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You are doing just fine, and your kid sounds like he's thriving! Relax on the period thing, if you can. Not every Mom can or does nurse her baby--I know you realize that--automatically and right away, you are WAY up there on the "Good Mommy Points" scale.
I've probably not gone into that idea here, have I?
OK--here's the deal:
When I had Material Girl I was one of the most paranoid/post partum/hormonal messes of all time. I am serious! I felt like I was just unable to even cope with this little "thing" that ate, slept (if I was lucky,) and excreted from every opening. I was convinced I could NEVER be the good Mommy that my daughter deserved.
Nobody really ever explained how messed up your hormones are when you BF. They did warn us in our birthing class that we might go "a little off" after the birth--but nobody EVER told me that the insanity was probably for the rest of my life. They NEVER told me that the worry and guilt were a permanent part of life when you have a child and WANT to be a good parent.
Finally, in an utter panic, I called a buddy of mine. This is a woman who raised five boys, nursed them all and even did home birth with the last four. I mean she is like this uber perfect Madonna in my eyes. (Oh--and did I mention she's an early child education specialist with the university?)
Anyhow, I called Loretta and I was just in meltdown. I was blubbering away about my kid wouldn't latch on, she was probably ruined for life because my body was too stupid to allow her to be born without a C-section, I was a failure as a Mom... You get the drift, I'm sure.
Anyhow, I will never forget what I learned from her. The upshot of it all is that being Mom isn't pass/fail, you will NEVER do the kind of excellent job you want to do, and absolutely EVERY parent has moments when they doubt they are able to do the job as well as they think their kid deserves.
Take satisfaction in what you DO get right, and love the daylights out of them when you can. The floor will still be there when you get around to sweeping it in a few days, and if the dishwasher (or drainer) is still full of clean dishes then be glad they got washed so you can go spend more time with your kid. Oh, and don't forget to laugh.
My idea--based on Loretta's comments--was to create the "Good Mommy Points" scale. Every time you get something right--you get good mommy points. Every time you mess up--you lose a point. Right out of the chute--you are WAY ahead of the game when you BF your kid.
When my kid rolled off the bed while I was changing her pants--I lost a point. When she ate a few "free range" Cheerios she found under the sofa cushion I lost a point (well, a couple actually--there was a wad of cat hair in there too.) But because I spent a lot of time with her and held her whenever I could, and because I loved her so very much--I had a HUGE stockpile of Good Mommy points to keep me from ever going in the hole and being a bad mommy.
I still joke about losing good mommy points--like when I let my kid eat cheese pizza instead of something packed with nutrition out of Parent's magazine recipe section. Or maybe when I let her spend a sick day watching TV instead of reading books. Like I did today.
Makes starting a period slightly less guilt provoking, I hope...
Brightest blessing, dear. You are doing a good job as a Mom!
Laura
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