I found becoming the mother of a newborn terrifying.
I was completely responsible for this helpless mite. What if I screwed up? What if I forgot to do something crucial? How could I possibly think of myself when this little one needed (and demanded) everything from me?
I went into hyper-caretaking mode. Every moment (and there were a lot of them, since I wasn’t getting any sleep), every thought, every impulse, was directed at her.
When I wasn’t feeding her, I made charts. How long she slept. How long she nursed. I woke her up to make sure she was getting enough to eat. I called my sister and sister-in-law, begging for their advice. I devoured the La Leche League manual. I made lists of questions. How do I handle the umbilical cord? What’s jaundice? How do I know if she’s got it?
And I studied her. Her little face. Her tiny fingers. Her aimlessly-kicking bowlegs.
Then one day I called my sister Carolyn and complained. “I have to say I’m getting a little bored looking at her, all these hours I’m nursing her.”
“For heaven’s sake, why are you just staring at her?” asked Carolyn.
“I thought I had to do that.”
“Read a book! Watch a movie! Do something nice for yourself, while she’s nursing! Enjoy sitting still. You’ll be chasing her around soon enough.”
Ah. It was ok to pause my microfocus. I could let go for fifteen minutes, while she nursed.
I watched The Karate Kid, in 15-minute segments, all day long. It was wonderful.
I grew braver after that, and wiser. I took her to the Morton Arboretum, just her and me… and felt restored to sanity in the fresh air, walking through the gardens.
I strapped her to my chest and went for walks. Just getting out of the house was pushing reset on my serenity.
I set her down (where I could see her) and watched a few minutes of a video workout, giving myself some exercise during the day.
I asked my husband to watch her on Sundays while I took time to myself, to write. It felt like heaven.
And she thrived.
As a matter of fact, she did better when I was calmer, and more relaxed.
So, I learned another of motherhood’s big lessons: Self-care is not selfish. It was a lesson I had to learn over and over again, through the years of active mothering.
Self-care is essential, for mothers most of all.