#4 – Sleep Like a Baby???

sleep baby

 

Number 1‘s first year was filled with so many ups and downs.  He was such a sweet boy.  Still is, but now he’s 4 and knows everything (He still doesn’t believe me that the green stuff on a pond is called algae, not allergy).  I absolutely adored finally having the chance to take my baby for walks, sing him lullabies, watch him hit all his milestones early, even as a preemie.  I was so proud of my Sweet Boy.

He was just 7 weeks old, playing on the floor with him as we watched the news coverage of the Boston Marathon Bombing.  Suddenly, he rolled over from his belly to his back.  It was the only happy news on my Facebook feed.  I like to think that sweet boy brought a little bit of happiness to a small part of New England that day.

I over-shared everything.  Every cute picture, every trip to the store, and every new food.  It all went up on social media.  I was so happy to finally get my turn to be a mommy that I just had to tell everyone.  (Incidentally, this is the reason I’m not using their real names or pictures.  They’ve been shared enough.)

Sleep, Baby, Sleep

But there was the other side of it all.  #1 was a terrible sleeper.  For the first 6 months, he only slept in his car seat or on my chest.  Of course, I had read horror stories about babies dying when they fall asleep with a parent.  I was just too afraid to let myself sleep too.  He was my boy.  My job was to take care of him.  Mothers are supposed to be selfless.  On the good nights, we kept the infant stroller in our room so we could keep him nearby while he slept in his car seat. His favorite place to sleep though was always with mommy.  And I always let him, as I played solitaire on my phone and felt him breathe.

At 6 months, I put my foot down.  The boy must sleep in a crib.  He was starting day care and would need to sleep flat in a pack and play.  Plus I was starting back to work and I actually needed to shower, commute, teach small children and come home to cook and clean.  I would need to get some sleep.  He finally got in the crib after a few weeks of tears (mine and his), but he was never able to fall asleep in there.  It just broke my heart to hear him cry while he was laying there.  So we always let him fall asleep on us and gently placed him in his crib, if possible.

In fact, I think one of my husband’s favorite memories with Sweet Boy was playing Baby Beatles on the computer while watching him drift off to sleep. I would pray that he wouldn’t wake up when laying him down in his crib. My husband would pretend he was Indiana Jones.  If he woke up, the process would start all over again.

I had this horrible guilt about it.  I had read every article on sleep training (during my solitaire breaks) and I was doing it all wrong.  My much younger mom friends were doing “the right thing” for their babies, but only “the wrong thing” worked for us…

 

Photo by treehouse1977

#1 – An old mom is born

old mom

When I was 34, I was ready to give up.  I was still single and pretty hopeless that I would meet someone in time to start a family.  I had contacted the state services to look into becoming a foster parent so I wouldn’t completely miss out on parenthood.  Love could come in my 50s.  Starting parenthood could not.

The foster parent paperwork came in September.  Later that month I met him.  The one.  We both loved the outdoors, Boston Sports, family-style events.  I was immediately hooked.  9 months after our first date we were engaged.  9 months after that we were married, and 9 months after that our son was born (he was 5 weeks early if that really matters to you).  #1 was born 4 days before I turned 37.  And just like that, both a 6 pound, 11-ounce little boy and an old mom were born.

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So who am I?  My name is Jen and I’ve been an elementary school music teacher for nearly 20 years.  I had my two kids just before I turned 40.  I think my age has a lot to do with my sense of parenthood.  Some days I feel jealous, some days I feel insightful, but most days I just feel tired.

I needed a project this summer, so I wrote.  I wrote during nap times, after the kids went to bed, or when the kids were playing nicely outside for 5 minutes at a time.  It was my therapy because being a mom is hard.  And when your 2 and 4-year-old are arguing over who gets the last blue freeze pop or who gets the yellow ball and who gets the red, you need to remind yourself not just of all the joys, but that all the challenges pass.  There are always new challenges, but there are always new joys too.

I hope our family stories make you laugh or think or just remember to appreciate your family.  Always.  On the best days, and on the toughest days.  Thanks for reading.