First Child vs. Ninth Child (a side-by-side comparison) |
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First Child vs. Ninth Child (a side-by-side comparison)

Daja February 22, 2016

By Daja, Contributing Writer

It’s no secret that having a baby changes you. No one starts out being an experienced mother. It’s all hands-on learning. I gave birth to our ninth child just two months ago and have been reflecting on the difference between having the first baby and the ninth baby. Here’s a few of the changes we’ve been through:

Trying to conceive:

First child: You take your temperature, check your cervical mucous, and spend 20 minutes with your legs up in the air after sex.

Ninth child: “We’re so tired, did we just have sex in our sleep?”

Finding out you’re pregnant:

First child: You take a pregnancy test when your period is half an hour late.

Ninth child: Too exhausted and busy to notice, you realize you’re pregnant halfway through the first trimester.

First Child: On the day you find out you’re pregnant you go to the library and check out every book about what to expect, nutrition and labor. You read them all the first week.

Ninth child: You read crunchy mommy blogs written by real mothers in the trenches.

Pregnancy:

First child: You track your pregnancy via apps promoted by corporate sponsored websites.

Ninth child: You track your pregnancy via which clothes you’re in. And you own everything from small to large in maternity and non-maternity lines.

First child: You take adorable pictures to announce your pregnancy and make extra copies for Grandma.

Ninth child: You update your Facebook status to “Guess what?” And that about handles it.

First Child vs. Ninth Child

Labor:

First Child: When you have your first contraction your husband starts taking pictures, you phone the grandparents and all your friends, fix your make-up and update Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Ninth Child: You have your first contraction and you go to take a nap. Maybe just this once you can give birth in your sleep.

First Child: In transition you tell your husband, “It’s all your fault you ^&*#*@#!!!!!”

Ninth Child: In transition you say, “Hey, I am feeling really bitchy, so I apologize. It must be time. Someone go call the midwife, she’s napping in the guest room.”

First Child: You have no idea how labor is going to be and that kind of freaks you out.

Ninth Child: You have no idea how labor is going to be and you’re OK with that.

Postpartum:

First Child: You can’t wait to take your baby out and show him off!

Ninth Child: You stay inside with your baby until you need groceries so bad that your dinner options include a half a jar of peanut butter, tomato paste, stale cereal and some cranberry sauce. You can make something out of that right?

First Child: When someone asks to hold the baby you make sure they do not have a cold, whip out the hand-sanitizer, and you’re still nervous.

Ninth Child: When someone asks to hold the baby you wonder if they will hold him long enough for you to take a shower and have a latte.

First Child: Bath time is a daily ritual that you both enjoy so much, complete with a plushy baby towel that looks like a duck and bath time songs.

Ninth Child: You lovingly kiss the neck of your infant and realize he smells like cheese. When is the last time we bathed the baby? you ask.

Social Life:

First Child: You don’t have time for anything except maybe sneaking in a shower. You nurse and hold the baby all day and live off take-out because who can find the time to cook?

Ninth Child: You wish you had back all the time you thought you didn’t have when you had only one child.

First Child: People ask “How old is he?”

Ninth Child: People ask “Are they all yours?” and “Don’t you have a television?”

First Child: You sign-up for Mommy-and-Me music classes and Mommy-and-Me Yoga and Stroller Walks and Mommy Clubs. You probably also had a long stroller buying checklist.

Ninth Child: You are the club.

Breastfeeding:

First Child: When you need to nurse while out you find a quiet spot somewhere, cover yourself with a hooter-hider the size of a tablecloth and still glance around nervously to see if anyone notices.

Ninth Child: Whip it out. If anyone says anything you hand them the baby blanket and tell them if nursing offends them they are welcomed to cover their heads.

First Child: You carefully plan which breast to use by switching a safety pin from one side of your blouse to another.

Ninth Child: You use the left one so that your can use your right hand to correct the older kids math papers and blog at the same time. You’ll catch up on the right one later.

First Child: You wonder and worry and plan about weaning.

Ninth Child: You are still nursing the four year old and two year old when the new baby arrives. Can a girl sprout a third breast already?!

Meal Time:

First Child: You introduce foods one at a time, starting with the recommended vegetables and progressing one-by-one.

Ninth Child: Here, play with this. And give them a spoonful of whatever you are eating.

Love:

First Child: You love your child so much you wonder how you can possibly love another child equally.

Ninth Child: You know that love never divides. It always multiples.

Do You Have Multiple Children? How Has Your Perspective Changed Since the First Baby?

 

Love Multiplies

Love never divides. It always multiplies.

This is the writings of:

Daja is the happy wife of Gana and the mother of nine amazing children. She's bookish and easily distracted and has too many ideas and not enough time. She writes about family life, preparedness, natural health, liturgical living over at The Provision Room, your source of abundant home-centered living!
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49 Comments

  1. Love it!
    I have only 3 kids but the story is close to yours. 🙂

    Reply

  2. That was a fantastic read. I am so proud of you. Keep them coming, Papa really doesn’t mind.

    Reply

  3. Love it! You’re a great writer.

    I have ten children. When the oldest started having babies, the love grew exponentially! I didn’t think it was possible to love so much.

    Reply

  4. I had four. They are all adults now, living on their own. As a single mom, I now have other people’s kids living with me. I have to have some noise!!!

    It’s amazing how creative you can become with what you have and prayer. Those kids are truly my blessing from the Lord!!

    Reply

  5. Brilliant! Same story with just 3 🙂

    Reply

  6. We have nine children and I agree with all of these! When people ask how many children I have, I try to cover the most common questions by answering: I have nine and yes they’re all ours and no twins and same husband. 🙂

    Reply

  7. This was so fun to read! I have two children, and can relate to some of these too.

    Reply

  8. I’m still laughing! I have 4 kiddos and I can apply your ninth child comparisons to my situation too! SO true!

    Reply

  9. Hahahaha this is really funny! 😀

    Reply

  10. How fun, funny, true, charming and interesting to read! Love the family photo at the end! <3 Well done, Mama!

    Reply

  11. Aw, thanks!

    Reply

  12. This was so fun to read Daja! And so true I would imagine! I see myself in some of those even with just 3 babies LOL! You are an inspiration!

    Reply

  13. I have four and can totally relate. You are so funny. I love that love multiples. I will have to use that phrase when my kids complain that I love one of them more than the other.

    Reply

  14. Daja! Thanks for the good laughs! I passed this along to all my mom friends as well. I can’t believe you have 9 kiddos already!? Weren’t you just pregnant with your first when we met?
    Love to you and your beautiful family!
    Hannah

    Reply

  15. Awww… I have eight children, can confirm :). The last three we had home waterbirths. Much less drama than hospital 😉

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  16. As a mom of 7, I can relate! So very true! And it’s funny to think back about how unprepared my first-time mom*felt*, but really wasn’t after all. I had the tools I needed, I just didn’t realize it. Experience helped identify those “tools”, I guess.

    Reply

  17. Mother and grandmother of 9

    Laughed so hard…..
    while some things were a little different….
    my first was born in 1980
    my 9th (actually 10th…we lost #9 early miscarriage)
    was born in 2000…..
    much was similar……
    I sure enjoyed this article….

    Reply

  18. Haha! Mother of nine here too and I could have written this word for word. I especially like the part about waking up the midwife in the guest room because… YES! This since number 4!!

    Reply

  19. I have birthed 11 babies and I can so relate….what a giggle I got reading all of these

    Reply

  20. I only have two kiddos, now grown, but I enjoyed this article so much. Really funny and heartwarming. I always wanted a big family. Just wasn’t in the cards for us. What a blessing, though, to have nine.

    Reply

  21. I have 6 children baby #7 due April 16th 2016 so heavily pregnant with it now.
    My first child was a girl who we blessed with the name Jade. My second child was a girl who was blessed with the name Mollie. My third child was a boy who was blessed with the name Louis. My fourth child was a girl who we blessed with the name Annie. By the time Annie was born everyone gave us such strange looks and rude comments but I don’t care it’s my life. My fifth child was a boy who we blessed with the name Charlie. My sixth was a boy who we blessed with the name Daniel. Heavily pregnant with #7 who is going to be yet another boy! So excited!!

    Reply

  22. […] I counted I have nine children. Nine wonderfully loving, compassionate, clever, responsible children, who we hope and pray we are […]

    Reply

  23. […] Having a lot of children has saved me from the smugness of having it all together when I just had one. […]

    Reply

  24. This was great! I have 7 and you described my life to a T!! A very fun read! Thank you!

    Reply

  25. This was so much fun to read!

    Reply

  26. This was awesome. I have 8, and yes to all!

    Reply

  27. […] kids range in age from 9 months to 15 years. (There are nine of them.) When they are itty-bitty, it’s common to think of their nutritional needs and articles and […]

    Reply

  28. […] I know, for myself, I need protein in the morning in order to feel my best, think clearly, and to avoid rabid cravings followed by a sugar binge. I believe every person is unique and there is certainly no one-size-fits-all approach. But, for myself, I like at least 20 grams of protein in the morning. It’s a decent goal for me to try to meet my protein needs early in the day, to sustain me as a I chase around these 9 children. […]

    Reply

  29. […] affection looks and feels like. I have two teenagers, three tweens, and four little kids (yes, that’s nine). And they all know how to give and receive physical affection appropriately. We like to all pile […]

    Reply

  30. Ha ha! Have seven at home and one sleeping in Jesus (stillborn at 38 weeks) but suspect there’s a ninth in there. Hope to test soon. May have some Irish twins. My youngest is 4 months and my oldest 11. Many blessings! Thanks for sharing!

    Reply

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Hi, I’m Kate.  I love medical freedom, sharing natural remedies, developing real food recipes, and gentle parenting. My goal is to teach you how to live your life free from Big Pharma, Big Food, and Big Government by learning about herbs, cooking, and sustainable practices.

I’m the author of Natural Remedies for Kids and the owner and lead herbalist at EarthleyI hope you’ll join me on the journey to a free and healthy life!

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