1) bring a pillow and a blanket for you and at least two for her.
2) bring an eye mask
3) bring snacks in a cooler. 3 days worth.
4)sneak in a little champagne in a cooler with some plastic flutes.
5)bring some button down shirts you don’t mind getting dirty and/or a robe. Skin to skin is the best drug I’ve ever taken. Its way easier and less awkward to just unbutton a few buttons. It’s also super helpful to your birthing partner.
6) you can totally help with breastfeeding. You can hold baby’s head and massage behind their ears to keep them awake and squeeze the boob to help milk out. A great nurse showed me how. It’s kind of fun and super helpful to your partner in the beginning. (Also you can practice this at home as a way to help naturally induce labor).
7)learn how to swaddle on YouTube. It’s the key to getting your baby to sleep and the only way you and your partner will get any sleep. The nurses will each have their own way of doing it and will probably help of you ask, but you will get mad props if you go in with some skill
8) Bring some 5 dollar bills if you can afford it. There may well be people you want to tip, especially right now. It’s scary times to be on food delivery, janitorial duty, or transporting patients. It may not be allowed, I don’t know, but there were lots of times I wished I could’ve discretely offered.
9) If you have a C section, especially an emergency one like we did, you might be the only person hanging close with your partner on the head part of the sheet. The anesthesia person has lots of dials to attend to.
There’s lots of other advice y’all have probably already received. These are just some things one recent graduate wishes he’d known. Sending you all good vibes. Catch you on the dad joke forums.
2) bring an eye mask
3) bring snacks in a cooler. 3 days worth.
4)sneak in a little champagne in a cooler with some plastic flutes.
5)bring some button down shirts you don’t mind getting dirty and/or a robe. Skin to skin is the best drug I’ve ever taken. Its way easier and less awkward to just unbutton a few buttons. It’s also super helpful to your birthing partner.
6) you can totally help with breastfeeding. You can hold baby’s head and massage behind their ears to keep them awake and squeeze the boob to help milk out. A great nurse showed me how. It’s kind of fun and super helpful to your partner in the beginning. (Also you can practice this at home as a way to help naturally induce labor).
7)learn how to swaddle on YouTube. It’s the key to getting your baby to sleep and the only way you and your partner will get any sleep. The nurses will each have their own way of doing it and will probably help of you ask, but you will get mad props if you go in with some skill
8) Bring some 5 dollar bills if you can afford it. There may well be people you want to tip, especially right now. It’s scary times to be on food delivery, janitorial duty, or transporting patients. It may not be allowed, I don’t know, but there were lots of times I wished I could’ve discretely offered.
9) If you have a C section, especially an emergency one like we did, you might be the only person hanging close with your partner on the head part of the sheet. The anesthesia person has lots of dials to attend to.
There’s lots of other advice y’all have probably already received. These are just some things one recent graduate wishes he’d known. Sending you all good vibes. Catch you on the dad joke forums.