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postpartum

Tales From A Working Mom // it’s all temporary.

May 4, 2013 by Rachel 1 Comment

talesfromaworkingmom

Truth: I would love a good night of sleep. I would love to go to bed at a normal time and wake up at 7:30 am or even 8. Especially on the weekends.

I would love to not have to wake up at 3am for a feeding and to pump. I would love to not have to schedule my days around when and where I’m going to pump. And I would love to not stress about my supply not meeting Ari’s demand.

But it’s all temporary. 

When I was home on maternity leave, I wasn’t able to see that these stages as just bumps in the road, thanks in large part to my postpartum depression. I was struggling to see that there was any light at the end of the tunnel. I couldn’t function.

Thankfully, I’m managing my PPD quite well these days, though I’m still haunted by some moments of extreme anxiety.

But I do recognize that all of these stages are temporary. And that’s a start.

So for now, I’ll wake up at 3am to pump even if Ari sleeps through; I’ll wake up at 6:15 am every morning, cause that’s when Ari starts his day; I’ll deal with the house being a mess cause I’m too busy to clean; and I can handle juggling work and home life, even when that means just barely making it through the day.

Because it’s bigger than me.

photo (45)

It’s for this perfect little guy we’ve created. And he’s totally worth it.

Filed Under: Ari Davis, mommyhood, parenthood, postpartum, tales from a working mom Tagged With: ari davis, motherhood, oh baby, postpartum, tales from a working mom

discouraged.

April 2, 2013 by Rachel 2 Comments

It’s hard not to get into a funk when you find out that you’ve been working out and not actually losing any weight.

Especially when I felt like I had lost weight. I mean, the night before I told Chad that I was starting to feel a teeny bit better about myself.

And even though I’m the queen of believing you should judge your progress based on how you feel and how your clothes feel instead of what the scale says, it’s awful difficult when My Fitness Pal keeps telling me that I should be losing pounds, and I’m not.

I’m not going to stop. I’m going to keep at it. This baby weight will come off — and I’ll finally fit in my pre-baby clothes again.

But it’s going to be a lot more difficult, psychologically, than I ever anticipated.

Filed Under: fitness, postpartum, workout Tagged With: fitness, postpartum, workout

Tales From A Working Mom // Handling PPD

February 7, 2013 by Rachel 14 Comments

talesfromaworkingmom

Before you start reading, I need you to understand that it was really hard for me to publish this. It’s difficult to be so honest with myself and everyone else; but I think it’s important to try and break the stigma by opening up a dialogue about it.

I need to make a big confession:

Shortly after delivering Ari I felt what can only be described as a sense of loss.

At first I didn’t say anything. I kept it to myself. I had expected some of this, right?

I was doing great in the hospital — running completely on adrenaline through our rush of visitors.

But once we got home, I was a complete mess.

One of the cats knocked over my latte? Cry for hours. Have to nurse a screaming baby? Cry for hours.

I expected to be emotional post-delivery. I anticipated the postpartum depression. But, to be honest? I had never really experienced depression before. Not like this.

For nearly a year, I took care of this little life inside of my belly. I developed a special relationship that a mother gets when she is the only person who can feel this little life growing and growing inside of her. So when I had to suddenly learn to share this new life with everyone that was anxiously awaiting his arrival, I felt a huge loss; like my job was ‘done.’

And I was angry. Angry that I had to wake up and feed the baby; angry that I was expected to selflessly take care of this new human; that I was supposed to instantly feel an overwhelming sense of dedication to this person.

I recently explained to a friend that right after Ari was born, I didn’t want Chad to leave my side. But he made me so inexplicably angry that I also didn’t want him to say a single word to me. I was angry at him for no reason.

And he was really worried about me.

Hell, I was worried about me.

I had never acted like this before. I was exhausted, but unable to sleep; I was emotional, but for no reason; I was over it.

I even had my placenta encapsulated in hopes of re-introducing the missing hormones back to my body. [Yeah, yeah, I know, totally hippie-granola and semi creepy to some of you.]

Nothing was working.

To be clear, I never wanted to hurt myself or the baby, nor do I think I would have ever gotten to that point; but I just knew I didn’t want to continue feeling this way.

I was starving, but I couldn’t eat; I was exhausted, but I couldn’t get to sleep at night. I would lay awake in bed and cry.

I decided to take the first step and talk to people about it. I talked to every woman I knew who had a baby. We talked about how many of them had experienced similar feelings. A surprising number of people I spoke with felt some level of sadness and loss. I was shocked that I hadn’t heard about it sooner.

In my research on PPD, I found that postpartum, most women experience some level of these symptoms. But your emotions should level out by week three.

By week three, my emotions were more out of whack than ever.

So I called my doctor and made an appointment.

I went to the appointment with my OB by myself. I tried to keep it together as the man who helped me through my darkest moments of delivery Ari — this man that we had grown to love — asked me about how I was feeling.

I lost it. I cried. I practically screamed, ‘Help me!’

He knew of my aversion to medical intervention. He told me about my options of therapy and about how some people take anti-depressants. I looked him in the eye and I told him “I will try anything to feel better.”

I meant it. I was at the point where I was in this cycle of depression, worry and anxiety. I couldn’t break free.

So I went on Zoloft. And after three weeks, I felt like a whole new person.

Ari was still fussy. He was still screaming constantly and he was still colicky.

But I was able to manage the depression and anxiety so much better — I was able to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

Do I know if the zoloft was the be-all and end-all cure to my depression and anxiety issues? Absolutely not. But I know that with the combination of that and a pretty incredible and understanding support system, I’m feeling a whole hell of a lot better.

I still have moments where I feel like I need to step away; like my world is unraveling. But I think it’s just more like a normal sort of new-mom crazy. And I’m learning to handle it. And I still have that great support system.

Filed Under: postpartum, tales from a working mom Tagged With: motherhood, postpartum, tales from a working mom

you are all rock stars

December 15, 2012 by Rachel 2 Comments

Operation: Get-Fit Postpartum is underway. I’ve been trying to really step it up.

And Thursday night my mother-in-law had stayed the night to help with Ari. You’d think that I would try and sleep in. Ha. Nope.

I actually woke up Friday and went to a 6am power yoga class at Yoga Bliss. I’ve been managing to make it to the gym pretty regularly the last few weeks, but this was only my second chance to take a yoga class, postpartum.

And I didn’t realize just how much I have missed my yoga practice.

I mean, I knew I missed it. But until this class, I didn’t realize that I missed everything about it:

the incredible teachers; the powerful students; the energy + enthusiasm; the amazing community we’ve built.

It opened my heart back up and made me ache for a regular yoga practice again.

All this from one incredibly difficult practice.

But our fantastic teacher, Amy B-G, kept reminding us that “You are all rock stars!” And it’s true. All 30 of us got up well before 6 am to be there. If nothing else, we showed up. Once you show up, the truly hard part is over.

And I certainly had to remind myself of this when she yelled out “Let’s prepare for Frog Pose!”

frogpose

My heart sank and I practically let out an audible sigh. The one pose I dread is Frog Pose, or Bhekasana.

And then I realized, that I signed up for this. If I didn’t want to be pushed + challenged, I wouldn’t be here. If I wanted someone to just agree with everything I say and feel and think, I would have just stayed in bed.

In that moment I decided to surrender to that pose and these feelings. And then I reminded myself that we are all rock stars!

After class I was on a post-yoga high. This is what I’ve been missing. This is what I’ve needed!

And I officially can’t wait to continue with Operation: Get-Fit Postpartum!

Filed Under: Akron, postpartum, workout, yoga, Yoga Bliss Akron

getting out of this.

December 3, 2012 by Rachel 9 Comments

I’m in a rut.

A blogging rut and a life-in-general rut.

Everything in my life seems to revolve around baby related activities. Like poopy diapers. And pumping breast milk. And feeding/changing/napping/holding/walking with the baby.

But just because I’m a mom now doesn’t mean that this is my entire life — it isn’t my single defining characteristic.

So, yeah, I’ve been in a rut. I need to break out and do other things that challenge and excite me.

Plus, I’m feeling the effects of being seriously out of shape. For the first time in my life, I’m really, really out of shape.

So I’m taking back the other aspects of my life to feel whole again.

Physically —

I was cleared for exercise last week during my six-week postpartum appointment. I’ve already started working out again, but I plan on kicking it into high gear this week. I’ve got my eye on a new pair of running shoes and I am going to a 6am power yoga class at Yoga Bliss this morning.

When I set a fitness goal, I plan on reaching it. So I have no doubts about getting there; it’s the starting it that’s difficult.

And I’m cutting out all the bad food.

See, while pregnant, my gluten allergy disappeared. In fact, carbs were the one food that settled my always-queasy tummy. So I ate them. And then I ate them more. And I just couldn’t stop. I was enjoying the freedom of the temporary relief of a gluten intolerance!

My gluten intolerance hasn’t returned postpartum — yet. Perhaps because I’m breastfeeding? Who knows. But I’m still mostly cutting them from my diet.  I’ll pick + choose my carbs based on how healthy they are. Like our homemade spelt and wheatberry pizza doughs/breads/pancakes. Oh — and Ohio City Pastas. Those I will still eat, too!

Mentally —

I’m challenging myself to get out there and meet new people. There are several Ohio Blogging Association events this month that I’m really excited to attend. But I’m not gonna lie — I’m nervous! In Syracuse, I was super involved in the social media community. Here, I’ve been mostly an observer. I haven’t quite taken the plunge. But I’d like to change that. I need to change that and finally meet some new people.

And yoga. It won’t only be helping me physically, but it’s mentally and emotionally challenging. I’ve been seriously missing it.

I know I’ll be out of my little life rut soon enough. 🙂 And don’t get me wrong, I love being a mom. I just don’t want to forget about the things I loved before I became a mom.

Filed Under: fitness, life, postpartum

calm before the storm

November 4, 2012 by Rachel 5 Comments

While all of my friends on the east coast have been recovering from Hurricane Sandy, around these parts we’ve been in the midst of Hurricane Ari.

Y’all, this mom to a newborn thing is the hardest thing I’ve ever done. Compared to this? Pregnancy was a breeze. This is exhausting.

I didn’t expect this parenting thing to be easy by any means. But Ari has been wide awake all night long for the past 5 nights. And screaming. At the top of his tiny little lungs, for no reason. He will be fed, changed, clothed, warm, and held; and he’ll still scream and scream and scream.

I’ve taken to my twitter family for advice, and I’ve been told that this is just what some babies do.

Do you know what completely sane adults do when their baby cries for hours for no reason whatsoever? They also cry for hours. True story.

Not everything is this depressing around our house. The days are fantastic. He’s a beautiful and happy little guy. We go for walks, trips to Starbucks for some tea [and just to get out of the house], and pick up random things from Target on the daily. We are, otherwise, living life. Just without any sleep and with our patience worn thin.

So hopefully this week in between the screaming and crying, I’ll be able to put together Ari’s birth story. But that may suck any remnants of life from my body [hint: it wasn’t pretty].

Filed Under: Ari Davis, parenthood, postpartum

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