- Email her a bunch of fun deals links she can surf while nursing
- Make sure she’s actually in 1 out of every 1,000 photos she’s taking (I wish I had someone who did this for me last year)
- Take candid pictures of her in the new daily routine
- Bring diapers when you visit
- Offer to drive her on errands and stay in the car with the baby
- Be honest about how hard motherhood can be
- Text her encouraging messages throughout the day
- Come over and hold the baby so she can have her arms back for a while to do chores or cook or catch up on anything that’s driving her crazy
- Tell her to keep her phone on vibrate so you can call without being “that person who woke the baby.”
- Don’t let her become isolated in the baby cocoon – invite her and the baby out so she can reconnect with friends
- Never expect her to show up anywhere on time
- Bring her lip gloss (or chapstick!!!)
- Massage her neck and shoulders
- Run her a hot bath
- Don’t imply that breast feeding should be a breezy walk in the park; let her know it’s normal to struggle sometimes getting the hang of it
- If she chooses to go the bottle route, please let her do so guilt free
- She is just discovering the hard world of mother guilt – please don’t do or say anything to add to that burden
- Don’t share any horror stories related to motherhood
- Protect her from turning on the news in her first few weeks of being home
- Vacuum
- Bring fresh flowers
- Take out any dried up bouquets
- Paint her toe nails
- Tell her she’s beautiful
- Don’t tell her by now your kids were all sleeping through the night
- Especially if by “sleeping through the night” you mean from 1am to 5am.
- Remember that your memories of new motherhood have the romantic haze of distance
- Wash her dishes without being asked
- If you come over for a meal, please bring the meal and then clean it all up afterwards
- Let her know it’s normal to stand hunched over a sleeping baby just listening to them breathe
- Anytime she is disappointed by her new figure remind her that she grew a human being – that’s a miracle and turns out miracles need room to grow
- Don’t bring over any magazines that feature celebrities in swimsuits 6 weeks after giving birth
- Ask her what the one chore is around the house she wishes she could get to and do it for her
- Always bring your camera when you visit
- Print and frame one of the zillion photos she emails of the baby; include baby’s name and birth date {it blew me away when my friends did this for me!}
- Bring toys/games over for the older kids when you visit
- Tell her it’s OK to feel like you want to quit motherhood some days
- But tell her that Trace Adkins is right and she’s gonna miss this one day
- Don’t just make a hand print of the baby – make one of mom and/or dad’s too for a fun comparison keepsake
- Bring her a Memory Keeper Box for that hospital bracelet, first lock, or even those first few pairs of shoes or favorite toys
- If she has to go back to work, assure her God will be watching over that precious baby. She is brave if she gets up while it is still dark to provide for her family
- Tell her pizza covers all the food groups
- Hold the baby so she can get a shower
- Bring over the Pride and Prejudice (BBC Series) boxed set for all those dinner {for the baby} and a movie {for her} months
- Ask her which baby items she still needs – get her those instead of the cute clothes you have your eye on
- Assure her you understand that while she might know that she’s walking on holy ground, that doesn’t mean she won’t still feel irritated how often that ground is strewn with cracker crumbs and yesterday’s socks (This is especially true for IFers!)
- Admit motherhood is one of the hardest things you’ve ever done
- Go ahead and quote that goodie-but-oldie, “It’s not brave if you’re not scared.” {Thank you Ben Affleck}
- Warn her everyone will have an opinion on how she mothers but at the end of the day, hers is the only one that matters
- Assure her motherhood is not graded; some days just surviving is victory enough
- Tell her that drive-throughs are the best friends of mothers-with-sleeping-babies everywhere
- Keep a pack of Thank You Cards handy in case she freaks out late one night that she hasn’t thanked anyone for all the meals
- Never expect a thank you card from a sleep deprived new mom
- Tell her there is no such thing as “doing it all.” And especially no such thing as “doing it all perfectly.”
- Reassure her that sometimes the love and happiness in a home is directly proportional to the mess.
- Send a special prayer, encouragement or blessing addressed to the baby via snail mail
- Turn the music up and dance with her and the baby
- Suggest that the greatest Pandora station for soothing baby music that mama can also love has to be “Winter Song” by Ingrid Michaelson and Sara Bareilles
- Take her (and the baby) for a walk
- Stock her fridge with necessities anytime you come over – like milk, bread, eggs, yogurt, ice cream etc – in case she isn’t up for grocery shopping
- Watch the baby for her while she goes grocery shopping
- Suggest she spend 15 extra minutes just reading in the magazine aisle
- Tell her it’s normal to be be smitten with newborn love one minute and weeping with tired the next
- Encourage her that a content household is rarely ever a perfect one
- Remember to always be kind to the mom on your flight
- Bring a goodie bag over for the new mom and not just the baby when you come to visit
- If you’re too far to bring over a meal, tell her dinner from her favorite delivery place is on you
- Tell her there’s no shame in cereal for breakfast, lunch and dinner
- Make up midnight snacks for her to grab when she’s up feeding the baby
- Tell her not every photo needs to be perfect – sometimes the closer to real life, the better
- Give her the The Girlfriends’ Guide to Surviving the First Year of Motherhood for when she needs to laugh
- Give her Devotions for Sacred Parenting: A Year of Weekly Devotions for Parents for when she needs to be inspired
- Tell her matching socks are highly overrated
- Wash the baby bottles for her
- Tell her not to sweat store bought baby food, disposable diapers or pacifiers - whatever works, works
- Reassure her that perfect is merely a street sign at the intersection of impossible and frustration in Never Never land
- Tell her motherhood should come with a super hero cape, a really cute one with sparkles
- Buy her sparkly nail polish
- Tell her not to sweat everything Pinterest tells her she should be doing, baking, making and crafting for the baby
- Encourage her to embrace PJ days – even if they last for weeks
- Encourage her also to go spend two glorious hours at the hair dresser while you watch the baby
- Tell her about all the women who did all these things for you
- Assure her that just passing along the encouragement one day is thank you enough
- Remind her it’s the ordinary days that make the extraordinary memories
- Promise her it will just keep getting better
I hope I will always remember these things. For myself, and to pass on to others.
17 and 18. YES! I am the shutterbug in the family so there are probably only a half-dozen candid pics of Ruby and I. I'm pretty adamant about getting professional photos done at least once a year so I at least get some then, but I look at the ones at home with her and Heath and I really want some like that of us! I need to hand the camera over even more!
ReplyDelete(this reminds me I need to go edit photos I took at the baptism of a friend's little girl. It took place right before I broke my ankle so she may not even know that I took them!)
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Love this list!! :) so many true things!
ReplyDeleteOkay... but really, if you try and take my picture right now, I might try to poke you in the eye. :) How about, secretly take pictures and hide the evidence for a few years... when she has regrets about not being in the pictures, THEN you can pull them out. :) Aaaah. That feels better.
ReplyDelete