In the beginning, my parents struggled to accept my diagnosis; they didn't want me to suffer, and putting a name to my symptoms
probably felt scary to them.
Not exact matches
And there's just so much going on at that age that makes it a tough, tough time — they don't really nap yet, their nighttime sleep is falling apart (thank you 4 - month sleep regression), you may be back at work or seriously wondering what made you decide not to go back to work and either way it screws with your head, you
probably haven't lost the baby weight yet and don't
feel sexy but then there's
Scary Spice doing the cha - cha looking like a brick house, and your baby is
probably not as fat as your doctor wants him or her to be, and it all just sucks.
Your child
probably will find this very funny, and laughter will help ease some of his
scary feelings so that he can be more confident.
Once you get used to it, you
probably won't
feel so self - conscious, and can then branch out into
scarier ballet - flat territory.
All in all, the process is
probably a lot
scarier than it seems, and you may actually
feel a lot more freedom not having an office to be at every day.