@diddle I’m right there with you… I delivered our b/g twins in January and when people realize they’re twins and it’s a boy and girl, I get the “you’re so lucky! a boy and girl!!! what a blessing. now you’re done having kids, huh?” And like you said, don’t get me wrong one bit, we are very lucky and blessed to have boy/girl twins but it is SO hard. I became preeclamptic at 34w and they were delivered prematurely via emergency csection. they were rushed to the NICU because they weren’t breathing. this was a shock to me because I also was going to appts 2x/week when pregnant with them and they were completely healthy. my recovery was awful, I ended up having to go back twice to be seen. then once we get home, 3 weeks later we’re back at the ED cause my daughter is projectile vomiting after every feed and my son could hardly breathe. both get admitted and my daughter ends up having pyloric stenosis and has surgery and my son was being monitored on oxygen. they diagnosed him with bronchiolitis even though he tested negative on the respiratory virus panel and none of us were sick. they’re discharged after 2 days and a week later, we’re back at the ED because my son is still retracting and has an increase work of breathing. they admit him again, give him oxygen, and discharged him after 1.5 days, saying it’s bronchiolitis after another negative respiratory virus panel. a week later, we’re back because he’s still having retractions, poor guy was struggling to breathe on his own. he was then admitted for 2 weeks where they did so much testing to discover he’s in respiratory failure and diagnosed him with interstitial lung disease. my husband almost lost his job because he stayed home with twin sister while I stayed at the hospital. now he’s home on oxygen 24/7, meds, chest PT, and appointments almost every week but life has surprisingly calmed down and I am finally able to enjoy them. sometimes I feel like I was “robbed” from that “newborn bliss” stage everyone talks about.
although I can’t relate to your experience completely, I can say I understand you and hear you. having twins is tough when other challenges arise, plus navigating postpartum (I can’t believe I survived the newborn stage tbh). but like I said, don’t get me wrong, I love these babies with every fiber of my being and yes, we’re so lucky, but the life of multiples is challenging and I don’t think people who don’t have multiples realize that. I think the reason it bothers me is because people see the two babies and yes, they’re so cute and it’s a blessing, but they don’t give recognition to how challenging it is.