this is
week five of
my postpartum
the winds of change blow fierce around this household and i can’t start with pictures this week because i need to blurt first.
this past week my baby turned a month old. my daughter started kindergarten. my husband trained for a new position at work. i accepted a position with a midwifery practice for childbirth education and to be a referred doula. i switched to almond milk. {jk on that last one}
my head is spinning with all the new that our household is undertaking right now. as mike and i were talking over the weekend about the long hours and grand changes, i confided that i was surprised by how we were “actually not sucking at everything.” i used those words. my husband sometimes gets my crudest, least eloquent self. lucky dog.
so now i’m questioning my abilities and wondering if i’ll be able to fulfill all the new roles in my life. and then i’m scolding myself for not having confidence and being happy with myself for being bold and courageous with my life. my mind is an exciting place to be at times.
so yeah. that’s what these pictures are about. they are about the new. they are about change. they are about finding balance and time for the necessary in the midst of it all.
we’ll start with our last day of summer break and sending my darling darla off to the world of public education:
^^^ pool playdate the last day of summer which brings us to… ^^^
^^^ kindergarten readiness assessment morning ^^^
^^^ does she look ready? ^^^
^^^ and suddenly i’m the lady packing school lunches ^^^
^^^ and taking first day of school pictures outside our house ^^^
^^^ and walking her to school ^^^
and just like that she walked into school and became a kindergartener. and i walked away with a lot fewer tears than i expected from myself {must mean my placenta pills are working} and… i might have waited until i was out of sight of the school to do a dance down the alleyway.
that is not to say that sending her to school was easy for me. if you’ve been following this blog you know that i had hopes of unschooling and/or homeschooling but this is where we ended up. and i’m thankful. this was the right choice for darla. this was the right choice for my family for this point in time.
so now darla spends her days at school and i spend my days…
^^^ staring at a beautiful baby. ^^^
and multitasking in a multitude of ways. such as…
^^^ being a human mattress while trying to write ^^^
^^^ propping up my baby in piles of laundry ^^^
^^^ getting yelled at while babywearing and house maintaining. {not really. that’s a yawn.} ^^^
^^^ and reviewing my lactation materials while lactating ^^^
speaking of lactating, how is breastfeeding going, elaine?
well, i’m so glad you asked. based on my daughter’s weight gain i’d say things are going super. i hope you all like fat babies cause i’m serving them up chunky over here.
but weight gain is not the only thing that matters when it comes to a breastfeeding relationship. i also assess that we’re both pretty satisfied with staying close and attached throughout the day. feeding my baby is still what consumes the majority of my time day and night. and i’m feeling pretty good about that. babywearing allows me to keep her close at all times and to easily nurse her while we’re out and about. i think it’s been easier to accept this second time around that my main job at this stage is sitting down and feeding my babe. that was hard for me the first time, especially in the beginning. i credit my breastfeeding support group with helping me to come around and allow myself to simply relax and rest with my baby while i fed and grew another human. and there are times when it’s still not easy to take a seat and focus on feeding my little girl.
but sometimes…when i’m seated in the right spot…
i’ll take a look and catch a glimpse of myself nurturing my baby and i’m reminded of how extraordinary this relationship is. and i let all the other to do’s go. and i just sit and feed the baby. and i feel beautiful. i feel maternal. i feel thankful. i feel accomplished.
and it’s then that i don’t question my abilities and i don’t wonder if i’ll be able to fill my roles. in those moments there is no scolding. and i am happy with myself. in those moments i feel bold and courageous.
it is in those moments that i feel balanced and have found the necessary in the midst of it all.