@mathman141 Oh man, yes to this. I was recovering from an emergency CSection with a 28 weeker who went straight to the NICU. I wasn't allowed to hold her for a whole week.
I honestly don't know what got me through it, but here are some things that helped.
- Your baby absolutely needs you. But as a mother, it is imperative we put our own masks on first. We need to be healthy, sleep, drink water, take our medicine, shower - at the very least.
- If you choose, you can help your baby by getting pumping this very second, and sending every drop up to the NICU. They will give it to her first before donor milk, etc. Your body will still be feeding and nourishing her.
- Go to the NICU as much as you want, but don't overdo it. You just had major surgery, you grew a HUMAN. That is a miracle.
- Do skin to skin with your baby as much as you want. My little girl was in the NICU for 70 days, and I was there every day. It helps them regulate temperature, calms them, and although their eyes cannot see well yet, they can smell you and they know your voice. Sing, read, just talk. Anything.
I know this probably sounds like very little, but your baby is in the best place they can be right now. And seriously, just feel all the feels. Cry, scream, be irrational, be overly protective, shout your needs and wants for your baby to the universe. And honestly, therapy helps, even for a few sessions. This is traumatic and hard and terrible. Ask for help, and don't feel guilty about it. This is your time to heal and rest so when you take that precious child home, you can fully be her mom.