By MIA FREEDMAN
When you have a baby, your relationship with your relatives changes.
Particularly the older female ones.
If you are lucky enough to have your mother and your partner’s mother in your life, they can be a huge source of support, comfort and reassurance.
Because those ladies? They’ve done this baby thing before. At least once each.
However it doesn’t always turn out like this.
Having spent many years comparing notes with girlfriends, it turns out I got incredibly lucky.
While many new mothers complain of older relatives insisting they KNOW how to do everything best (feeding, changing, settling etc, my Mum could barely remember having a baby.
She wasn’t even 100% on which way was up so she deferred to whatever I wanted to do and took to the role of my #1 cheerleader, boosting my non-existent confidence as a new mother. And my mother-in-law was just as supportive of whatever I wanted to do – even when it was plainly obvious that I hadn’t a clue.
But even though some things about babycare haven’t changed over the years since your own parents had kids, (they’re still best when held upright, not upside down) others HAVE.
A generation ago, mothers were encouraged to give babies bottles of sugar water. Or a nip of brandy in their milk to ‘help them sleep’. Babies were placed on their stomachs to sleep (with the view that this would stop them choking if they vomitted). And child restraints in cars were pretty much just stick-a-seatbelt-around-a-basket. Or hold the baby in the backseat. Hell, my mum was encouraged BY HER DOCTOR to smoke in the later stages of pregnancy so she wouldn’t gain weight.