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8 Parenting Myths Busted
By
Aprill Brandon
I
know what you're thinking.
What
the hell does a first-time mom who is only six months pregnant know
about parenting?
And
the answer is, of course, nothing. Well, almost nothing. I do know
that the first poop the baby takes once it's outside the uterus is
apparently a mix of dark matter and pure evil, but I only know that
because I read too far in my pregnancy book last week.
But
after extensive and thorough research where I asked friends who were
new parents scientific stuff like "so, does parenthood blow or
what?" and "when do babies stop being annoying?" and
"how much Red Bull and vodka can I have while simulatenously
breastfeeding?" I have gathered enough evidence to debunk the
most common myths surrounding this major life change.
Myth
No.1: As soon as your baby is born, it's love at first sight.
Chances
are you will not immediately fall in love with your baby. Chances are
you'll look at it and wonder "who is this wrinkled old man who
came out of my vagina and what the hell is he covered with?" OK,
maybe that's exaggerating slightly. You could also be thinking
"wrinkled old woman." But the point is, it's perfectly
natural not to feel bonded to your child right away. So don't worry.
You will bond eventually (possibly even before they go off to
college).
Myth
No. 2: Breastfeeding is the most natural thing in the world.
Breastfeeding
is NOT the most natural thing in the world. Far from it. In fact,
Joan Rivers' face is more natural than breastfeeding. Now, don't get
me wrong. I don't mean feeding a child from your breast is unnatural
(despite what those squeamish jerks in restaurants that just HAVE to
complain whenever a woman dares to use her boob in public for
anything other than sexual intentions would have you believe). I mean
that in no way does this natural act come to you or to your kid
naturally. It's a daily battle the first few weeks, sometimes months,
to get you, the baby and your ginormous boobs all on the same page at
the same time.
Myth
No. 3: Having a baby will bring you and your partner closer than
you've ever been.
Maybe
it's the sleep deprivation. Or the dull tedium of changing diapers
every two hours. Or perhaps it's the immense crushing responsibility
of having to keep a small human alive. But you and your significant
other will hate each other for awhile and argue about stupid crap
such as why lil' Kayleighanna isn't wearing socks outside when it's
OBVIOUSLY FREEZING OUT THERE AND WHAT ARE YOU TRYING TO DO, KILL OUR
DAUGHTER!?! But never fear. This is why God invented grandparents, so
that just when your marriage is about to implode, they can take the
demon seed for a night and let you two drink until you can't feel
feelings anymore.
Myth
No. 4: Babies are sweet little angels.
Babies,
by nature, are not sweet and nice and innocent. They are terrorists.
Tiny, tiny terrorists who refuse to let you sleep or eat a warm meal
or sit down or shower or pee or talk on the phone or have a beer or
leave the house or wear a clean shirt not covered in vomit.
Myth
No. 5: Babies are expensive.
Babies
aren't expensive. Babies are ridiculously, mind-blowingly expensive.
Whatever crap you bought for your baby, it's not enough. Because
apparently babies die if they are not surrounded at all times with
educational toys, soggy baby books, slightly less educational toys
that play music, no less than five chairs that all move or vibrate or
swing in different directions and 76 blankets.
Myth
No. 6: Putting your baby into yoga/music/sign language class will
give them a jumpstart in life.
Babies
think key rings are the height of civilization's achievements. It's
OK to wait until they aren't floppy headed drooling machines to sign
them up for Infant Interpretive Dancing. Stop stressing out about
their future at Harvard when they're only three-months-old.
Myth
No. 7: Babies cry for a reason.
Sometimes
they don't. Sometimes they cry just because they're a butthead. For
reasons why they do this, see Myth No. 4.
Myth
No. 8: Religiously reading parenting magazines and websites and blogs
will help keep you informed and up-to-date.
Religiously
reading parenting magazines and websites and blogs will help turn you
into a competitive and paranoid control freak who lectures other
parents about how they really shouldn't let lil' Pyke play with their
iPhone because the latest studies show that children who are exposed
to screens within the first two years of life end up being serial
killers who work at Wal-Mart.
And
everyone will hate you.
Can’t get
enough of
Aprill? Can’t wait until next week?
Check out her
website at http://aprillbrandon.com/
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