Survival tips for new moms
Reported July 10, 2007
New mom Annemarie Tempelman-Kluit found herself wandering around the house,
ravenously hungry, wondering if she could stand to eat another container of
yogurt or another healthy cookie or bowl of cereal. Again.
"It's awful!" she says. "People tell you a lot of stuff about having a baby, but
nobody tells you what to do after you have the baby. Nobody told me I'd be that
hungry, or that thirsty. You don't realize how little time you're going to have.
I thought there had to be a better way."
The lightbulb went on. She knew she wasn't the only mom looking for answers, so
she decided to write a breastfeeding manual. "I ended up going back to the
bedroom, and I wrote up the proposal for the book in five minutes," she says.
The concept for what is now Healthy Mum, Happy Baby (Random House, $25) may have
come together instantly, but Tempelman-Kluit also ended up doing an incredible
amount of research. She read a ton of books, interviewed consultants at local
health units, talked to dietitians and pored over the websites of the Canadian
Health Network, the Canadian Pediatric Society, Health Canada and lots more.
"All the information is out here," she says. "But it's in 50 different places.
Who has time to do that?"
Tempelman-Kluit made time, and Healthy Mum, Happy Baby became a super-useful
handbook. The first half is packed with tips of all kinds for keeping your
sanity, as well as keeping your baby and yourself healthy, and the second half
is healthy, easy recipes.
Healthy Mum, Happy Baby is a hot shower gift and is also spinning off a career
for Tempelman-Kluit in related websites.
Healthymumhappybaby.com updates the information in her book, and yoyomama.ca
provides helpful, hip info, tips and guides to local events to smooth over the
yo-yo bumps of early motherhood.
Here are the author's Top 10 survival tips for new moms:
1 Don't worry that you don't have enough milk if your baby's always hungry.
Breast milk digests faster than formula. Even if the baby's hungry, it doesn't
mean there's anything wrong with your milk supply.
2 Don't be obsessive about what you eat, or limit your intake. Have a glass of
wine, a piece of chocolate, some spicy food -- limiting yourself is not a good
idea unless your baby reacts.
3 Fully empty your breast. The baby does need both the early, "flow" milk and
the later, "hind" milk. They both have different nutrients and richness.
4 Trust your instincts. Look at your child instead of reading all those books.
You're building a relationship with your child at the same time as you're
breastfeeding, so it's important to trust your instincts.
5 Remember to take care of yourself. You may think it's all about the baby, but
the best way to take care of the baby is to take care of yourself. You're
probably not getting enough sleep and you're probably not hitting the gym or the
spa, but at least you can control what you eat.
6 Ask for help, and accept it when it's offered. "I let my sister-in-law clean
my bathroom!" says Tempelman-Kluit, still sounding amazed. "I called people I
barely knew, in tears!" There is no shame in this kind of thing, and nobody will
think the worse of you, she says. People are happy to help.
SOURCE : www.canada.com |