enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

new mama care package

I have said this before but my transition into motherhood was bumpy. I was the first of my close friends to have a baby and my knowledge of what was coming was seriously lacking. (Prepare yourself for some brilliant insight…) Having one yourself is NOT the same as liking a filtered photo on Instagram of someone else's newborn. 😉

It's amazing and wonderful and OMG your heart is bursting.

But it's also painful and difficult and OMG every single part of your body is leaking.

I felt like I was living on razor blade. Behind me was the past and in front of me was the future. I couldn't go back. I couldn't even remember the past. But I couldn't go forward either. I couldn't even see the future.

That's what I remember repeating most often. To my mom, to Paul, to anyone who would listen, I would whisper:

"I can't see it."

I couldn't see it. I couldn't see how we'd leave this razor edge where the feelings were so intense and horrifying and beautiful. I couldn't see past one feeding…much less past one week.

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Now, that I'm here, out of the fog and in the future, it is a tremendous relief to say that that all sounds so dramatic. I see it. I see where we are. I see where we're headed. I see that there will come challenges, but I see that we'll be okay.

I can also see behind me now. I see the new mama that I was and I hurt for her.

I have forgotten so many of the hard parts from those early weeks and months. But I haven't forgotten the underlying panic. I haven't forgotten how I felt those first few weeks when Paul was deployed, my baby was new and my body felt foreign. And I think that memory is what makes now – solid ground – feel so sweet.

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And with that long and personal story, please let me share one of my favorite things to do these days…

Send new mama care packages! My friends are having babies! My friends are becoming mothers. They are (please, God) transitioning into their new roles better than I did. They are learning what it's like to live on a razor blade. They are learning what it's like to exist on little sleep and a bursting heart. They are amazing and I love them.

With every new baby, I get a bit better at building a care package for my faraway friends that I hope will be helpful in those early days. I'm excited to share it with you (feel free to let me know what you'd add!)

new mama care package

Larabars (these are amazing any time, but especially when she has just one hand to eat or needs a middle of the night snack)

chapstick, nail files and cuticle cream (she probably has all this, but she doesn't know where it is)

face wipes (she wants to wash her face each night and these will make it easier)

thank you cards (she'll run out of these)

a soft comfy robe (she probably already has one but two?! Having two robes means she'll have a chance that one is sort of clean)

a note on cheap paper (beautiful letterpress cards are great – before the baby is born when she has time to do stuff like "put the card in a special place." Those first few weeks after the baby is born? She feels like she's drowning in stuff and just wants to clear a tiny space in her house because that might help her clear a space in her head.)

new mama care package

Pack everything in a flat rate priority box (the regional box A is a perfect size and not as expensive to ship) and skip the tissue paper, wrapping and extra packaging (she's drowning in stuff, remember?). Send it off with good wishes and a mental promise that you'll listen to whatever she has to say and forget it all when she recovers and is feeling like her old (awesome) self again.

To all the new mamas: I'm thinking about you. I'm cheering you on. To all the mamas: You are amazing. To my beautiful girl, who made me a mama: I love you to the stars. You make me want to do better.

PS. awhile back I shared my 34 gift suggestions for a new mama if you live by your friend and don't need to send a care package via mail. When I went back and checked, all of these items were on it. I'm nothing if not consistent.

 

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47 responses to “new mama care package.”

  1. Amanda Rose Zampelli Avatar

    This is so sweet, Elise. Three of my close friends are having babies this year (one down, two to go) and I so appreciate these new-mama suggestions.
    Now about ‘living on a razor blade’ — I love this articulation. I’m not a new mama, but I think that phrase accurately describes any major life transition that manifests itself in panic and in desperately whispering “I can’t see it” about the future. I’m am at the beginning stages of breaking up with my boyfriend who Ive been with for 8+ years. I can’t see my life without him, and I’m in a constant state of low-level (and at times, piercingly high-level) panic. I can’t see the future. I freaking out. I’m living on a razor blade. Thank you for giving me the words, and the hope that one day my fog will pass I’ll be able to see it. ❤ ❤

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  2. Angel Y. Avatar

    I love this! I actually gave my bff a pregnancy care package when she told me she was pregnant just because I knew how pregnancy changes you! My little one is only 7 weeks old and my adjustment period wasn’t terrible but it’s important to support the women in your life who are approaching this life change. Babies change things! Thank you so much for sharing! Hope you and your little one are doing well.

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  3. Valerie Avatar
    Valerie

    Elise – I have a baby (almost 5 – but she’s still my baby) and another on the way. My transition into motherhood was much the same as yours. I read this post and the one you linked to about other things to bring and you are spot on. Being an emotional pregnant lady it got me all teary just thinking how wonderful any of those things would have been. Like you I was the first of my friends to have a baby and when they came to visit all they wanted to do was sit up and chat and hold my baby. I have always been the one to entertain so they came over looking for food and drinks. I would have given anything to have them help me clean, bring food, watch the baby so I could sleep without constantly listening for the baby or take a shower that lasted longer than 5 minutes. Its good to know someone one went through what I did. Felt how I felt. Thanks for all your beautiful insights Elise.

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  4. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    so sweet and so full of thought and love! As a mama of two, I agree with everything!

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  5. Leah Avatar

    What a beautiful, brilliant idea! Love, love love.

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  6. Allie Avatar

    This is so timely – I’ve been gathering things to send my dear friend who is a new mamma. She’s had a bit of a bumpy start too. What I can never seem to find are suggestions for the new dad. It feels strange to leave him out, but I can’t relate to that transition at all, especially from a male perspective. Any insight here? What would Paul have needed or liked or appreciated? (Especially while helping you through such a tough transition.)

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  7. Liz Avatar

    Love this list, especially the robe! I’m so thankful you shared some of your new mamahood stories, they helped me tremendously during my early mama days. This summer I put together a short list of things that helped me: http://super-girl.ca/blog/2014/07/24/4-surprising-products-for-new-moms/ — I still use all of them. 😉

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  8. jessica o'brien | @jessohbee Avatar

    such crazy timing – my postpartum experience with connor (now five days old) is night and day different than mine was with mila’s (which sounds a lot like yours was for the first month to six weeks!), but still i went googling for that post of your about gifts, thinking it would be good to share. so i just read it yesterday! love both these posts and will reference again the next time i’m a friend to a new mama.

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  9. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    this is such a good question! I don’t know… Paul was gone for the first four weeks so we didn’t have a “normal” start… it’s hard to know what I’d suggest.
    maybe help with meals? either having something delivered or dropping something off? offering to do the grocery shopping? Anything that helps them both as a couple will be wonderful. 🙂
    Congrats to your friend Allie. 🙂

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  10. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    yay Connor! Yay YOU!!! I have SUCH HIGH HOPES that my second baby will be different. I think experience alone will play a role. And I understand now how FLEETING those early weeks are. I’m hoping I’ll be able to swim with instead of against the current next time around.

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  11. Shirley K Avatar

    Great photo of you and Ellerie at the beginning of the post. It’s so easy to forget in retrospect how tiny and new they were!

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  12. Alexandra @ the phillipses Avatar

    We’re at 2 weeks post-partum, and oh my, I am right there on the razor blade. I didn’t know it would be so hard. I felt (and feel) so unprepared and unlike myself. I’m adjusting, of course, but I just can’t see getting out of this fog. It’s good to hear that I will, even if I can’t see it yet. Thank you for writing about your experience and letting me (and other new mamas) know we’re not alone.

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  13. Becca Groves Avatar

    Every time I saw my sister after my second was born she would take the baby out of my arms and replace her with a glass of ice water and lead me to a chair to sit down. I remember this so vividly. And it probably happened only a half a dozen times. But each time I thought, “she gets it.”
    Thanks for this list. It’s awesome and so doable.
    Joyfully,
    Becca

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  14. Kimi Avatar
    Kimi

    OMG yes, I say while releasing a breath I didn’t know I was holding. Yes. I had chills reading this, because in retrospect, this was ‘me’. You put a very difficult feeling into words. I felt exactly the same. But I was the last of my friends… an older mom, 40. All my friends had kids in elementary school… and somehow, because they were able to see their future, they were shockingly unhelpful to me who couldn’t see mine. My son it 2 now, and I can see our future… where all I could say when he was a new born was, I walked into the hospital, and never walked back out. Overwhelmed, exhausted, elated, terrified, lost, excited, in love, leaking, bloated, hormonal and just all together someone else. The razor blade was slicing through my feet. Beautiful…you SO GET IT! 🙂

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  15. Raesha Avatar

    I just have to share – I LOVE this package and it is such a wonderful idea. I was one of the last of my friends and my family to have babies so I was blessed with the knowledge, help and insight from all of them. The BEST thing I did was have my sister come stay with us for a month. Luckily her schedule was such that she could do this. My beautiful sister has birthed 5 babies and also has 2 step kids and is the best mother I have ever known. When my daughter was born she only had 4 kids at that time 🙂 Her help was invaluable – she made sure my husband was fed and taken care of, that I got what I needed at the hospital, answered all the weird, gross biological questions for me, held me when I cried and cried cause I had no milk and nursing was so painful I thought I was going to die. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Oh man – even remembering all this is making me teary eyed (and my daughter is 14!!!!!! now). Ok – I think I need to go send my sister a thank you card just because and remind how much she saved my life back then.

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  16. Emily Avatar

    You can do it, Alexandra! You’re awesome and it only gets more and more fun (from what I’ve heard from friends and learned as a full time nanny).

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  17. Za Avatar

    This is just so amazing. It reminds me of the time I rushed to one of my friend’s with diapers and useful baby stuff…. My mother-in-law also has my eternal gratitude for being with us and helping at a rough time after my second son was born and cooking what must be the best fish+ mushrooms+ sauce out of leftovers ever! I also loved your first post on what you can offer (emptying the dishwasher! oh my!). This is one of my favourite posts ever! So helpful and intelligent!

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  18. Janell Avatar
    Janell

    a perfect care package, if I was to add just one thing it would be a good water bottle. Water intake is so important to new moms who are attempting to breastfeed and yes, she probably already has one, but it will have to go in the dishwasher at some point.

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  19. Tristin Avatar

    Oh goodness Elise. I’m a long time reader, not sure I’ve ever commented before? This is the BEST gift and the BEST note and the BEST message. Having had a (VERY) bumpy start with daughter #1, I can’t tell you how much a gift like this would have meant (nor can I overemphasize how much having a better “round 2” meant).
    And my notes to my friends (who, I’m grateful to say, have mostly had much smoother and more gracious landings than I) often read very similarly. It does get better and better, and that is such an encouragement to those who struggle to make it through those early days.

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  20. Jess Avatar

    Great list! Care packages are the best! Perhaps it’d be helpful to add stamps to those note card envelopes. And add an Izze soda! Moms drink so much water, that a healthy refreshing carbonated drink tastes so good!

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  21. Hanna Avatar

    Amanda, hang in there! I broke up with my boyfriend of 10 years one and a half years ago, and it was so tough at first. But, now, it’s all better, and I have a whole new better future to live in. I’m married to my soulmate and best friend. 2 years ago I couldn’t see the future ever being so bright, but it is and it’s amazing!
    I’m sending lots of good thoughts and wishes your way!

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  22. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    oh Amanda, just reading this through — I agree with Hanna. So beautifully said. 🙂 lots of love!

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  23. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    AGREE AGREE! I was not yet adjusting at 2 weeks out so you’re ahead of the curve. It gets easier and harder all at once. But there will be a day where you look around and think YES!!!!! I promise. it’s coming. And do not be afraid to reach out. xx

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  24. elise blaha cripe Avatar
  25. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    stamps! yes, for sure! 🙂

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  26. Marissa Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your journey. Panic and being overwhelmed are exactly what I remember (just 2 years ago). I was so lucky and had my mom stay with us for 5 weeks, and even so, it was such an overwhelmingly awesome (not in a good way!) responsibility to be solely responsible for feeding this creature and being so needed. I remember panicking at one point as the nightime crept on, and just letting it all out and admitting to my mom and husband that I wanted to basically crawl back into my own mom’s belly. We also laughed. It does get better (and if it doesn’t, get help dear friends. I had a good friend get post-partum, but she’s great now!). I think your care package is great, and especially the easy foods (I got so sick from nursing at night and not getting enough protein). The no-thank you card needed is amazing too.
    Yes!!! The robe! Hugs. Your daughter is adorable and thanks for sharing your story.

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  27. Maggie Avatar
    Maggie

    New motherhood is the hardest transition I’ve ever made in my life. I’m a goal setter, like you, so while I knew it would be hard I thought determination would get me through just fine. I just wasn’t prepared for my life to change so completely. When you become a mother, you evolve into something entirely different….like a caterpillar into a butterfly. You adjust to living your life and the baby’s at the same time. For me, I turned a corner when my baby turned 4 months old and I distinctly remember this. That’s when I wasn’t scared anymore. Before that, I was honestly baffled by the fact that people chose to have multiple children. When she was 10 months old, I was surprised to find out I was pregnant with number 2. I emotionally prepared myself for craziness that never occurred. Everyone warned us how 2 was so much harder but it wasn’t. We found it easier because we sunk into a natural rhythm. Instead of debating who was going to do what we just knew if one had the baby, the other helped the big girl. Sidenote, with that baby breastfeeding came sooo much easier and wasn’t ever thought of as a chore. One more surprise pregnancy and now I have three beautiful daughters….the youngest about to turn 3 months. All this to say that it just gets easier and so much more enjoyable all the time. The longer and more often you parent, the less it feels like work and more just like part of the deal since you get to enjoy these little humans. The care package ideas are wonderful too…and when your friends have multiple children, just remembering to send or say anything is a treat!

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  28. Erin Freeman Avatar
    Erin Freeman

    Nailed it! (As per ususal – you rock!) What a fabulous idea and so on point. Even down to the note on un-special paper because STUFF totally buries you when you are in that panicky place. I was there, I can still remember the fog and the mid-night hunger pains. I’d add a cute headband because, let’s face it, sometimes you need to fake a little pretty in the disheveled keep-the-greasy-hair-out-of-my-face state!

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  29. casie Avatar
    casie

    “Living on a razor blade”! I feel like this most (if not all days!) and my kids are almost 2 and 4!
    I love this simple yet spot on care package!
    and I have that same robe from Target and it was my favorite as a nursing and post partum mom!
    Spot on Elise!

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  30. Sarah Milligan Avatar

    I love all your posts about adjusting as a new mother because how you felt and how you describe it is exactly what I went through. I had no idea what was coming – I thought I was ‘preparing’ by washing cute baby outfits (which never got worn) and obsessing over the right stroller. And when my first baby was born I felt completely out of reality… you describe it so well! I recognize that everything changed, the day I first gave birth. It was painful, and wonderful, and I am so glad it’s behind me. Having that massive shift in perspective over with is what makes subsequent babies so much easier to deal with – simply because you have a clue what is coming. I prepared for my second by washing sleepers… only sleepers. And stocking up on power bars for that one-hand-midnight-snack when you’re blearily nursing and have to eat something now or you will pass out. I think your care package is great… I love your points about not including a fancy card, tissue, and so on and about providing those simple things that a new mother probably has but can’t find. One idea to add would be a nice organic balm for dealing with those lovely cracked nipples… she may have some, but good to have lots on hand.

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  31. Sarah Milligan Avatar

    Really love this. That is exactly what a new mother needs!

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  32. Tiffany Marshall Avatar
    Tiffany Marshall

    This is uber sweet. I so was that mom like you the first week not knowing how in the world I was going to go forward. I was scared and lost and felt totally unprepared but the one thing I knew was I was in love with the idea of being a momm . He’s my light and world. Motherhood has given me a new purpose and reason to breathe.

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  33. a touch of domesticity / katie sparrow Avatar

    Faaaabulous advice Elise! I totally concur. And beautifully written as always.
    I think another hard point comes when you have your second. Some things are easier: you know what you’re doing, you know when to panic and when not to, you can get out of the house sooner and quicker. But there are harder things too: splitting yourself between two small people on totally different schedules and with totally different needs, when you are un-splittable; feeling properly on top of things – I think this actually takes longer the second time round, though you can give off the impression of it a lot sooner; and learning that second child, because though you know how to be a mother, you don’t know how to be that particular child’s mother. But it’s all good in the end! It must be – I’ve had three!

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  34. Nicole Norman Avatar

    Thank you for such an awesome post. I’ve been following you since before you were married and we seem to be have pretty similar personalities (Type A list-makers, etc.), so it’s no surprise that my early motherhood experience was similar to yours, but I’ve never been able to articulate it this well. Our daughter just turned one and my husband and I now have a joke about any new things (opening the package of a new sippy cup with multiple parts, for example): “it’s just SO overwhelming!!”, because EVERYTHING was to me in those early weeks and he had a hard time understanding. It was a big day that first day he came home from work (several weeks in) and I could report that I hadn’t cried over anything at all that day. Hormones are real, man, and turning a super Type A girl’s world topsy-turvy does mean things to a household. Here’s hoping for both of us that someday round 2 will be much smoother. 🙂

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  35. Jak Avatar

    Love Reading this.

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  36. Susan Avatar

    When my kids were born the BEST gift I got was when my friend Claire organized a while troop of people to bring us dinner every other day for about two weeks so neither of us had to cook. Providing meals is, I think, one of the most helpful things you can do for a family with a new baby. That’s assuming you are local of course! So that’s what I do for people now too. I am an avid knitter so I usually make a baby sweater or hat and bring over a big pan of lasagna or hearty soup and salad.

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  37. Natalie | Circus & Bloom Avatar

    What a beautiful idea! I’m just entering into this season and so are my friends. I’m definitely going to keep this in mind! Thanks!
    Circus & Bloom
    ♥♥♥

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  38. Charisse Avatar

    I have always loved your honesty about your transition into motherhood. I also had a bumpy transition and it helped me so much to see you being so open and honest about yours. I am happy to report that I just read through this post with my SECOND newborn (5 days old) snuggled up next to me and things are so different the second time around. 🙂 They are infinitely better – a true 180. I love the note that you included in your care package – after my first experience having a baby, I realized how much the new MOM needs love and support and that it’s not just about the baby. I’m curious to see what your experience is like the second time around (whenever that may be). 🙂

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  39. Julie Avatar

    This is fantastic. Thank you for sharing.

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  40. cinback Avatar

    You, Elise, are simply amazing! You are so insightful. And your friends are lucky to have you. Be blessed for blessing others…

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  41. jessica o'brien | @jessohbee Avatar

    yes! told my midwife today, i’m lucky, in good hands and knew what to expect this time! knowing what to expect and how to breastfeed (had some painful complications in the beginning last time) have made a huge difference. also, i ate smoothies 2x a day for the first 5 days with chunks of my raw placenta in them and i can’t say it is causation, not correlation, but i am livid i didn’t do it the first time around because it legit feels like a miracle. somewhat controversial, but i would urge every future mama i know to do the same. when it’s time for your second i know you’ll be in a great spot. xo

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  42. Mary Avatar

    I love these posts. I’ve been reading your blog regularly for about a year and seem to enjoy it more and more each month. I’ve been especially enjoying reading back through all your pregnancy and motherhood posts now that I’m expecting my first baby in June. I don’t usually comment but I feel like I could easily comment on almost all of your posts because they usually strike a good chord.

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  43. Mandie Avatar

    I love this! I almost teared up at your little note at the end, and I’m 14 months out! Momma hood is not for the faint of heart! 🙂

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  44. Steph Avatar
    Steph

    Wow, Elise. You’re so thoughtful and an amazing friend. Thanks for sharing, this is bound to come in handy.

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  45. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    Elise:
    This is such an awesome and thoughtful care package!!!!!! I love your blog, and am looking forward to buying your planner this year. Best wishes from San Francisco.

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  46. Lanne Avatar
    Lanne

    Love this list. I have an 11yo and my husband a 10 yo and I head over heels madly in love idea of …we should try for one together…. Resulted in twins. Opps. Im now 38, living in a new country, without a single person I know nearby, drowning in newborn goodness and good grief lol I had a dreadful c section and recovery isnt anything like what I imagined. Everyone says rest but w twins in a Nicu for 1 and 2 weeks , there is no rest. You spend your nights w one baby and your days visiting the other trying to bond to these new people who were ripped out of you and taken away to live in a box and be cared for by others. Now we are all home its just sleep deprivation, never ending feeds, and older children to parent still. What did I do to my perfectly nice life? But i know how fast this passes and is replaced by new challenges and sleep will come and our gorgeous girls will grow faster than we are ready for. … Thanks for keeping it real and supporting new moms

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