Nov
24
2015

Preparing for Your Christmas Due Date

How to get it all done if you're about to have a baby right before Christmas.

Preparing for Your Christmas Due Date

Have a holiday-season due date for your baby? Here's how to ensure that things still get done for Christmas. | YummyMummyClub.ca 

I don’t know about you, but as a kid, I always felt bad about other kids who had their birthdays right near Christmas.

At first I thought it would be coolest thing in the world. I mean, your birthday AND Christmas? That’s two present holidays in a short amount of time. However, my friends who suffered from this soon let me in on a disturbing fact: Having a birthday near Christmas meant less presents, not more. Often. the two were bundled together.

It wasn’t the best thing ever. It was the worst.

Now I’m a mom-to-be with a due date about a month before Christmas. Rather than worrying about the number of presents my kid will get, I look at the whole birthday / Christmas thing a little differently. How did their mothers do two things — preparing for baby and preparing for Christmas — while pregnant? 

This is my first baby, so it’s just my husband and I that I’m planning Christmas for, but I can’t imagine having older kids that I need to be planning Christmas for, too!

Knowing our due date was a month before Christmas and that baby could come early (or late), I began to think about Christmas much earlier than normal to help ensure we had a plan. After all, something tells me once baby arrives, trimming the tree may not be on my list of things to do.

Here are some of my tips:

Plan for the worst-case scenario

That sounds a lot harsher than I mean it to. All I mean here is look at your due date and think about what happens if baby comes sooner or later? For example, with my due date of November 22, I wasn’t really about to put up Christmas decorations in October, just in case baby came early. However, if you’re due date is the beginning of December or later, you may want to put up your decorations a little bit earlier... just in case.

Do what you can in advance

I’ve been prepping post-baby freezer meals for my husband and I since I began my maternity leave a couple of weeks ago. Along with freezer meals, doing some of my holiday baking when I have the energy could be a good way to maximize the pre-baby time I have so I don’t feel so pressured once baby arrives.

Ask for help

Don’t feel things have to be perfect or that you have to do it all, Mama! After all, you’re growing a person inside of you. Ask for help with baking this year. People want to feel helpful, so let them. Scale back on your holiday responsibilities this year. Your friends and family will understand.

Did you have a baby around Christmas time? I’d love to hear how you prepared for both baby and the holiday season. Leave your tips in the comments below!

Nov
19
2015

An Open Letter to the Newly Pregnant

The best advice about getting advice.

An Open Letter to the Newly Pregnant

An Open Letter to the Newly Pregnant. Here's some advice about getting advice. | Parenting | Motherhood | YummyMummyClub.ca

Dear newly pregnant mom-to-be,

We may not know each other, but I wanted to reach out to you as a formerly pregnant person myself.

Everyone - from your mother to your grandmother to the stranger shopkeeper down the street - is going to give you advice from when they were pregnant. They’re going to assume everything they know or have learned will transfer easily to you. What they are forgetting is that no two pregnancies are the same. Because of this, I’m not here to give you advice, or tell you anything I’ve learned from being pregnant, because I’m sure things will be different for you and your pregnancy.

And that’s OK.

The advice I will give you is this: treat people kindly when they offer you advice or talk about their pregnancy experience. For the most part, people mean well. They’re excited for you to be going down this road, too. They feel like sharing their experiences makes them a small part of yours. Be gracious with them.

Take some of their advice, or opinions you find useful, and discard the rest.

As for those horror birth stories? If you don’t want to hear those, politely inform the teller that. Alternatively, smile and nod, and then remind yourself that birth is much like pregnancy: Every woman is different. Just because your sister’s best friend had a bad experience at a hospital doesn’t mean you will, too.

As for judgement from other mothers? That comes with the territory of bringing a life into the world in 2015. I’d like to say it gets better, but with being ever connected by technology and living our lives online, I don’t think it does. So navigate these waters with caution. Share what you want online, but don’t feel you have to share it all.

Remember the decisions you make are your decisions. If you don’t want to breastfeed, that’s OK. Prefer to co-sleep with your child? That’s OK, too. You are the mom-to-be. You’ve earned the right to make the decisions that you feel are best for you and your baby. Be open to listening to another side, but don’t let anyone make you feel the decisions you have made for your baby are wrong.

Finally, there is no right way to be pregnant. Some people love it, some people don’t. Some people are really excited about what’s coming, some people aren’t. If you find your enthusiasm level isn’t the same as others in your prenatal class, that’s OK. It’s your pregnancy and your life.

The only other piece of “advice” I’d give you is this: Treat other pregnant women they way you would like to be treated. When you learn of a new pregnancy of a friend, relative, or co-worker, treat her the way you want others to treat you while you’re pregnant. You may learn that it can be hard not to butt in with your two cents, but you will also remember how it felt when you were that pregnant woman. That will help you keep your unsolicited advice to yourself.

Good luck, future mama.

Sarah