Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 30, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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TUESDAY, JULY 30, 2013
C 1
N EW YORK - " Your sex life will
never be the same." " In my day."
" What, not breast- feeding?"
Sleep- deprived and superstressed
new parents have heard it all. And
they want you to stop it.
As Britain's Prince William and his wife,
Kate, move along on their parenting journey,
it seems even the Queen has had a
what- not- to- say moment. According to a
special edition of Us magazine on raising
royals, she exclaimed soon after William's
birth: " Thank goodness he hasn't ears like
his father!"
Most every new parent has a greatest hits
of lame advice and annoying remarks. For
fitness buff Brook Benten, mom of fourmonth-
old Hayes, her list included her postbaby
body.
" My swollen uterus made me look like I was still
five months' pregnant," said the Round Rock, Texas,
mom. " I was elated to be a mother, but I knew good
and well that I looked baaaaad. Well- intending
visitors would look me once over and say, ' Wow! You
look great.'"
And how should that have gone?
" Compliment our baby. Tell us he/ she is the cutest
baby you've ever seen, but don't compliment the
body of the new mother."
Devon Clement is a postpartum doula in Princeton,
N. J. Basically, her job description is to be helpful to
new parents. She has overheard some doozies and
has made up a facetious script for clients to hang on
their doors. It covers a lot of ground:
By Leanne Italie
You gotta see the baby!
But please, hold the advice
" Dear Guests,
Thank you so much for
coming to see our new
addition( s), and for bringing
your smiles, gifts and good
wishes. Thank you, also, for
leaving your germs at home!
If you think you may be sick,
we'll have a visit by waving
at each other through the
window. We also greatly appreciate
the hot or easy- toheat-
up meal you've brought
us, and the fact that you plan
to keep your visit nice and
short.
We've had a busy few days/
weeks around here, so please
excuse the mess in the house
and the fact that I am still
in my pyjamas... I may need
to breastfeed while you are
here. If this offends you or
makes you uncomfortable, I
keep some blankets close by
for you to put over your head.
While we find it very interesting
to hear your stories
about what things were like
when you had your babies,
please keep your advice to
yourself unless asked, especially
if it comes
with an air of
judgment. We have
enough information
coming at us,
and we are doing
OK, thanks."
" Perhaps most acutely distressed in
the very early months are the parents of
preemies.
Megan Lubin of Philadelphia gave birth
three months early to her now- two- yearold
and spent that time in a hospital's
neonatal intensive care unit. Once he did
come home, during winter, she and her
husband didn't host many visitors or go out
that much.
" When we did interact with the outside
world, the comments and questions
flooded in," she said. " We certainly didn't
mind if people were curious or genuinely
interested in our son, but it was hurtful at
times when strangers would compare their
child to ours."
Things not to say to the parents of a
preemie?
"' Well, my child is the same age and
much bigger.' Or, ' Your son is awfully
thin,'" Lubin suggests. " The worst was
when they would compare what their child
was able to do."
Brandi Jordan, who owns a parenting
resource centre in Los Angeles, said the
way to avoid ticking off new parents is
pretty simple.
" I think that people should not give
advice. Period," she said. " People see it as
open licence when they see someone with
a baby to give them their opinion on how
they should have socks on, or they should
have a hat on, or they need sunblock, or
you shouldn't be taking them out, they're
too young. Some people make themselves
armchair experts because they've read a
lot of things."
That, she said, is why the
what- not- to- say problem is so
out of control these days. Blogs,
social networks and simple
online searches are the armchair
expert's best friends, said Jordan,
who has a six- year- old.
Instead of advice, how about
not coming over for a visit when
you have a cold, even though you think you
and your kids are no longer contagious?
How about not asking the new parents of
multiples: " Are they natural or IVF?"
But she has a suggestion for new parents,
too: How about not rejecting outright
the experiences of your own parents due to
their grandparently status?
" A lot of new parents discount what
their own parents actually know, but a lot
of grandparents do have good traditional
things that work really well," she said.
First, she said, parents need to realize
they really do need help. " Before, you
didn't need help because your family was
right there and did everything, but so
many people are far removed from their
families."
But make sure help is help. Visits should
be 10 minutes, not two hours, in the early
days unless you plan to throw in a load of
laundry, do dishes or cook a meal.
Dr. Richard So, a pediatrician at Cleveland
Clinic Children's hospital, has three
kids of his own. The youngest is not yet
two.
His advice for well- meaning loved ones:
" Leave the lasagna or manicotti at the
door."
Among the what- not- to- say moments that
set his phone ringing: " Oh my gosh, what
is that rash on your baby's face?" And " Oh
my gosh, what's wrong with your baby's
head?"
Rashes: They're common for newborns.
The head: It often doesn't exit a woman's
body completely round.
So what should a well- intentioned visitor
be doing?
" Ninety per cent is just reassuring that
mother that she's doing the right things,
that she's not going to harm her baby," he
said. " All a new baby needs to do is eat,
sleep, poop and grow."
- The Associated Press "
Fitness buff Brook Benten didn't appreciate comments - even good ones - about her body after she gave birth to Hayes.
ROBERT DABBS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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