Welcome to Barnyard Language.
Caite:We are Katie and Arlene, an Iowa sheep farmer and an Ontario dairy
Caite:farmer with six kids, two husbands, and a whole lot of chaos between us.
Caite:So kick off your boots, reheat your coffee, and join us for some
Caite:Barnyard Language, honest talk about running farms and raising
Arlene:families.
Arlene:In case your kids haven't already learned all the swears from being in the barn,
Arlene:it might be a good idea to put on some headphones or turn down the volume.
Arlene:While many of our guests are professionals, they
Arlene:aren't your professionals.
Arlene:If you need personalized advice,
Caite:consult your And maybe we'll make this a two part episode
Caite:since it's three hours long.
Caite:Yeah, maybe.
Caite:Or maybe not.
Caite:Maybe we'll just invite people to get a beer and get some supper and have a chat.
Arlene:Yeah, they don't have to listen to it all at once.
Caite:Raising babies and electrocuting
Arlene:raccoons.
Arlene:Language, and for only the second time in history, Katie and I are actually
Arlene:in the same place, and we have a guest.
Arlene:It's the third time in history, Arlene.
Arlene:Okay, well, second time recording.
Arlene:In recording history, yeah.
Arlene:Third time in the, in our life.
Arlene:And we're back in the place where we kind of met for the first time.
Arlene:So we're in Madison at Dairy Expo, and we have a guest with us today.
Arlene:The famous Dairy Carrie, Carrie Mess, is joining
Carrie:us today, too.
Carrie:I'm not sure if it's famous or infamous.
Carrie:Well,
Arlene:yeah.
Arlene:Potato patata.
Arlene:Potato patata.
Carrie:That's right.
Carrie:I mean,
Arlene:I'm cool with either.
Arlene:Whatever.
Arlene:So Carrie was one of our, our very first guests, I think, other than each other.
Arlene:And was Katie's mentor when the podcast idea got started.
Arlene:So, uh, it happened.
Arlene:You mentored us right into existence.
Arlene:I'm sorry.
Arlene:Hopefully the people listening are happy about it.
Carrie:No, I really love the community.
Carrie:That you guys have built through this podcast, you're really filling
Carrie:a niche that, um, was needed.
Carrie:Um, on the dairy side, we have the Dairy Girl Network that kind of does
Carrie:some of the same kind of thing of how we tie as women in the industry, um,
Carrie:all the roles we're responsible for.
Carrie:But you guys have taken, you know, some of that idea and made it not
Carrie:just dairy specific and, and really Connected with a lot of cool people.
Carrie:I love what you guys are talking about.
Carrie:Good
Arlene:job.
Arlene:Yay!
Arlene:Yeah, we're enjoying it too.
Arlene:And there is something about parenting as a separate facet of what we do, right?
Arlene:Because for so many, for so many of us, the farm becomes central
Arlene:to our role, but then raising kids and farming at the same time is,
Arlene:is not an easy job, as we all know.
Carrie:I always think it's funny when people think that, like, moms
Carrie:who are farmers are stay at home moms.
Carrie:And some of them are.
Carrie:And some of them are.
Carrie:I am not.
Carrie:Um, like, am I a work with kids mom?
Carrie:Is that?
Arlene:Yeah, working with your children.
Arlene:Like, working two jobs at the same time.
Arlene:It's perfect.
Carrie:Everybody loves it.
Carrie:Never goes wrong.
Carrie:But that's a lot of the listeners.
Carrie:You know, I said women earlier, but that's not true.
Carrie:You have people of all genders.
Carrie:Um, as part of the community, and that's why it's so important, because
Carrie:we gotta talk about this shit.
Carrie:Yeah.
Carrie:So everybody knows it's
Arlene:hard for all of us.
Arlene:Yeah, that's right.
Arlene:And when your kids are on the job site with you, or are in daycare,
Arlene:or wherever they happen to be.
Arlene:Right.
Arlene:When the work is happening, and we know that the work doesn't end
Arlene:even at the end of a daycare day.
Arlene:Even if you've got your kids in care, then you're still juggling all the things.
Arlene:All the things, all the time.
Arlene:That a 24 hour day job can sometimes bring with it.
Caite:I think two farm kids are different.
Caite:Um, I think with that comes.
Caite:I don't want to say an expectation of some of the behavior that we see from
Caite:our kids, but there are things that are, um, snuck by my kids that might
Caite:be more hammered down with town kids.
Caite:But.
Caite:You know, in case anyone missed Carrie's kid peeing.
Caite:I mean, he got off the bus before he started peeing, I think.
Carrie:So that was good.
Carrie:Yeah, he got off the bus and made it like four steps off the side of
Carrie:the road before he dropped her out.
Carrie:And had an incredible arc.
Carrie:That was really quite impressive.
Arlene:Um,
Carrie:but, I see.
Carrie:We live on a quiet country road, but his bus pulled off and he started peeing.
Carrie:Suddenly there was traffic, like all these cars coming by.
Carrie:Plus the
Arlene:whole side of the bus, I'm guessing.
Arlene:Well, no, that bus
Carrie:went by.
Carrie:They were going the other way?
Carrie:They went, but then the lakeside Lutheran bus came past.
Carrie:The church school bus came past.
Carrie:And they got the full view.
Carrie:Um, yeah.
Carrie:Yeah.
Carrie:I mean, I'm glad he made it off the bus.
Carrie:Clearly he had to go.
Carrie:That's an accomplishment in itself.
Carrie:But I haven't, maybe, done a very good job about, um, furthering,
Carrie:like, the modesty piece.
Carrie:So, Ben was born, and he has a birthmark that covers, like, half of his body.
Carrie:So, when he was born, and we were figuring everything out, the one thing
Carrie:I said was, like, okay, body positivity.
Carrie:We're leaning in on that, but we've maybe done a little too good of a job.
Carrie:Ben has no shame, at
Arlene:all, about anything on his body.
Carrie:And, um, doesn't, does not care.
Carrie:Does not care, at all.
Arlene:It'll come around eventually.
Arlene:How old is he?
Arlene:Five,
Carrie:but I don't think it's coming.
Carrie:I really don't.
Carrie:You've got time.
Carrie:That one.
Carrie:Um, not, not, not
Arlene:kid mooning, mooning people outside the, the, uh, the bus.
Sarah:If we're
Kristen:lucky only
Carrie:that, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Carrie:So it'll be fine.
Arlene:Yeah.
Arlene:Can't wait for that call.
Arlene:So given the fact that we are in Wisconsin means that I left the
Arlene:farm again, which is a wild thing.
Arlene:And.
Arlene:And I know that a lot of people, especially in the ag forums,
Arlene:talk about, you know, like never being able to leave the farm.
Arlene:And I think that even the fact that we can leave and I have some both like Not
Arlene:guilt personally, but guilt about the fact that we have the help to be able to do it.
Arlene:So I just want to say that out loud, that I know that not everyone
Arlene:gets the opportunity to get away.
Arlene:But you know, like, if there are times when you can, you know,
Carrie:that guilt for a second though?
Carrie:Yeah.
Carrie:It's not just guilt, it's also fear of being judged.
Carrie:Yeah, that's true.
Carrie:Oh, must be nice.
Carrie:Must be nice.
Carrie:Yeah, you could leave.
Carrie:Must be nice.
Carrie:And then I say the same thing when I see other people doing
Carrie:things that I want to do.
Carrie:Must be nice.
Arlene:Yeah, or even within industries, right?
Arlene:Like, oh, the crop farmers.
Arlene:Yeah, they get to go.
Arlene:What were they
Carrie:doing this winter
Arlene:when it was 20 below?
Arlene:Yeah, in January when all their water bowls are frozen and they,
Arlene:yeah, they get to go on vacation.
Arlene:But yeah, I mean, sure.
Arlene:Must be nice.
Arlene:It is.
Sarah:And it is nice.
Sarah:But we should be happy for
Arlene:people that they have that opportunity, right?
Arlene:We're in a place right now where we have older kids and we have good
Arlene:health and we know that we haven't always been in that place and not
Arlene:everyone can afford it or not in a, in a physical location where there is,
Arlene:you know, there isn't good employment, you know, like we, we are lucky that
Arlene:we've got people that we can depend on.
Arlene:And my father in law is still healthy enough to be able
Arlene:to keep an eye on things.
Arlene:Yeah, that's right.
Arlene:Feed calves and look out for sick cows, you know, that kind of stuff.
Carrie:Thank you.
Carrie:Yeah, we have, you know, we farm with my in laws, but my mother in law's retired
Carrie:after her farm accident, and my father in law's still out there, so, you know, he's
Carrie:there, some days he's wrecking more things than, than fixing, but, yeah, it's a body
Carrie:that, you know, we know will at least Yes.
Carrie:And we have some really good help and we're only 30 minutes from the expo
Carrie:grounds here so it's really easy for us to buzz in on this but for Pat
Carrie:and I we've both realized that it's really important for our relationship
Carrie:to take one night away, like.
Carrie:Every six months, if we can, like twice a year, if we can get it, just one night
Arlene:away from just the two of us.
Arlene:It's been so important for our marriage.
Arlene:Well, when one night, two days, like when you're with your kids and your
Arlene:in laws and your everybody all the time, it feels like a long time.
Arlene:If you can get away, we, yeah, sometimes, you know, Spring and fall we do try and
Arlene:often it's like it looks like it's gonna rain for the next two days Do you want
Arlene:to go somewhere and I mean obviously it's you know, like not ideal weather, but it
Arlene:doesn't matter like you can Yeah, if you can get away for a little bit of time.
Arlene:It doesn't mean a lot
Carrie:One of the things I've we've noticed is like we have to leave leave
Carrie:Because even though we don't live on the farm our farm in our house are separate
Carrie:What we find if we're not at the farm doing stuff there and we're just at
Carrie:home and like trying to relax at home we can't Because we see all the things
Carrie:that we haven't had time to do at home, and it doesn't work, and we have to
Sarah:be gone.
Sarah:Yeah,
Arlene:that removal from your workplace and your home is kind of critical
Arlene:for actually being able to fully...
Arlene:Let your guard
Carrie:down.
Carrie:And you know that 2k8 was working your day job from home too, like,
Arlene:where's the line?
Arlene:Yeah, the line exists.
Arlene:The computer's right over there, and you can just walk
Arlene:over and put in another hour.
Arlene:Shut the door.
Arlene:Yeah, my desk is in
Carrie:my bedroom.
Carrie:I can't, I can't lay in bed without seeing the computer on, and yeah.
Carrie:I know,
Caite:though, we went away for a couple nights a few weeks ago because
Caite:Jim won his concert two weeks ago, and it was amazing just to be Must
Carrie:be nice.
Arlene:Must be nice.
Arlene:I hope it was nice.
Arlene:It was nice.
Arlene:No, I'm telling you about all of that.
Arlene:No,
Caite:no.
Caite:The concert, everything.
Caite:It was amazing just to not have anything we should be doing.
Caite:Like, the only thing that was expected of us was to eat.
Caite:And show up for a concert and show up for a plane.
Caite:Check.
Caite:That was it.
Caite:And it was so, like, it's really uncomfortable when you
Caite:do leave because you're like, What am I supposed to be doing?
Caite:You're doing, right.
Caite:Where's my calendar?
Caite:What's on my schedule?
Caite:What's next?
Caite:What's happening in ten minutes?
Caite:And you're like, Nothing?
Caite:Right.
Arlene:Nothing.
Arlene:Yeah, whatever I feel like doing.
Arlene:Or, or I could do nothing.
Arlene:Right.
Arlene:What do
Caite:you mean I could just take a nap?
Caite:Yeah.
Caite:And I can actually take a nap without anybody climbing on
Caite:top of me and saying, Mommy!
Arlene:Yeah.
Arlene:Open my granola bar.
Carrie:Are your thumbs broken?
Carrie:Yeah, clearly.
Carrie:A lot of the times when we've been able to get away, like I was speaking and
Carrie:so Pat was able to like come with me.
Carrie:So I still didn't even fully have that, like, total disconnect where
Carrie:I didn't have to do that, but it was still totally worth it.
Carrie:Just to not, not be in our zip code.
Carrie:I think any way you can hack it, get some time away from the farm, we have to.
Arlene:Keep ourselves sane.
Arlene:Yeah, and the getting away from the farm and the kids combo is extra stressful.
Arlene:I mean, I know that.
Arlene:You know when you've got little people if you're breastfeeding or you
Arlene:know, like if they're not sleeping through the night It's not like you
Arlene:can just be like, hey grandma, you like to be up 24 hours a day, right?
Arlene:So I know that yeah, it's not always that easy But once you're in that place
Carrie:to be able to do it And a lot of times in farm families too,
Carrie:like that older generation isn't able
Arlene:Yeah.
Arlene:Or they might be in the barn so that you can leave the barn part, right?
Arlene:Right.
Carrie:Or they're just, you know, the age where they're not,
Carrie:they can't keep up with little
Caite:kids.
Caite:Yeah, that's right.
Caite:It is nice, since our kids are getting a little older, that they can go over
Caite:to Grandma and Grandpa's a little bit easier, because they don't have to be...
Caite:Adults frequently do not think my children have to be picked up and carried nearly
Caite:as often as my children still think they need to be picked up and carried.
Caite:But they're a little more self sufficient than they were a few years ago.
Caite:But, yeah, it's definitely, they're a lot.
Caite:That's for sure.
Caite:We
Carrie:have a dinner we're going to tonight as part of Expo.
Carrie:And so the kids are going to get off the bus at Grandma and
Carrie:Grandpa's and go to bed there.
Carrie:We'll pick them up.
Carrie:I don't know.
Carrie:Tonight, when we get home, or in the morning, um, but we were packing the stuff
Carrie:up, like, we're gonna stay overnight, and like, we'd bother putting the
Carrie:toothbrushes and toothpaste in there, because Grandma's not going to open
Caite:the brush
Caite:tonight.
Arlene:Grandma's not gonna remember, and then if they get
Arlene:taken out of the bag, then you're just not gonna have toothbrushes at
Carrie:home tomorrow.
Carrie:Exactly, so, you know, sometimes you just gotta give up.
Carrie:Yeah, that's right.
Arlene:And let it happen.
Arlene:Let some things go.
Arlene:Well, I think we are going to wrap up and go look at some more pretty cows.
Arlene:Yes, and maybe do
Caite:some, we've got some elite, elite cow areas to sneak into.
Caite:So if you don't hear from us, we need bail money.
Caite:We're in Madison.
Caite:We got busted for sneaking into private areas.
Caite:Super expensive cow areas.
Carrie:Yeah, they're not private.
Carrie:No, if you have anyone on drink
Arlene:down there.
Arlene:If you pretend you want to buy embryos.
Arlene:Yeah,
Caite:I could look real interested.
Arlene:Yes.
Arlene:Yeah.
Arlene:So thank you very much, Carrie, for joining us again
Arlene:and for the grilled cheese.
Arlene:Yeah,
Carrie:you guys have done a great job.
Carrie:I'm really proud of what you've built.
Caite:You guys don't even know what a big deal Carrie is.
Caite:She got like fast passes for grilled cheese.
Caite:I didn't even know that was a thing.
Caite:It's really helpful when
Carrie:your neighbor works for the company that
Arlene:That's the lineup for the grilled cheese here is very impressive.
Arlene:It is good.
Arlene:We are going to ask you to go back and listen to episodes with Sarah Zastrow.
Arlene:So she actually got to come on twice.
Arlene:So she is maybe our most popular guest other than Katie and myself.
Arlene:She's been here a couple of times and she is joining us from Michigan.
Arlene:So there was an episode early on with her while she was pregnant with
Arlene:her first baby and just announced.
Arlene:And then a second one where we threw her a podcast.
Arlene:baby shower.
Arlene:So if you want all the parenting advice before you have a baby,
Arlene:that's the episode to listen to.
Arlene:And then we also have...
Arlene:Arlene,
Caite:I'm going to interrupt for our listeners because this is not a video
Caite:medium, as Arlene keeps reminding me.
Caite:Sarah is currently hiding in a laundry room closet from her baby.
Caite:Um, I think there's a lot of dress shirts behind her and it's very quiet
Caite:and she said it's cool and nice in there.
Arlene:Yeah, yeah.
Arlene:So the baby doesn't know that she's still in there.
Arlene:Sarah.
Arlene:Yeah, that's right.
Arlene:And we're also talking to Kristen Kelderman, who announced her pregnancy
Arlene:to us on her podcast episode early on in 2021, I believe, or maybe
Arlene:winter of 21, 2021, 2022 is when we talked to both of these ladies.
Arlene:And she was actually pregnant with twins.
Arlene:So it's her first pregnancy, but she got double the money.
Arlene:So she has Two new babies and Sarah has one.
Arlene:And so this episode, we're actually talking to both of them about how life
Arlene:in the first year with baby has gone.
Arlene:And we have this interesting perspective of being able to go back and listen
Arlene:to what they thought it was going to be like before they had their babies.
Arlene:And then the reality of what it was actually like.
Arlene:So I'm going to start with Sarah, with our usual first question.
Arlene:Sarah, can you remind our listeners and us what you're growing?
Sarah:Yes.
Sarah:Okay.
Sarah:First off, thank you for having me back for the third time.
Sarah:I'm glad to be the three peat here.
Sarah:Um, so I am growing a baby, a toddler, a one year old, which is insane.
Sarah:Um, and then we grow corn and soybeans in Central Michigan and then we
Kristen:have kind of what I consider
Sarah:our hobby farm division as well.
Sarah:So we've got some chickens and turkeys and ducks and produce, you know, garden
Sarah:vegetables and that sort of thing.
Sarah:So, um, we're having a lot of fun right now.
Sarah:I'm picking strawberries, uh, every day, which has been, uh, really
Sarah:interesting with a one year old on my hip, but, uh, yeah, we're, we're
Sarah:having a lot of fun, so that's good.
Sarah:Growing chaos is, um, the primary crop around here.
Arlene:Yes, that's right.
Arlene:And for the people, as Katie said, it's an audio medium.
Arlene:Can you tell us what's on your shirt today?
Arlene:Because you dressed on theme for us.
Sarah:I did.
Sarah:I was going to dress up and look nice for you guys, but I have a shirt
Sarah:that said, good moms say bad words.
Sarah:And I was like, eh, it's on brand.
Sarah:So I'm wearing it.
Arlene:That is perfect.
Arlene:Kristen, can you remind us and our listeners what you're growing?
Kristen:Hello everyone, yes, good morning.
Kristen:Um, thanks again to Arlene and Katie for having me back again.
Kristen:Um, I feel, uh, so blessed to be here and to join, uh, the, uh,
Kristen:the most frequent podcaster here.
Kristen:Um, and, uh, yeah, so my life right now, I am growing.
Kristen:Uh, twin toddlers, which as I can attest to Sarah, the chaos is real and
Kristen:it is rampant in our house right now.
Kristen:Um, but in both a frustrating and an incredibly beautiful way, I'm
Kristen:trying to see both sides of it.
Kristen:Um, outside of being a mom, I am growing my career.
Kristen:I have started a new position, uh, that I'm really excited about, um, working
Kristen:in farm mental health here in Canada.
Kristen:for a new national organization.
Kristen:And, um, and that for me is just like really filling my cup these days, uh,
Kristen:in kind of taking a step back from mom life and getting back to who I would
Kristen:say, like, is just me, Kristen, myself, um, and taking myself back to, uh,
Kristen:to pre kid life, which is coming with a little, you know, some challenges.
Kristen:I'm now trying to balance and, and do mom life and career life at the same time.
Kristen:Um, but in my, you know, quote unquote spare time, um, I am also
Kristen:enjoying this summer getting back out into the garden and really.
Kristen:getting my hands dirty and growing my vegetable garden, doing
Kristen:some landscaping around here.
Kristen:So quite literally growing some plants and, and growing some, you know, gardening
Kristen:for me is kind of a form of therapy.
Kristen:So growing my therapy, uh, through my garden as well.
Arlene:It's nice to have you both back.
Arlene:I can just, uh, picture the, the toys and, uh, debris that's probably around
Arlene:your house at this stage of life.
Arlene:I don't have little people in the house anymore, but I definitely remember.
Caite:I've been doing a lot of cleaning out my Google Photos and coming across
Caite:memories of the kids at different ages and found one the other day of the girl child.
Caite:I'll probably use...
Caite:14 months old she had dumped an entire box of Cheerios out
Caite:on the floor my daughter And
Sarah:I play this super fun game where she as she eats she throws half of
Sarah:everything on the floor You know now that she's done with it right so I get her
Sarah:out of her Uh, high chair and then we race to see if I can sweep it up faster
Sarah:or if she can scarf it all up faster off of the floor because for some reason
Sarah:food mixed with dog hair tastes so much better and she was full in the high chair
Sarah:but now she's starving suddenly as she gets to the floor and I'm like, no, stop
Arlene:eating stuff off the floor.
Sarah:That's for sure.
Arlene:Yeah.
Kristen:Yeah.
Arlene:It's so much better down there.
Sarah:That's right.
Kristen:Different flavor profile, I think,
Caite:right?
Caite:It tastes more like the land.
Caite:If you eat it off the floor, it tastes more authentic.
Caite:And it's higher in fiber once it's got dog hair in it.
Caite:There you go.
Sarah:Um, it was a
Sarah:So I ended up with an emergency c section.
Sarah:I was six days overdue and they said we're going to induce you on Thursday night.
Sarah:So, Thursday morning I ended up having a c section, having an emergency c
Sarah:section and I just, um, didn't really...
Sarah:I didn't foresee that, you know, because I had everything planned and that was not in
Sarah:my plan, you know, so, um, anyway, that, I ended up having a super long labor,
Sarah:prodromal labor for like 11 days, which, um, they used to call that false labor.
Sarah:But now they say, oh, it's not false.
Sarah:It is labor.
Sarah:It's just kind of very slow labor.
Sarah:So, um, I was in prodromal labor for 11 days, which means I didn't
Sarah:sleep very well for 11 days.
Sarah:And so by the time labor came around, I was just absolutely exhausted.
Sarah:So I was in labor for about 40 hours, like active labor for about 40 hours,
Sarah:pushed for four and a half, and then I was like, We're done here, folks.
Sarah:We are done.
Sarah:Caught me open and get this shit over with.
Sarah:Like, I have never been so exhausted in my life.
Sarah:So, um, that was, uh, you know, a surprise.
Sarah:I had, for a long time she was breached, so I had sort of emotionally
Sarah:prepared for what would happen if I had to have a c section.
Sarah:But then she flipped, so I was like, Okay, check that off the list.
Sarah:We're, we're golden.
Sarah:We're in the home stretch.
Sarah:stretch here, boys.
Sarah:And, um, we were not, in fact, in the home stretch.
Sarah:So, uh, anyway, that was, um, like, not as difficult of a recovery as
Sarah:I had expected, uh, physically.
Sarah:I was more sore from pushing for so long, and I, like, my eyes were
Sarah:bloodshot, my cheek, like, the hollows of my cheeks were bruised.
Sarah:It was really...
Sarah:tough on my body.
Sarah:Um, but that was more from the pushing than the actual C section.
Sarah:My C section was great, really easy.
Sarah:The C section recovery was way easier than 11 days of labor, you know.
Sarah:So, um, anyway, ended up, um, you know, doing fine with recovery
Sarah:physically, um, but emotionally, uh, was really just rocked.
Sarah:So, I, um, I had always thought of like birth trauma as like, oh, people, you
Sarah:know, people can like die on the table and like people can, you know, hemorrhage
Sarah:and lose tons of blood and all these like really terrible things that could happen.
Sarah:Um, but I never thought of like, Oh, your, your body will be emotionally
Sarah:wrecked for a good solid week and a half.
Sarah:Um, good luck, you know, so anyway, I kind of, um, that was a little
Sarah:bit tough for me and then I just had some wild, wild hormones and I, it
Sarah:ended kind of in the two week period.
Sarah:So they're like, Oh no, it's, you know, it's fine.
Sarah:It ended, but just some really scary thoughts and really scary,
Sarah:like things going through my head.
Sarah:And, um, my husband was in the field, so we ended up having tons and tons
Sarah:of family over, which was really great, but also I definitely like.
Sarah:Put on a front when people were here, and then as soon as people left, it
Sarah:was a completely different story.
Sarah:So, I think that it was good that I was sort of prepared for that.
Sarah:Um, and I had watched some videos and things like that about, like, just
Sarah:postpartum hormones, and like, you will have some really scary thoughts, and you
Sarah:will think about some really horrible things, and, you know, like, I just
Sarah:remember, we're gonna really bring down the mood here, but it's all about reality.
Sarah:So, I'm gonna say it anyway.
Sarah:Somebody had told me that, um, like, they...
Sarah:So they felt like they were like grieving their old life.
Sarah:They felt like they, um, they kind of felt like they were babysitting
Sarah:and like, when's this kid's parents going to come pick, pick it up?
Sarah:Cause I'm tired of this, you know?
Sarah:And I definitely felt that.
Sarah:And I remember thinking like, If something happened, I don't even think I would
Sarah:care, you know, and I was so tired and so exhausted and I like fell asleep
Sarah:with the baby kind of like in the crook of my arm on the couch and I was kind
Sarah:of breastfeeding her and like she had fallen asleep and I had fallen asleep
Sarah:and my husband came out and he was like, Sarah, like, wake up, you know, like, the
Sarah:baby's not really in a great position, like, this is really scaring me, and I
Sarah:remember thinking, like, I don't even care if she dies, like, I would grieve
Sarah:that loss, and I would, um, I would be over it, and I would, and then, and then
Sarah:I had that thought, and I was like, oh, my, something is wrong, like, this is
Sarah:really not, not good, um, you know, and so, it ended up, like, I ended up doing
Sarah:a ton of journaling through that time, and kind of journaling everything that
Sarah:had happened with my birth, and these crazy thoughts I was having, and, um,
Sarah:And, and it ended up kind of fading and then after that it was kind of fine.
Sarah:So, um, that ended like in two weeks after my birth.
Sarah:Um, and then things got a little bit easier and she
Sarah:was sleeping better at night.
Sarah:So, um, yeah, but that first, that first couple of weeks was extremely challenging.
Sarah:Um, and just really scary.
Sarah:To, like, think about what your body's been through, what your hormones are
Sarah:putting you through, that you're getting to know this new alien that's suddenly,
Sarah:apparently, your responsibility, even though it doesn't feel like that.
Sarah:Um, and I'm so glad, Katie, you had said in our first, or the last,
Sarah:uh, podcast interview, like, you're not, you might not feel this way.
Sarah:Emotional attachment right away, and I did not at all.
Sarah:And that in itself scared me also, because I was like, what
Sarah:is wrong with me and this thing?
Sarah:And there was no bonding.
Sarah:And we had talked, I wanted this like golden hour so bad.
Sarah:And I was, Drugged that entire golden hour and I don't know what the baby was
Sarah:doing and I don't know what I was doing and I Woke up and she was breastfeeding
Sarah:and they were like, how does it feel?
Sarah:And I was like, I can't feel anything Like I have no idea, you know, so it
Sarah:was a complete Uh, completely different from what I had envisioned, and I
Sarah:think just getting, um, acquainted with, like, the reality of it took,
Sarah:took me a couple of weeks, you know.
Sarah:And then after that, it was a lot better, and I started to get out of the house
Sarah:a little bit, and started to exercise again, and I was doing journaling,
Sarah:and, um, it got better quickly, but that first, those first couple of weeks
Sarah:was whiplash, you know, really, really A lot different than I had expected.
Caite:I know, Sarah, I was thinking a lot about the Baby Blues this last week as we
Caite:were preparing for the show and thinking about, that I feel like we tell women that
Caite:They'll experience the baby blues, but it'll be hard because you'll love your
Caite:baby so much and everything will just be so beautiful that it'll you Yeah, I,
Sarah:first of all blues is very understated.
Sarah:That was not the blues.
Sarah:That was like, happens to somebody depth, I dunno, anyone
Caite:who's
Sarah:experienced it, something I don't, it, it felt like an Biss, that's for sure.
Kristen:Um,
Sarah:and I don't, in theory I loved my baby, but it was not an
Sarah:overwhelming sense of love and adoration.
Sarah:At first, you know?
Sarah:And so I think that kind of caught me off guard as well.
Sarah:Like I said, I'm really glad that you and a few other people had
Sarah:warned me of that because then I knew, like, oh, this could happen.
Sarah:This might be, you know, what happens.
Sarah:And so at least then I knew, like, I'm not completely alone, you know what I mean?
Sarah:And so I think that I talk about this not to, like, scare new moms
Sarah:or anything, but, like, that might happen to you, too, and that's okay,
Sarah:and it will pass, and you will grow to love your baby, and now I love her
Sarah:more than anything else in the world.
Sarah:Um, but it...
Sarah:It was just so unexpected.
Sarah:And no, there was no newborn bliss, no overwhelming sense of
Sarah:this is the best day of my life, nothing remotely close to that.
Caite:I feel like for me, that first couple of weeks was a lot like, like if
Caite:you see a mother raccoon with her cubs, like if you tried to touch one of her
Caite:babies, she'd rip your fucking face off.
Caite:Yeah.
Caite:But I wouldn't say that she's like, Oh, my precious angel babies, you know?
Caite:Yes, exactly.
Caite:There's not that emotional connection to them, where she's
Caite:like, They're the light of my life.
Caite:You know, she's just like, I'll fucking kill you if you touch them.
Caite:I don't like them that much, but I will kill you if you touch them.
Caite:Like, it's so weird that you guys are all muted and I can see you laughing, but
Caite:it's just like, dead silence on my end.
Caite:Okay, cool.
Caite:Anyway, yes, we're all nodding
Arlene:along.
Caite:Yes.
Caite:Yeah, it's it's a weird
Arlene:feeling.
Arlene:Yeah, it's hard to do a four way interview.
Arlene:We're trying not to overlap each other.
Arlene:But yeah, thank you Sarah for being so honest about that time
Arlene:because like you said, I mean some people do have that initial bond.
Arlene:They maybe have the labor they expected but so many of us don't and even if
Arlene:it's what In theory, what you expect, the experience is still something
Arlene:you cannot really prepare for there.
Arlene:There's nothing, there's nothing anybody can really say to tell you
Arlene:what it's gonna be like for you, because it's unique for every person.
Arlene:It's unique for every baby.
Arlene:So yeah, every time it's gonna be completely different and
Arlene:we really can't anticipate it.
Arlene:And it's good to be honest about how it is for different people so that all of those
Arlene:scenarios are at least things that you're.
Arlene:prepared for or or know that could happen.
Arlene:So, Kristen, do you want to talk a little bit about your labor and first few
Arlene:weeks, your initial days of motherhood?
Arlene:Which probably seems like a long way away now, but it was only a year
Kristen:ago.
Kristen:Oh, it does.
Kristen:You know, it feels like they say like parents, like time is like a
Kristen:vortex when you become a parent.
Kristen:It's both the longest, most arduous thing and also just like in a
Kristen:blink of an eye like passes by you.
Kristen:I completely feel that sentiment so real in my life today.
Kristen:Um, and yeah, just to start off, I just want to echo, uh, Sarah.
Kristen:I feel so many of those same feelings.
Kristen:Um, you know, motherhood.
Kristen:In those early days for me, um, was, felt so isolating a lot too, um, because you
Kristen:are just so encapsulated, um, and probably biologically we're forced to just kind of
Kristen:put those blinders on and focus on keeping these little humans alive, um, but yeah,
Kristen:I, I echo so many of, of what you shared.
Kristen:For me, having, uh, going into having twins, I was very well prepared
Kristen:with my birthing team and my OB that there was a high likelihood
Kristen:that I would have a c section.
Kristen:And so, I was very, I kind of went into it very open minded.
Kristen:I said, you know what, I, I had, you know, kind of a rough idea, a rough plan,
Kristen:but also, trying my best to just kind of go with the flow at the same time,
Kristen:uh, which for a type A personality, um, was a little bit difficult for me.
Kristen:Um, we, uh, we also knew that there was a really real, um, uh, risk of
Kristen:that the twins would come early too.
Kristen:So twins generally, um, are, are, can, can come quite early on.
Kristen:So, leading up to, my due date was supposed to be the beginning of June,
Kristen:Um, but already, I would say like, late April, May, I was already starting to kind
Kristen:of be like, Okay, when's the day coming?
Kristen:When's the day coming?
Kristen:When's the day coming?
Kristen:Just kind of like, um, kind of starting to feel some of that anxiety.
Kristen:And, um, cause I was really uncomfortable.
Kristen:Like, for me, pregnancy was not a cakewalk.
Kristen:I don't think that I was truly ready for all of the aches and the pains
Kristen:and everything that came with that.
Kristen:Um, and I would consider myself a rather, like, fit person, active person.
Kristen:I tried to stay, um, you know, throughout my pregnancy moving around and stuff
Kristen:like that, but I certainly was not what I expected I would be doing.
Kristen:Um, I was very much less active than I wanted to be, but that month, um,
Kristen:ahead of time, I was really starting to, uh, anticipate, um, you know, just
Kristen:wanting it to be over with, honestly, and not the fact that I wanted to
Kristen:meet my babies that I was so excited.
Kristen:I was like, I just want this to be done with.
Kristen:Um, so for us, I went into, uh, one of my OB appointments, and with the twins,
Kristen:um, they monitor the differences in the weights between the two of them.
Kristen:Um, and it became pretty apparent pretty quickly that, uh, we had
Kristen:gone over the allotted discrepancy.
Kristen:So one baby, um, appeared to be much bigger than the other and so there's
Kristen:a risk there and, um, the way that my OB explained it was that it's better
Kristen:for babies to be out of mom's womb at this point and survive, um, in the NICU
Kristen:than to stay with you and risk that.
Kristen:So I was induced, um, at 36 weeks, so about a month early, um, and quite
Kristen:honestly, The worst part of my whole labor was the induction part was that
Kristen:night before so I went into the hospital Um to be induced and then they sent me
Kristen:home For that night and said come back in around between six and seven the
Kristen:next morning and so that was the worst sleep I think of my entire life that
Kristen:i've ever had and Slept on the couch had a heating pad couldn't get comfortable
Kristen:turn the tv on like It was just hours of just feeling like really kind of
Kristen:uncomfortable and crampy and whatnot.
Kristen:Uh, we went into the um, into the hospital the next day and quite honestly, um,
Kristen:I was a textbook, um, birthing story.
Kristen:Um, I had Very little, um, very little pre labor.
Kristen:I did have an epidural, so once that kind of kicked in, I was like, smooth sailing.
Kristen:It's like, okay, I can feel this, I'm feeling good.
Kristen:Um, and almost, you know, I, I am very fortunate.
Kristen:I know that there are so many stories and birth traumas that are out there.
Kristen:Um, and I was, I was, Fully expecting worst case scenario.
Kristen:That's kind of what I went in with and um, the twins they Arrived very well.
Kristen:We delivered in the or and um, it was almost kind of like This weird calmness
Kristen:because again, they prepared me that like, you know Baby one comes and if
Kristen:baby two doesn't come or there's some complications like it can get hectic
Kristen:and crazy Really fast and there's lots of people and there's lots of stuff.
Kristen:So I was very much Psychologically and emotionally prepared
Kristen:for that and going into it.
Kristen:I was like, okay like, you know, um Ready to experience that.
Kristen:And then it was just this like weird calmness and I just remember sitting
Kristen:there with my husband and the team there and we were just laughing.
Kristen:Like we were literally laughing in the, like baby one had come.
Kristen:And so, uh, my daughter, Eleanor, she was born first and, um, I was
Kristen:expecting like, okay, baby two, like, you know, pretty quickly after that.
Kristen:And it was 45 minutes between the two of them being born and it was, again,
Kristen:kind of this, like, weird, calm, chatty, like, um, the doctor was making some
Kristen:jokes and the, um, the anesthetist had come in to check on us and it was
Kristen:just this, yeah, this kind of, um, almost, like, out of body experience.
Kristen:And, uh, thankfully my son was then born, uh, Knox, uh, 45 minutes later.
Kristen:And, um, because they were preemie babies, um, I got to hold both of them for a
Kristen:very short time period, uh, and then they were both brought into the NICU.
Kristen:Um, afterwards, my recovery was pretty dicey for a little bit there, um,
Kristen:I went through some pretty, like, kind of almost like shock symptoms,
Kristen:I would say, um, in terms of, like, Just like I was like vomiting.
Kristen:I was like Really hot and cold like kind of hypertensive like just this really
Kristen:weird feeling and that was something that really quite shocked me because
Kristen:I did Not expect like afterwards.
Kristen:I'm like, okay now I go to like my room and I just kind of relax and you know
Kristen:Wait for them to bring the babies to me And I have no sense of time in terms
Kristen:of what happened there at the hospital.
Kristen:Um, but eventually I was brought to go and see my babies and going
Kristen:into the NICU, that was something that I was not prepared for either.
Kristen:Um, again, I had, I had held both of my babies, but then.
Kristen:Going in there, being wheeled in on a wheelchair, um, in kind of,
Kristen:like Sarah said, this kind of like weird, fuzzy, drugged up state.
Kristen:And seeing these two tiny, little, like, shriveled potatoes sitting in these,
Kristen:like, incubation boxes with all of these, you know, lights and beeping and whatnot
Kristen:going on, it was a little surreal.
Kristen:And I was like, Those are my babies and similar kind of similar feeling like
Kristen:that connection was that bonding like, you know, from that point until, you
Kristen:know, bringing them home and all of that.
Kristen:It just felt very bizarre to me, um, that, okay, this is my reality.
Kristen:Now this is what life is like.
Kristen:And, um, we were very fortunate that, um, our NICU stay, we were there for three
Kristen:days and then got to bring them home.
Kristen:Um, which quite honestly, I didn't want to bring them home.
Kristen:I was like, you're safe here.
Kristen:I know you're good.
Kristen:I have all of these nurses helping and, you know, feeding and changing and.
Kristen:And, you know, all the censors and stuff are telling me that you're, you're good.
Kristen:Um, when they, when they told us, like, okay, you can go home now.
Kristen:It was almost like this really intense, like, anxiety, like, holy shit.
Kristen:I don't think I want to do this.
Kristen:And, um, but hey, you just kind of have to, have to, they kick you out, right?
Kristen:You, um, you're not allowed an infinite stay.
Kristen:And so we got home and I was fortunate.
Kristen:My husband.
Kristen:Were
Arlene:you in there the whole time too, Kristen?
Arlene:No.
Arlene:Did you stay in or did you get
Sarah:discharged and then were coming
Kristen:back in?
Kristen:The babies discharged.
Kristen:Yeah.
Kristen:Yeah, so I was discharged.
Kristen:Um, and so that first, the first night I stayed in the hospital.
Kristen:The second night we got to come home and then go back in.
Kristen:And then the third night we stayed and like did our test run with the babies.
Kristen:Um, Where we had to get up and feed them, uh, throughout the
Kristen:night and they were, like, out of their little, um, incubation boxes.
Kristen:And, uh, and then the next day, yeah, it was, uh, it was real life.
Kristen:So, that, uh, Good luck.
Kristen:Exactly, exactly.
Kristen:I, I was very fortunate.
Kristen:Our medical team was incredible and amazing and I just wanted
Kristen:to, like, package them up and bring them home with me.
Kristen:Um, the, uh, The recovery period for me, I was pretty thankful that, um, it
Kristen:was fairly, I think, standard textbook.
Kristen:Yeah, it was, you know, there were times when I didn't feel great and
Kristen:whatnot, but, um, myself, it was more the emotional, psychological
Kristen:side of like, okay, I'm a mom now.
Kristen:And like, still reminding myself that, hey, these are, these are my babies.
Kristen:And, and similar to Sarah, like, that connection that, um, That
Kristen:maternal ness, I didn't feel kick in.
Kristen:And it kind of started to yeah, kind of sit in my head and be like, I
Kristen:don't, I don't know if I like this.
Kristen:I don't, I don't know if I wanna do this.
Kristen:Can I, can I go back ? Can I, can I return?
Kristen:Like I don't, I'm not, I'm not really, uh, you know, in it all.
Kristen:And it was a really.
Kristen:It was a really difficult summer for me.
Kristen:Um, so the twins were born in may and throughout that whole summer like it
Kristen:was really um that grief of my previous life, I didn't anticipate that coming
Kristen:so Like, becoming so difficult for me.
Kristen:Um, because I thought, and you know, the advice and what people told me
Kristen:beforehand was like, Oh yeah, like, you just fit baby into your life.
Kristen:So you can go out and you can do all these things and you can, you know, you
Kristen:can garden and you can go out with your friends and you can just, you know, cart
Kristen:baby along with you wherever you go.
Kristen:Go to the grocery store.
Kristen:I was like, yeah, friggin right.
Kristen:I'm not taking two newborn twins to the grocery store.
Kristen:Like, as simple as a task as that may have seemed pre baby.
Kristen:It was monumentous, um, afterwards, and to the fact where it like, it caused me
Kristen:so much anxiety, and the, I just, I just wanted so desperately to be able to do
Kristen:some of those things again, um, that it was really difficult for me, um, that
Kristen:summer, especially because summer, you know, is such a difficult time for me.
Kristen:Um, yeah.
Kristen:is the time that I live for.
Kristen:I, I just, I love it so much and I want to be outside.
Kristen:And even just, there were days when the only outside time I got was, you
Kristen:know, standing on our front porch.
Kristen:And like, that was just, it was so hard to, to kind of feel like myself again.
Kristen:Um, and I remember I was very fortunate to have the support of our family come, um,
Kristen:and help look after the twins and my mom was, uh, uh, still to this day comes once
Kristen:a week to, uh, to help out with the twins and, um, those were the days when I would
Kristen:just kind of like pile up everything.
Kristen:Okay, I want to do this, this, this, you know, run errands, do all of that stuff.
Kristen:And there was one, um, one day that I was like, okay, I'm going to go to the grocery
Kristen:store and like, you know, Spend some time there and do all that I need and I was
Kristen:driving home And by our place there is a golf course and um, not that I'm a big
Kristen:golfer or anything Um, but it's you know, nice to do every once in a while hit some
Kristen:balls and uh and drink some beers but we I was driving by and I just saw these people
Kristen:out on the course and like the sense of just like That is so far away from
Kristen:my reality right now And that all those people out there are enjoying their time.
Kristen:They're in the sunshine.
Kristen:They're having fun.
Kristen:They're with their friends They're socializing like I just felt
Kristen:such a pit in my stomach that I am stuck being a mom right now.
Kristen:Um, and that I really had a hard time coming around to that.
Kristen:So it was, yeah, the
Arlene:idea that someone would have like two or three hours of
Arlene:spare time to do a hobby like that in, in that stage of life, right?
Arlene:Like just seems so, yeah.
Arlene:Like you said, so far from removed from your reality.
Arlene:Like, like how do you just golf?
Arlene:Like, how do you How would you even like the logistics of that?
Arlene:Like, yeah, like if going to the grocery store feels like a vacation,
Arlene:something like playing golf is just like, yeah, completely out
Arlene:of what you can even think about.
Kristen:Absolutely.
Kristen:Absolutely.
Kristen:And feeling like I felt like.
Kristen:Like, I've never been a jealous person, but I could feel that kind of like
Kristen:negative jealousy coming at me like, Oh, how dare you go to the golf course?
Kristen:Like, I, like, I want to go and do that.
Kristen:And like, that was just, yeah, just really a feeling and an emotion
Kristen:that I'd never experienced before and something that I really hadn't
Kristen:anticipated to come along in that, that motherhood journey that's supposed to
Kristen:be beautiful and amazing and bonding.
Kristen:Um, which is, as we all know, total bullshit.
Caite:I feel like something...
Caite:It's
Arlene:so hard to think about.
Arlene:Sorry, go.
Caite:Something that gave me the jealousy so bad, and I can only imagine with twins
Caite:because it's twice as much, is how much I took for granted things like going to
Caite:the library and using two hands to pick out books, or not having to wrestle a
Caite:stroller out of the back of the car, or God forbid when they get too big for
Caite:the bucket seat, and then you have to take the kid out of the car seat to take
Caite:them somewhere, and I mean you've got...
Caite:You guys are both nodding because you know exactly what I'm talking about.
Caite:You see people just waltzing into Walmart like it's nothing and just
Caite:like, looking at their shopping list without their baby actually eating it,
Caite:which has literally happened to me.
Caite:My child ate an entire sheet of paper one time while we were grocery shopping.
Caite:You know, and just that irrational rage that people could just be out with
Caite:their Having slept, having showered, you know, having socks that match,
Caite:whatever, just out in public using both hands and nobody screaming at them.
Caite:And nobody judging them for whether their kid has socks.
Caite:Wow.
Caite:Well, I'm going to go back to therapy because
Caite:this
Arlene:is obviously just opening a whole can of worms.
Arlene:Yikes.
Arlene:I think we don't talk enough about and I don't know.
Arlene:Yeah, I just was going to say I don't know that we talk enough about and yet
Arlene:I at times don't know how to talk about what you were just saying, Kristen, about
Arlene:the, the grief of life you had before.
Arlene:Because sometimes, now when I go to a baby shower, like, I want to warn the person,
Arlene:but I don't want to be that person either, to be like, soak it up, because you're
Arlene:never going to be this person again.
Arlene:But how do you tell someone?
Arlene:That you're going to turn into a new person and that
Arlene:everything is going to change.
Arlene:You're not, like you said, you're not just having a baby and maybe some babies
Arlene:fit into your life or that's what we tell ourselves, but I didn't have those babies.
Arlene:And even the babies that do fit into your life, you're still changing everything
Arlene:to, to make it look like they fit, right?
Arlene:And you're, yeah, you're not the same person anymore.
Arlene:And, and it's.
Arlene:It's okay to feel sad that you're not that person anymore.
Arlene:It's okay to grieve that loss and to realize that you aren't going back.
Arlene:It's kind of the same, you know, like you move on from high school or
Arlene:you move to a new place and you, you grieve the loss of those other things.
Arlene:But it's, it's hard to talk about when it's your kid because then,
Arlene:you know, like we always talk about, Katie, then it sounds like you're
Arlene:saying, I don't love my child because I'm sad that something has changed.
Arlene:But those two things can be true at the same time.
Caite:Well, and I, I think, too, for myself, I've changed so massively
Caite:and in so many amazingly good ways.
Caite:I am so much happier with the person I am now.
Caite:But the growing pains of getting here, and that it doesn't, like the baby
Caite:blues or whatever, it's not like it takes three hours and then everything
Caite:is great, you know, like, it takes time.
Caite:Right,
Arlene:it was hard for a few minutes, but now I'm all good.
Caite:Yeah.
Caite:And no matter how good the end result is, it was still painful to get here, and
Caite:that's, you know, and I, I feel like for me too, it was kind of like when you get
Caite:married and you stop, you know, like you spend however many of your years looking
Caite:for potential partners or, you know, Oh, that boy's cute, whatever, you know,
Caite:because you're like 13 and then, and then you get married and suddenly you're never
Caite:supposed to look at another human again.
Caite:And it's like, even if you don't want another person.
Caite:You've been doing it for so long, and I feel like having a baby is
Caite:a lot the looking was kind of fun.
Caite:Yeah, you're supposed to just drop everything and be
Caite:like, I am only a mom now.
Caite:That is it.
Caite:And if you can't just, like, subsume your entire existence into six
Caite:or, like, I guess twelve pounds of twins, then it's because you're
Caite:a bad person who is never happy.
Caite:You know, it's because you're ungrateful.
Caite:And not because you've spent 30 years being a person, just by yourself.
Arlene:Yeah, I
Sarah:really do need to go into therapy.
Sarah:I
Kristen:completely can appreciate those growing pains, Katie, that you mentioned.
Kristen:Um, identity, I think, is something that we don't talk about in motherhood.
Kristen:And, um, And in life in general, like who we are and what we were
Kristen:just so busy constantly just kind of trying to get to the next thing,
Kristen:trying to get to the next thing.
Kristen:That we don't take a step back and say, well, how am I feeling
Kristen:and how am I doing and, and what is this doing to me right now?
Kristen:To pause and to say, yeah, maybe I do need to go back to therapy because this was,
Kristen:Not the experience that I thought it was going to be and that it has impacted You
Kristen:know me as a human being so drastically And it I guess it doesn't even need to
Kristen:be drastically either like everybody has their own struggles within um within that
Kristen:and how they cope with that and identity for me has just been such a a theme
Kristen:throughout my life, I guess, um, that this whole motherhood, like, I almost resisted
Kristen:it for a lot and Just kind of like not wanting to admit it that like, yeah, I'm
Kristen:a mom now But also still wanting to crave that community too because I felt so
Kristen:isolated And not that the people around me or you know, my family and my friends,
Kristen:you know They were all so very supportive and wanting to you know, see you thrive
Kristen:and to help out but Not knowing how to ask for what I needed in that time, too.
Kristen:Um, because I was just in such a haze and in such a, a sleep deprived state, and,
Kristen:and hormones, and that that feeling of just kind of feeling out of control, but
Kristen:still having to function, um, to keep, you know, your, your family going and
Kristen:these, you know, you're, you're self fed and all of those like essential things.
Kristen:Um, And the smallest little thing can seem so monumentous to
Kristen:do, like taking the trash out.
Kristen:Like, I can remember just, you know, we live in a suburban neighborhood, so our
Kristen:driveway is like maybe 30 feet long.
Kristen:But it was like, oh my god, I have to get the garbage out today.
Kristen:Like, how am I going to do that?
Kristen:And just feeling so...
Kristen:Overwhelmed in a sense, and, and not, yeah, not really recognizing
Kristen:that it's not about the garbage.
Kristen:It's about everything that's happening in my life right now.
Kristen:Um, and, and really understanding that what we.
Kristen:How, how to communicate in those instances, um, you're almost
Kristen:relearning it again, right?
Kristen:Because now you're doing it, um, as a, as a mom, um, with all of these
Kristen:hormones coursing through your body and also, yeah, this identity shift
Kristen:and you're in a very fragile state because sleep deprivation is no joke,
Kristen:like that can do some really wonky, fucked up things to your brain that you.
Sarah:I thought I would be, this sounds ridiculous, I
Sarah:thought I would be better at.
Sarah:Delegating things that needed to be done to other people and
Sarah:communicating what I needed.
Sarah:And it used to not be difficult for me to delegate, to be like,
Sarah:Hey, can you do these dishes?
Sarah:Can you, um, do this?
Sarah:Can you pick me up some things from the grocery store?
Sarah:No, I didn't think twice about it.
Sarah:And then all of a sudden it feels like now that I, Can't do things for myself
Sarah:instead of it being a quick favor.
Sarah:It's a burden, you know?
Sarah:And so I didn't expect that things that used to be easy would be so difficult.
Sarah:Not like including things like getting the dishes done and the laundry done
Sarah:and taking out the trash and those sorts of things, but also like.
Sarah:Setting boundaries and communicating and saying, Hey, I really need whatever, three
Sarah:hours to go golfing or whatever it is.
Sarah:I, I used to be good at those things and suddenly I'm not.
Sarah:And I'm like, afraid to even utter those words, you know?
Sarah:And so, I don't know if that's hormones or the way that motherhood changes the
Sarah:weight of things or what that is, but I did not foresee Me having an issue with
Sarah:those things like I was listening back to our old episode and I had talked about how
Sarah:I was like already planning on delegating making this person do this and this person
Sarah:do this and I didn't do any of that like I
Arlene:Had them
Sarah:hold the baby and I did all that shit, you know, like it's so funny
Sarah:to me how Like like just how that was and I think now it's getting better
Sarah:and I'm finding my voice a little bit Again, but it's just so funny,
Sarah:like, I did not foresee that happening
Arlene:at all.
Arlene:I wonder if some of that is that feeling of, and I think that maybe we're kind of
Arlene:similar in this way, that the feeling of asking for help from someone when you have
Arlene:no idea when you'd be able to reciprocate.
Arlene:It's easier for me to delegate and to ask someone to do something for
Arlene:me when I think, well, when they have a problem, I can drop off muffins or
Arlene:I can pick up their kid or whatever.
Arlene:But when you're in that mode of just surviving yourself, and you're like,
Arlene:I'm asking somebody to do something for me, and there's no way I could, if they
Arlene:asked me the same question, I'd have to say no, because I've got nothing left.
Arlene:Like, I'm completely depleted.
Arlene:So I wonder if that's a little bit of those, the feeling of
Arlene:the, the early stages when.
Arlene:you've just got nothing to give back.
Arlene:So then you, then you do feel like you're a burden because you're
Arlene:like, well, I, I can't contribute.
Arlene:I can't, can't do
Sarah:it.
Sarah:I think that might be part of it.
Sarah:Yeah, because there, there's no reciprocation for those
Sarah:first several months.
Sarah:And even now, like, it's kind of shitty reciprocation, and it's
Sarah:probably going to be half assed.
Sarah:So sorry about it, you know, but I think that that's a really good point because,
Sarah:um, Yeah, I, I don't, I don't know.
Sarah:I think that's a really good point.
Arlene:One thing I didn't include in our list of, sorry, Katie, I just
Arlene:wanted to talk about something else.
Arlene:I was wondering, we hadn't, haven't, I didn't put it in our list of questions,
Arlene:but one thing that, that ends up taking up a lot of our time in those first few
Arlene:months is feeding, which is something we didn't talk about, and there's a lot of...
Arlene:We can, as mothers, put a lot of stress on ourselves about a cold point for a lot
Arlene:of, uh, a lot of medical and, um, society.
Arlene:Ladies both willing to talk about how your babies ate in the first
Arlene:year, or the first six months, which seems to be a critical pressure.
Arlene:Sarah, do you want to go
Sarah:first?
Sarah:Yeah, I can go first.
Sarah:I ended up breastfeeding, um, Scout for the whole first year and she had, um,
Sarah:some dairy allergies and then, um, we had really bad shortages in our area.
Sarah:Um, and I am not, I didn't think that I would breastfeed for the whole
Sarah:first year, but it ended up being, so it was like 44 for a can of, um,
Sarah:formula and it was the little can.
Sarah:So that was like a day, it was like about a day.
Sarah:A little over a day and a half for 44 and I'm like, I cannot afford this
Sarah:and she didn't tolerate it super well.
Sarah:And so I was like, well, I guess I'll just keep breastfeeding, you know, um,
Sarah:but it was a, it was not an easy journey.
Sarah:I was a just enough for, I constantly was having to power pump.
Sarah:I would usually like power pump twice a week just to make sure that my supply
Sarah:was like staying up enough and it seemed like it would, I would get it.
Sarah:To where it was good and then it would dip and then I would get it back up
Sarah:and dip and get it back up and dip and so it was a constant constant battle.
Sarah:Um, and I had mastitis and clogs and she, um, at four months decided
Sarah:that toys were more fun than eating.
Sarah:And so I pretty much, um, pumped during the day.
Sarah:She would eat at night if it was dark or if it was if it was
Sarah:just her and I at home alone.
Sarah:So, Sometimes she would eat, um, but I have a really slow let down.
Sarah:So then she would get really frustrated.
Sarah:And so, um, we ended up breastfeeding and struggled through it.
Sarah:And there was a lot of pumping and dishes involved.
Sarah:Um, but it was, I didn't envision that for myself, you know?
Sarah:And so, um, yeah, that's, uh, I'm really glad to be weaned.
Sarah:So really, really.
Arlene:Yeah, that sounds like a lot of pressure.
Arlene:What about you, Kristen, with two babies to
Kristen:feed?
Kristen:Yeah, so I, I decided, um, pre delivery that I was going
Kristen:to formula feed the twins.
Kristen:Um, I had done a lot of research and talked to a lot of other moms about
Kristen:their experiences and whatnot, and certainly I, I kind of came at it from
Kristen:my own mental health standpoint, knowing my own, um, stress levels and whatnot.
Kristen:And I just, in my mind, I couldn't logistically understand how to feed two
Kristen:babies and survive at the same time.
Kristen:And certainly, I know there are women that do it, and that is absolutely incredible.
Kristen:I am in awe of them.
Kristen:Um, but for me, I chose to formula feed, uh, pre babies.
Kristen:Um, Would I have chosen the same thing knowing the struggles that
Kristen:we had through the last year?
Kristen:Um, probably not.
Kristen:Like Sarah said, um, we had extreme shortages in our area and it was so
Kristen:stressful because I just assumed, oh, you need formula, you go to
Kristen:the store, you get the formula, you feed the baby, whatever, done.
Kristen:And And
Arlene:like we said, going to the store is already
Kristen:That is so true.
Kristen:Exactly.
Kristen:Absolutely.
Kristen:And so We, we struggled.
Kristen:Um, we started off the twins, um, on the formula that they had at the hospital,
Kristen:um, which was a, like a pre mix stuff, so it was great, it was just like ready
Kristen:feed, um, which was fantastic, and so, um, they, we, as a recommendation from
Kristen:our, from the, from Public Health, uh, we fed that to them for two, two ish
Kristen:months, um, before we went to powdered formula, and that stuff is Friggin
Kristen:expensive like when you find it you we bought it and I can remember going
Kristen:to walmart over and over again and Talking about asking people for favors.
Kristen:My number one favor was if you see formula buy it.
Kristen:I will e transfer you immediately um, and so I had like all of my family, friends,
Kristen:scouring, looking out, um, on any store.
Kristen:My mom would go to multiple stores and ask, and then they started to put limits
Kristen:on, you know, how many you can take.
Kristen:And it didn't matter that I had two babies to feed.
Kristen:I was one, I was one parent, and so they would only let me take one, um, container,
Kristen:which would just, you know, be eaten up within, like, a matter of, Hours, if not
Kristen:a day, um, so that was extremely stressful and something that I never anticipated.
Kristen:I don't think any parents did, um, but thankfully we, we were able to still
Kristen:continue feeding the twins because, um, I, I didn't nurse at all, so my supply like
Kristen:very quickly, um, dried up, um, and so.
Kristen:I was like, well, what, how, like, I don't even have an option here.
Kristen:Um, so, on top of that, having two babies with two different needs,
Kristen:um, our daughter, she had some very significant reflux issues pretty early on.
Kristen:And being a first time mom, I had no idea.
Kristen:I knew babies spit up.
Kristen:I knew they were fussy.
Kristen:I knew they cried.
Kristen:Um, but something just seemed off with Ellie.
Kristen:Like, she was just not comfortable.
Kristen:Really, like, Feeding was a challenge for her and afterwards she was always
Kristen:just so just, yeah, frustrated it seemed.
Kristen:And, um, so through a series of trial and error and finally, you know, getting, um,
Kristen:getting to the doctor and talking to them about it, we tried all kinds of different
Kristen:formulas, uh, to see what fit well with her, her tummy and her reflux and whatnot
Kristen:and went to go and see a pediatrician.
Kristen:Thankfully, she wasn't, uh, she didn't have, um, what they would classify as
Kristen:a cow's milk protein allergy, but she just had a really sensitive stomach.
Kristen:And so, not only feeding formula to two babies, but feeding two different formulas
Kristen:to two babies, um, that was, again, a challenge that I didn't anticipate,
Kristen:and something that brought me so much anxiety, that, like, I would keep, like,
Kristen:Stock like we would have our stockpile of each formula and down to the day.
Kristen:I knew how much we had, um, and how much I needed to get.
Kristen:And so, you know, I tried not to get into that.
Kristen:Like, um, you know.
Kristen:fear buying and like stockpiling mode.
Kristen:But as a parent, when that's your only option to feed your infant,
Kristen:like you can't help but, but do that.
Kristen:So whenever we would find it, I, you know, I would try to get as much as I could.
Kristen:And so, yeah, that was our feeding journey.
Kristen:I am so thankful.
Kristen:They're on solid foods now and we are, um, way past that, but.
Kristen:Certainly, I feel for all the parents out there right now who, who do and are
Kristen:continuing to experience these shortages because you are literally have no control.
Kristen:Seems
Arlene:like a basic, and it is, it's a basic need this.
Arlene:Yeah, it's been such a wild time for anyone who is, yeah, like you
Arlene:said, it seems this is something that our infants need to survive
Arlene:and that that was not available.
Arlene:When people needed it, it was such a, such a scary situation, and I don't
Arlene:think that there were so many people who, I mean, if you're not in it,
Arlene:you didn't have to think about it, or it wasn't even on the radar, right?
Arlene:Like, it, yeah, you didn't have someone in your life who was feeding, it was
Arlene:in the news once in a while, but if you weren't in the mom and baby groups on,
Arlene:you know, on social media, baby during that time, probably lots of people didn't
Arlene:even know it was an issue, but it was such a huge thing for so many people.
Arlene:Mm hmm.
Arlene:So, in both of your original episodes, we ended up talking
Arlene:about stress and mental health.
Arlene:So, Sarah, you talked a bit about the course of the past year, the
Arlene:first few weeks, but how do you feel like your mental health and your
Arlene:stress level has been kind of over?
Arlene:So,
Sarah:overall, I think it's been pretty good.
Sarah:I have Um, a lot of help, you know, and so that helps too.
Sarah:Um, Scout goes to my mom's once a week and Zach's mom's once a week, so
Sarah:I have enough time to get some self care in and run my errands and do a
Sarah:few fun things and stuff like that.
Sarah:And I'm good about, like, carving out minutes during nap time and after
Sarah:bedtime and stuff like that to make sure that I'm like, um, doing the
Sarah:things I need to do to fill my cup.
Sarah:I'm a big person, like I need.
Sarah:some quiet time.
Sarah:I need some me time.
Sarah:And so just knowing that I have to prioritize that I think has helped.
Sarah:Um, and so also I went to therapy and that helped a ton to just
Sarah:like have somebody to talk to.
Sarah:And I feel like there's so much judgment in parenthood.
Sarah:Like, I don't, I just need to get this stuff off of my chest.
Sarah:I really can't have a friend or a family member being like, well, Why don't you
Sarah:just or why isn't this happening or whatever like I don't have time for
Sarah:that shit and also I can't tell somebody something and then like Fear that they're
Sarah:gonna bring it up again against me.
Sarah:You know what I mean?
Sarah:And so I was like, okay therapy it is which has been great and I've done
Sarah:therapy lots and lots and lots of times And so I just, I think I did it for like
Sarah:two months and it was great just to get some stuff off of my shoulders, off of
Sarah:my chest, and there's a ton of other stuff happening with family right now.
Sarah:And, um, so I think that that has helped tremendously.
Sarah:I'm just, mental health is always just a slow roll for me.
Sarah:Like, something I have to stay up on.
Sarah:It's something that has to be a priority.
Sarah:Um, or else.
Sarah:Things get out of control really quickly, both with depression and anxiety.
Sarah:And so I think that, um, I have after the first little bit.
Sarah:So, so the first two weeks were really hard and then things got pretty easy.
Sarah:And then the four months sleep regression wrecked my world.
Sarah:Um, and then that lasted for a long time in that.
Sarah:So at the four months sleep regression.
Sarah:was when I went back to work, which was a clusterfuck beyond imaginable.
Sarah:And then we went into the field.
Sarah:So then we were super busy and I was like, well, I can't really like, like
Sarah:I knew I needed to sleep train her.
Sarah:I knew that, that for, I wanted to do Ferber.
Sarah:I knew that she's a kid who needed that and not that everybody does.
Sarah:And I know there's lots of opinions on that and that's fantastic.
Sarah:I needed that and she needed that, but also how can you sleep train a kid when
Sarah:they're sleeping in a tractor three naps a day and bedtime isn't consistent?
Sarah:Wake time isn't consistent, you know, so I felt like I had to
Sarah:wait till after harvest was over.
Sarah:So I ended up sleep training or closer to six months, um, which was a saving grace.
Sarah:It was, oh my gosh, I, if you have a kid who's not a good sleeper.
Sarah:Ferber it up, baby.
Sarah:Like, it, it, it was a lifesaver for us.
Sarah:Literally a lifesaver.
Sarah:Um, and so I counted one day.
Sarah:I was, I, in one day, I spent seven and a half hours trying
Sarah:to get her to fall asleep.
Sarah:In one day.
Sarah:And I was like, This is why I'm crazy!
Sarah:Right?
Sarah:You know?
Sarah:Um, and so.
Sarah:Exactly.
Sarah:You can't, you can't.
Sarah:Oh, and you're working full time right now, you know, so, um, that was insane.
Sarah:And so, um, after so kind of the first couple of weeks were tough and
Sarah:then it got easier and then four to six months was rocky and I blocked
Sarah:most of that out of my memory.
Sarah:I don't remember a lot of it.
Sarah:I know that going back to work was really rough.
Sarah:I know the harvest was really rough.
Sarah:I know that I was waking up a lot and then Ferber came along and things
Sarah:have been smooth sailing since then.
Sarah:Not that she hasn't regressed or we haven't done little
Sarah:resets or things like that.
Sarah:But, um, that has.
Sarah:Sleep makes the world, world of difference.
Sarah:And when you have sleep, then other things fall into place, you know?
Sarah:And so, um, that has made, I think, the biggest difference for me.
Sarah:So, just knowing that I need to prioritize that and stuff has been really key.
Sarah:And my husband has a lot of health issues.
Sarah:So, part of it also is like, he can't really have not a lot of sleep either.
Sarah:You know what I mean?
Sarah:And so...
Sarah:Um, there's a tremendous amount of like, uh, like, like saying they
Sarah:like, why doesn't your husband get up
Kristen:with them?
Kristen:Like,
Sarah:I don't have time for that.
Sarah:He doesn't have time for that.
Sarah:That I'd still have to get up and pump, like
Kristen:shut up.
Kristen:You know what I mean?
Sarah:And not that he's not helpful and not that he not that men shouldn't
Sarah:get up at night with their babies, but in our situation, it just.
Sarah:That would have been way more difficult for you know, so anyway, I think that
Sarah:um overall we're doing good now We're we we hit our stride after six months And I
Sarah:also think that like there's something to be said when babies can reciprocate love
Sarah:You know what I mean and for so long.
Sarah:They're just like Sitting there like a bump on a log and then they can hug
Sarah:you and run up to you and say mama and like that Warms your heart there is
Sarah:there is something to be said for that in terms of like not only filling your
Sarah:cup But just like that human connection, you know, and so I feel like now that
Sarah:we're in that stage It's so much easier than it was in the first little bit.
Sarah:Yeah,
Arlene:that all makes a lot of sense I know with the the dad Waking up with
Arlene:the babies, like I breastfed all of mine for the year and sometimes a little bit
Arlene:more and it was like, so if he gets up, then the baby screams harder because they
Arlene:just want to eat and I had to probably wake him up to go and say, could you
Arlene:go and see if you can get the baby?
Kristen:Also, I'm going to have to
Sarah:wake him up three or four times for him to actually get his ass out of bed.
Sarah:So then I'm going to be mad, he's going to be mad, the baby's mad, and
Sarah:now I have to pump and do dishes.
Sarah:And, yeah.
Arlene:This is so helpful, yeah, for everyone.
Caite:Well, and as with, as someone with two littles close in age, and I'm sure
Caite:Kristen's in the same spot, that if one wakes up and then you have to wake your
Caite:husband up three times, then the other kid is up, the dogs are up, the cats are
Caite:up, neighbors five miles away are up.
Caite:And then I'm pissed at my husband, and the baby, and myself.
Caite:And the universe, and it, not being able to, yeah, everything, like it's easier,
Arlene:and it's really easy to fall back asleep,
Sarah:and after all, that's what I was just going
Kristen:to say, and when I'm that mad,
Sarah:falling back asleep is not really an option.
Sarah:Now I've got to fight with my
Kristen:husband for an hour.
Kristen:I mean, it's just not worth it.
Arlene:Even if he's gone back to sleep, I'm fighting in my head.
Arlene:Your field of.
Arlene:Education and expertise is also in mental health.
Arlene:Do you think that impacted you differently, kind of
Arlene:knowing what to expect?
Arlene:Yeah, now I'm googling
Caite:divorce lawyers.
Arlene:Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Arlene:Googling that.
Arlene:So, Kristen, are you willing to talk a little bit?
Arlene:I mean, I know you're, did that impact at all how you felt about your stress level
Arlene:and your mental health over the last year?
Kristen:I would say yes and no.
Kristen:Um, and in a sense, my, my mental health journey postpartum,
Kristen:um, was really up and down.
Kristen:And, um, I certainly had some seasons and some time sprints
Kristen:that were easier than others.
Kristen:And so with, um, with me being, I was still, uh, trying to complete my
Kristen:master's, uh, when the twins arrived.
Kristen:So, What we had planned was that I would take a four month maternity leave.
Kristen:Um, and, uh, And, uh, focus on the kids for those four months.
Kristen:And then we were very thankful that, um, my husband's work has parental leave.
Kristen:And so he would take the following four months, I would finish up school, um, and
Kristen:then we would figure it out from there.
Kristen:Which did go to plan, um, in some ways and not in others.
Kristen:And so those first four months, um, of me, Uh, kind of being the primary
Kristen:parent, uh, during the day and my husband does work at home as well, which a
Kristen:lot of people are like, Oh, that must be so great and so nice, which it's
Kristen:great to have an extra set of hands, but also knowing that he has other,
Kristen:he's there, but he can't always help.
Kristen:Uh, he hears the screams, but he can't always grab a baby, uh, cause
Kristen:he's in a meeting or he's, you know, running to, uh, to do the next thing.
Kristen:And so, um, that was that those first four months, um, you
Kristen:know, it was just a lot of.
Kristen:Trying to unders like, to figure out motherhood on my own, and I really
Kristen:struggled with being that kind of self critical person and, you know, thinking
Kristen:about, like, well, why isn't this going the way that I think it should be going?
Kristen:And why are they doing this?
Kristen:And why?
Kristen:Like, I was always questioning, well, why is this happening?
Kristen:And why is this?
Kristen:And so many times people would be like, well, they're just a baby.
Kristen:That's what happens.
Kristen:And to me, that was not a good enough answer I needed to know.
Kristen:To know which now thinking about it.
Kristen:It's like well there that is the only answer really Um, but for me in that
Kristen:that mindset that I was in Um, it was just so all encompassing, well
Kristen:why aren't these sleeping and why are they crying and what is going on
Kristen:and why aren't they eating right now?
Kristen:And I always just had to like, you know, really, I had kind of this
Kristen:like tight feeling around like I need to control everything, um,
Kristen:because I want it to go this way.
Kristen:And we would hit a good day and it'd be like, oh, awesome!
Kristen:Finally we're hitting our stride.
Kristen:We're doing great.
Kristen:And then the next day would absolutely go to shit Like there was no question
Kristen:about it And I don't know if it was just like the cadence of our days or whatnot
Kristen:But mondays for us were like absolute shit shows I was just kind of like every
Kristen:monday and I came to a point where like I would almost like Feel that tension and
Kristen:anxiety leading up to a monday and being like, oh my god, this is horrible Like
Kristen:i'm i'm not working so I don't have that like work stress of uh of a monday But
Kristen:for some reason the kids were just like a nightmare that day and I was just like
Kristen:absolutely spent at the end of the day So we, you know, kind of, we get through the
Kristen:summer, we get to the fall and I'm like, okay, great, awesome, I'm going to get
Kristen:back to school, I'm going to, you know, focus on that, and Tony's going to be,
Kristen:you know, taking care of the kids, and that'll be awesome because I don't have to
Kristen:do any of that, and we start transitioning through the fall and it's just like, I
Kristen:had such a hard time letting go after being the primary parent, um, and And it
Kristen:kind of created a little bit of tension between us, I would say, um, because
Kristen:he Seeing it now from his perspective.
Kristen:He was like, well, why don't you trust me to take care of our kids?
Kristen:He's like I'm the dad like I have the time I can this is what I'm supposed to
Kristen:be doing And I was just kind of like well Have you you know when the if the I was
Kristen:in my office, you know doing stuff and I could hear the kids in In the house for
Kristen:instance, and I was just like I would come out and be like, oh, have you tried this?
Kristen:Or what about that or you know has have you changed their diaper?
Kristen:Have they had a poop today like blah blah blah blah blah blah blah and I
Kristen:would just like start like ranting and going off and he's just like He would
Kristen:look at it and be like, you, you know, like, I, I don't have the confidence
Kristen:in him as a parent and it wasn't that.
Kristen:It was like my own.
Kristen:I was like, why aren't these kids like, why aren't they acting how we, we, we
Kristen:think they should be acting and how, how I want them to be and controlling them.
Kristen:And so that was, um.
Kristen:That was right around, like, the fall, the four month mark, and so we certainly
Kristen:went through the hellish four, four month sleep regression too, and with
Kristen:two babies, like, oh my god, like, it was, we went right into sleep training.
Kristen:As soon as I felt like they were ready for it, we firboarded up, and it, also, Sarah,
Kristen:yeah, like, I can't, I don't think I would be, um, a functioning human without that.
Kristen:Uh, we sleep trained the babies, and they, they both were, Um,
Kristen:had the right personality for that and we, we got through that.
Kristen:Um, but then we kind of got into this phase where the kids were
Kristen:sleeping and things were going well.
Kristen:Um, and then I started to have, um, some personal challenges,
Kristen:uh, with my mental health.
Kristen:And it was, you know, looking back at it now, it's easy to look back and see all
Kristen:the red flags and the signs and whatnot.
Kristen:Um, but in the moment I.
Kristen:Really was having a hard time, um, with a lot of my personal anxiety issues, um,
Kristen:that I had struggled with pre partum and like, you know, before becoming a mom.
Kristen:Um, but this was at a level that I wasn't, um, I hadn't really experienced before.
Kristen:And so, I was really struggling, um, with kind of racing thoughts and
Kristen:ruminating thoughts and not really being able to shut my brain off.
Kristen:Um, and, you know, that's, I think most moms can attest to
Kristen:kind of feeling that a lot.
Kristen:Your brain just like, you know, clicks on and it's always popping
Kristen:off about to do lists and this and that and on the farm and whatnot.
Kristen:Um, but for me it was, to a point where it was really starting to affect
Kristen:my sleep and I was not sleeping.
Kristen:Um, but the babies were sleeping, which then frustrated me because
Kristen:I was like, why can't I sleep?
Kristen:My kids are sleeping.
Kristen:I finally got to this stage.
Kristen:What is wrong with me?
Kristen:Why am I not sleeping?
Kristen:You know, what's going on with me?
Kristen:And it was just kind of like, start to cycle.
Kristen:And this really, um, I would say went on for about six months, um, where I was on
Kristen:again, off again, um, mostly not sleeping through the night, um, just really having,
Kristen:and the, the rest that I did have wasn't, um, you know, restorative and good for me.
Kristen:So then the days were hard, um, and I was trying to finish school and
Kristen:also be a mom on the side and be a partner and, you know, do some self
Kristen:care for myself because I knew.
Kristen:Um, you know, being in mental health and, and studying it and knowing all the good
Kristen:things that I should be doing for myself.
Kristen:I knew what I should be doing, but I did not have the capacity
Kristen:to be able to do that for myself.
Kristen:Um, which was also a frustration for me because I'm like, why can't I do this?
Kristen:I know this would help me if I could get to it or if I could find the time or if I
Kristen:could find, you know, quiet myself down.
Kristen:long enough to just be able to do that, to, you know, to go for a walk
Kristen:or to, um, to, you know, eat a healthy meal or something along those lines.
Kristen:Um, so for me, um, those, the red flag really was like my sleep.
Kristen:That was something that I, I can't function without sleep.
Kristen:I've always been the type of person that I need my eight hours.
Kristen:Otherwise I just can't get through the day.
Kristen:And so, you know, after months of experiencing this, I was like, okay,
Kristen:I need, I need to do something.
Kristen:This can't go on.
Kristen:This is not sustainable.
Kristen:This is not good for anyone, including.
Kristen:myself the most.
Kristen:And so, um, I met with my, my doctor, my GP, um, who, at first,
Kristen:we started with a sleeping pill, um, just because I was like, that
Kristen:at least will give me some rest.
Kristen:And so, after, um, about a couple months of, um, of using that, which was kind of
Kristen:working here and there, but then I would go through going a really difficult, you
Kristen:know, just kind of worrying anxiety spell, um, then the sleeping pill wouldn't work.
Kristen:I would wake up, um, I would go to bed, have no problem falling asleep because
Kristen:I was exhausted throughout the day.
Kristen:Like, you know, just dealing with the kids and all of the just life stuff
Kristen:every day, um, at the end of the day.
Kristen:I was exhausted, so falling asleep was not an issue for me.
Kristen:It was staying asleep, and so I would wake up multiple times throughout
Kristen:the night and again, not be restful.
Kristen:I would move to the spare room, I would go to the couch, I would turn the TV on.
Kristen:I would, you know, try to read a book.
Kristen:I would listen to a sleep meditation, like all over the things.
Kristen:I would just kind of like go through and eventually, At some point, I would sort of
Kristen:doze off, but then by that point, it was time to wake up and feed the kids again.
Kristen:And so, um, the sleeping pill kind of helped for a little bit, but
Kristen:then, um, it wasn't really a, a a sustainable long term option for me.
Kristen:And so I was like, okay, well, what's next?
Kristen:What can I be doing?
Kristen:And so throughout that process, I did, um, I was, I was journaling.
Kristen:I was trying to do regular meditations and some of that stuff
Kristen:was, was helping, um, and was.
Kristen:Um, you know, good for me.
Kristen:Um, but it still wasn't getting to the point where I knew I needed to be.
Kristen:Um, in terms of like, healthy me and like, really showing up as my full self.
Kristen:And so, I went back to my doctor again and I said, Look, um,
Kristen:you know, this isn't working.
Kristen:And I should also add as well that I did
Kristen:Um, and so that was something also that I, I knew I needed to do for my
Kristen:self care, um, and thankfully with my mom, she would come once a week.
Kristen:So I knew I would have, you know, an hour every Thursday that I could talk to my
Kristen:therapist, similar to like what Sarah said, and just kind of like unload and,
Kristen:um, And this was something, you know, the, the postpartum anxiety was something that
Kristen:I, um, I spoke with her quite a lot about.
Kristen:Um, and so once I got to that point where the sleeping pill wasn't really working,
Kristen:I knew I needed something else, I, I had kind of struggled with the idea of
Kristen:turning to um, an anti anxiety medication.
Kristen:Um, and For me, I know, um, being in the field of mental health,
Kristen:all of the good things that can come with taking medication.
Kristen:Um, and that it is something that I encourage others, that if it is something
Kristen:that you want to consider for your mental health, I encourage people and I know
Kristen:that they can be very valuable, uh, tools for people to use in coordination with.
Kristen:a lot of other self care practices, and so when it came for time for me to consider
Kristen:that for myself, I had a hard time just kind of processing that and being
Kristen:like, well, why do I need medication?
Kristen:I should know better.
Kristen:I should know how to, you know, get myself healthy again, um,
Kristen:without the help of this, and so.
Kristen:So, through a lot of talking with my therapist about this, and um, one of the
Kristen:things that really kind of clicked for me, um, was she, she enlightened me and said,
Kristen:you know, you're, you're taking a sleeping pill every day, so how different is it
Kristen:than taking an anti anxiety medication?
Kristen:She's like, the sleeping pill's not working for you, but you still take, like,
Kristen:but you're still, you know, using it.
Kristen:Why, what's your hesitation in taking, um, taking a different form of medication?
Kristen:And so, So, that kind of shifted my mindset a little bit to say, yeah, you
Kristen:know what, why, why do I, um, have this kind of internal bias, um, and the, this
Kristen:thought pattern, and so I, I took some time to really sort of understand my,
Kristen:my internal hesitation around that, um, and ultimately came to the decision that
Kristen:it was time for me to consider and start taking, um, an anti anxiety medication,
Kristen:and I knew that It is a process to kind of get yourself on to, um, the, the right
Kristen:medication for you at the right dosage.
Kristen:So there's many different options and there's different side effects that you
Kristen:do need to, uh, consider and understand.
Kristen:Um, and how your body reacts to that.
Kristen:Um, it can be a bit of a trial and error process.
Kristen:So I was a little...
Kristen:Kind of concerned about that, being like, I know I'm gonna feel
Kristen:like crap for about two weeks, um, while I take this new medication.
Kristen:Um, and I was almost, I think, worried that I would get worse, that I, but I
Kristen:was already in such a bad state of, like, no sleep and, um, you know, very little
Kristen:patience for everything in life that anything was gonna be better than this.
Kristen:And so, um, I started taking my medication, um, that the doctor
Kristen:prescribed to me and, um, it was honestly the best decision that I've
Kristen:made for myself in the last year.
Kristen:And it is something that I never thought I would need or
Kristen:never thought I would consider.
Kristen:Um, because I do work in mental health and I do have good self care practices and I
Kristen:know what I need to be doing for myself.
Kristen:But as a new mom with two young babies that have so many needs and we always put
Kristen:everybody before ourselves, those things, it almost seemed to me like I could...
Kristen:see everything that I needed to do.
Kristen:It was behind a glass wall and I could not access it.
Kristen:And now having my medication, um, I can open up that glass wall and
Kristen:I can access everything again.
Kristen:And I am so thankful that I am sleeping, that I am healthy, that I am able to, you
Kristen:know, start new things like a new job.
Kristen:Um, be a functioning parent, um, and be a partner to my husband
Kristen:that's not, you know, completely at my wits end all the time.
Kristen:So that's really been my mental health journey over the last year and it's been
Kristen:extremely eye opening, very challenging, um, but I'm really happy to say that
Kristen:I am in a healthy place right now.
Arlene:Thank you for sharing that with us.
Arlene:I think it's really important to recognize that even Someone who knows
Arlene:as much about mental health as you do, that you still had that bias
Arlene:even kind of against yourself, right?
Arlene:Like, that it was, it was fine for, for other people, but you
Arlene:know, I'll be okay without it.
Arlene:But, but yeah, it's interesting to know that even that.
Arlene:That lots of people can, you can, we can all talk about mental health, but,
Arlene:but sometimes it's harder to, to self reflect and realize that, that the help
Arlene:that we think other people can access, we also need to be kind to ourselves
Arlene:and, and do the same things for us.
Caite:All right.
Caite:So Arlene, I'm going to steal your question.
Caite:Um, Sarah, one of the big surprises that I had as a new parent was how hard it
Caite:was on my body to care for an infant.
Caite:Um, you know, I ended up with tendinitis in both knees from standing up from
Caite:the couch while holding a baby post C section, like, just that sort of random.
Caite:Ended up with tennis elbow from carrying around a huge baby, and then ended
Caite:up with tennis elbow in both elbows from carrying around two huge babies.
Caite:Um, so knowing that your background is in exercise physiology, how have you...
Caite:dealt with this bullshit.
Caite:Did anybody warn anybody about any of this?
Caite:Cause, I feel like, this seems to be a common thing, but nobody
Sarah:ever seems to be warned about anything to do with my body other than
Sarah:taking care of your hoo ha after you tear.
Sarah:That's, that's all there was.
Sarah:Yeah.
Sarah:Like, oh yeah, don't use toilet paper.
Sarah:Good luck.
Kristen:You
Sarah:know, and so I think that, um, uh, You had said in our first episode
Sarah:that there are so many repetitive motion injuries from carrying around babies and
Sarah:stuff like that and that was the first time I'd really ever heard anything.
Sarah:I know that like, Oh, your back can hurt if you carry them around too much.
Sarah:And, of course, my pregnant self was like, Well, I'm gonna teach my kid to
Sarah:be content on their own, so I don't have to carry them around too much.
Sarah:Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Sarah:Yeah, like shit.
Caite:How's that working out for you, Sarah?
Caite:Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Caite:It worked out
Sarah:real good.
Sarah:So, I think that in the first, um, Like, little bit.
Sarah:Super, super post C section.
Sarah:I was like, okay, I need to make sure that my pelvic floor is, um, is strengthening.
Sarah:That my, I had a pretty severe diastasis recti.
Sarah:So, like, I was making sure that I was doing my, um, you know, my, uh, dead bugs
Sarah:and my clamshells and all that stuff.
Sarah:And I had a little bit of pubic symphysis issues.
Sarah:So, I was doing my exercises and making sure that my body was getting
Sarah:back to where I was able to...
Sarah:Walk around and carry a baby and get up and down off the floor and
Sarah:um, you know, not shit my pants in Home Depot but I think that
Caite:It sounds like an oddly specific
Kristen:So,
Sarah:okay.
Sarah:I did not shit my pants in Home Depot and I really debated on making this
Sarah:a tick tock But I feel like this is a safer place than tick tock.
Sarah:So I'm gonna I'm gonna say it here Okay, so there are
Kristen:few things that men will never
Sarah:have to deal with.
Sarah:Okay, first
Kristen:of all,
Sarah:putting their cart of lumber
Kristen:aside that they're buying for someone else to go to Home Depot,
Kristen:to the bathroom in Home Depot, to hold their infant on their toilet,
Kristen:on the toilet, while they poop is one of those things that my husband
Kristen:will never have to deal with.
Kristen:First of
Sarah:all, it will be a rare day that he will be running errands with our child by
Kristen:himself.
Kristen:And his pelvic floor is woven tighter than a Langeberger basket.
Kristen:Like, this is just not a thing that he will ever have to deal with.
Kristen:And to that, I say, fuck
Sarah:you.
Sarah:You know?
Sarah:Come on, man.
Caite:I'm, I'm just envisioning your husband's pelvic floor being lined
Caite:with, like, that blue gingham shit.
Caite:And, like, I'm sorry, I'm done.
Caite:I'm...
Caite:As, as someone whose pelvic floor posts...
Caite:Direct eye and hernia surgery and five more hernias is more like...
Caite:A fishing net that has gone through a hurricane.
Caite:And then through, like, a jet engine, I'm...
Caite:Yeah, yeah.
Caite:so anyway, um,
Sarah:I totally forgot where I was.
Sarah:I just, I'm envisioning my collection of Langeberger baskets now, and how
Sarah:I should decorate them for summer.
Sarah:But, um...
Sarah:Oh, uh, the body.
Sarah:Physiologically.
Arlene:So,
Sarah:after getting back to kind of like where I was, being able to
Sarah:function, then I started thinking about like, okay, how do I need to
Sarah:strengthen my body so that I can put the car seat in the car and do some of
Sarah:the things that are like a little bit more, take a little bit more balance and
Sarah:coordination and s and things like that.
Sarah:Um, and so I was just surprised at how many muscles you need to do simple things
Sarah:after all those muscles are moved and stretched and cut and all that stuff.
Sarah:So we think that, um, That was really surprising for me, um, and then also
Sarah:just knowing what I know, like, I know that I need to strengthen, to lift
Sarah:weights, to do exercises in order to be able to carry my child, you know,
Kristen:um, and yeah, she is a stage 5 clinger
Sarah:and so, um, there is no teaching her to be content on her own, even
Kristen:now she's like, Just
Sarah:loves to be held, you know, and so I think that at, you know, 26 pounds,
Sarah:it's a little bit different, um, and I still carry her, like, in the, in the
Sarah:baby carrier, or the infant, you know, carrier that you strap to you, um,
Sarah:quite a bit, and I think that I've now thought a lot about my body structure
Sarah:and how I, um, how I walk the shoes that I wear, how I stand if I'm just standing
Sarah:around the kind of angle of my pelvis, which changes after you have a baby.
Sarah:Um, and that really can change the amount of pressure on your low back.
Sarah:And so paying attention to those things, um, has been really
Sarah:beneficial, but still like you hold it.
Sarah:26 pound baby for it doesn't matter how long or like, you know,
Sarah:for a while and your back hurts.
Sarah:And so then what do I need to do at the end of the day or after I put her down in
Sarah:order to stretch my back to make sure that I'm not then overcompensating in other
Sarah:areas because then sometimes that can cause soreness and tension and issues You
Sarah:know, where you're not even expecting it.
Sarah:So, um, there's kind of like the, the chain of your body, right?
Sarah:That starts with the arches of your feet.
Sarah:And so if you're, if your feet are, are too flat and whether they're
Sarah:naturally flat or you're wearing, you know, the dollar store flip flops.
Sarah:It doesn't matter.
Sarah:Um, but that makes you a little bit knock need.
Sarah:It kind of turns your knees in a certain way and that makes your hips, your pelvic
Sarah:girdle like literally fall forward.
Sarah:And then if you have a, um, a diastasis recti or you have low
Sarah:back issues or you have different things going on with your core, then
Sarah:that exacerbates All those issues.
Sarah:So part of it is like, well, throw your dollar store flip flops away and
Sarah:buy yourself a pair of Birkenstocks and pay attention to how you're
Sarah:standing and pay attention to your body structure or your body's, um, stature.
Sarah:And so that these problems that are just a little bit of soreness here and
Sarah:there don't turn into big major issues.
Sarah:And so paying attention to that has been really helpful.
Sarah:And then also now I do a lot of back, um, weightlifting exercises.
Sarah:Like, I never had, like, back day before, but now I do, you know?
Sarah:And so I think that that's important too, that as your baby grows and gets
Sarah:heavier, you are making sure that you're being proactive on the muscular
Sarah:front to be able to support your stage 5 clinger as she hits 30 pounds.
Arlene:And the pesky thing about babies is that the, the 26 pound baby doesn't
Arlene:just sit in your arms like the, you know, the, the 10 pound one did, right?
Arlene:Like, they're twisting and turning and reaching for things and then
Arlene:they want down and then they want back up again right away.
Arlene:So yeah, the, it's not just the weight, but the, yeah, the movement
Arlene:and the way that you're carrying.
Sarah:Absolutely.
Sarah:And I then carry her on my left side so that I can do things with my right
Sarah:hand, which then causes a whole other boatload of issues, you know, if I'm
Sarah:doing that too much or depending on what I'm doing for that day, you know.
Sarah:Um, and so paying attention to that as well has been really,
Sarah:uh, interesting, I would say.
Caite:I'm, I'm really going to put forward to that we should rename these
Caite:things and change our expectations around them because as I found out, Two, the
Caite:tendinitis behind your kneecaps has some name like washerwoman's knee or
Caite:housewife's knee or some goddamn you know one of them's like washerwoman's elbow
Caite:and housewife's knee and and then if you're me and you have to get cortisone
Caite:shots because you're an old mom and now you have to get cortisone shots in
Caite:your elbows because you had two huge ass kids who both need to be dragged
Caite:around everywhere and it's just like It should be called, like, Bad Bitch Knee.
Caite:Like, Something cool.
Caite:Like, It should be, like, And, I don't know if you guys know this, but they
Caite:warn you that your ligaments get loose during pregnancy, but nobody reminds you
Caite:that there are ligaments in your knees.
Caite:And, like, In your elbows and shoulders and shit, and that
Caite:all of those got loose, too.
Caite:And they might
Sarah:not
Kristen:tighten back up!
Kristen:In
Sarah:the same way that they were before.
Sarah:Like, probably not.
Caite:Mm hmm.
Caite:Things that are supposed to be loose will now be tight, and anything that
Caite:used to be tight will now be loose.
Caite:Except a few random things, which we'll find out about at some point
Sarah:later.
Sarah:I agree, that should be called, like, bad bitch syndrome or something like that.
Caite:Yes.
Caite:Yes.
Caite:Give it a call.
Arlene:Now that we've talked about Sarah's husband's pelvic floor, I'm
Arlene:going to go into my question about relationships and how your marriage
Arlene:has changed in the last year.
Arlene:So what is, what is their adjustment to fatherhood been like?
Arlene:Sarah, I remember one of the things you were looking forward to was
Arlene:seeing your husband become a dad.
Arlene:So I'm also wondering about the good things that have happened in your
Arlene:relationship, not just the fights that have happened in the last year.
Arlene:So how, how have you seen your
Kristen:relationship?
Kristen:Zach went in pretty confident.
Kristen:He's got brothers
Sarah:who are 10 and 13 years younger.
Sarah:So
Kristen:he was kind of like, no, I'm good with babies.
Kristen:Like I'm good with diapers.
Kristen:I got, got this in the bag.
Kristen:And he was quickly humbled.
Kristen:Uh, quickly humbled.
Kristen:So
Sarah:that was, um, enjoyable for me to see.
Sarah:Um, so, but I think that it took him a while.
Sarah:Same thing to, to bond with
Kristen:her.
Kristen:He
Sarah:did have the experience of, like, this is the best day of my life.
Sarah:This is the most beautiful experience I've ever had.
Sarah:Um, but then I think that he got really scared.
Sarah:And part of it was because then he spent two weeks in the field where he didn't...
Sarah:Really see us that much and didn't really
Kristen:interact with her and then it was like
Sarah:well wait You know everything about her and everything to do
Sarah:and I saw her one time two weeks ago What do I do now, you know?
Sarah:And so I feel like that was challenging to have her at the beginning of planting
Sarah:season And then it took them a while to bond, which I do think is normal.
Sarah:I've had several friends I've actually had six friends have babies in the last Um,
Sarah:well, since the beginning of the year, so the last six months, really, so I think
Sarah:that that's pretty normal, um, to see,
Kristen:and then that was a little bit challenging, too, because I would
Sarah:be like, do, do this, do that, do this, do that, and he, um, is like,
Kristen:I don't, I don't
Sarah:know what
Kristen:to do or
Sarah:how to do
Kristen:it or anything like that, and I was like, I thought you were Mr.
Kristen:Confident coming into this thing, you know,
Sarah:so, um, I think that overall parenting
Kristen:together has been interesting, challenging, beautiful, you know, it's fun
Kristen:to watch him become a dad and fun to watch
Sarah:like their relationship flourish and now they have so much
Sarah:fun together and it's hilarious.
Sarah:Um, but our relationship in general, I feel like...
Sarah:Ours is a little bit different, too, because Zach was having so many health
Kristen:issues up until a couple of months ago.
Kristen:So now, he's like, feeling
Sarah:good and motivated for the first time in three years.
Sarah:And I'm like, okay, but it's 10.
Sarah:30, like, can you come in the house?
Kristen:Like, I haven't seen you all day, you know?
Sarah:So, that has been a welcomed change of pace from me doing
Sarah:everything to him suddenly, like, feeling good and doing things again.
Sarah:Um, but I think that there just takes a lot of communication and we
Sarah:have a lot of like family involved in our farm and stuff like that.
Sarah:So we try to stay on the same page pretty regularly.
Sarah:But then with a newborn, of course, that's not As easy or he says something
Sarah:and I'm sleeping or half sleeping or you know, um, exhausted and vice versa.
Sarah:So I think that that has been a little bit challenging just re establishing
Sarah:the priority of communication, um, has been really tough.
Sarah:And so I think that now we're like in a good system, a good
Sarah:rhythm and that sort of thing.
Sarah:Um, but yeah, there were definitely some growing pains through that.
Sarah:And also like the whole, like.
Sarah:Mothers just basically take on the entire emotional load and burden
Sarah:of the logistics of children.
Sarah:Um, has just been something on my mind a lot lately, you know what I mean?
Sarah:And like, part of it, we very much have our own domains, right?
Sarah:His domain is the farm and my domain is everything else, which actually he does a
Sarah:lot more at the farm than everything else.
Sarah:So I feel like it was always kind of balanced, but now it's kind of not
Sarah:balanced, you know, so part of this is also like me encouraging him to take
Sarah:over to reclaim or to take responsibility for certain things that had previously.
Sarah:Ben on my plate is like, you got to step up to the plate here, bud, you know?
Sarah:And so he's more than happy to do it, but I definitely feel like that
Sarah:took a little bit of hand holding and a little bit of like encouragement
Sarah:and, and building up his confidence.
Sarah:I would say it was almost like he didn't feel like he could do things.
Sarah:He didn't feel like.
Sarah:He knew what to do, or he could do it as good as me, right, because
Sarah:mom always does everything best.
Sarah:And so part of that was like, nope, it's gonna be dad's thing now, and
Sarah:dad can do it best also, you know.
Sarah:And so, um, I think that that is, is, important that we did that because
Sarah:it makes a big difference now.
Sarah:Um, and for a while when he was not feeling good, that was really
Sarah:tough because I was basically taking care of him and me and the baby
Sarah:and the house and everything else and working and everything else.
Sarah:And so that, um, was really challenging now that he's feeling better though.
Sarah:It's, it's been a good change over and I feel like in some ways farm families
Sarah:have to do that every Every season, multiple seasons, when you're done
Sarah:with harvest, there kind of needs to be that, okay, now that you're done,
Sarah:you know, working so, such long hours, here's a few things that you need to
Sarah:take into your zone of responsibility.
Sarah:Um, because it can really easily be, you find yourself at Christmas time,
Sarah:still doing everything, and you're like, wait, you're no longer working 16 hours,
Sarah:so step up to the plate here, bud.
Sarah:Um.
Kristen:So I feel
Sarah:like just having that reset has been really helpful, and I
Sarah:have to remind myself of that, you know, a few, a few times a year.
Arlene:Yeah, that's a, that's a really good way on the farm.
Arlene:So that should carry over into the rest.
Arlene:Looking at it, that seasonality doesn't, doesn't mean that we all
Arlene:have the same responsibilities all the time of our lives, right?
Arlene:Where it's like, okay, yeah, yeah, things are a little bit easier on your end.
Arlene:So yeah, let's, let's shift some of the, some of the jobs or let's look
Arlene:again at who's responsible for what and, and who gets to do which jobs.
Arlene:Kristen, you alluded it.
Arlene:to it a little bit already, but how do you feel like your marriage and
Arlene:relationship has changed in the last year, and how has your, your partner
Arlene:adjusted to being a dad of two?
Kristen:Yeah, so I, I want to take just a quick little step back to say
Kristen:that Sarah, I need you to come and do like a physical body consult for me
Kristen:because the havoc that these twins have, like, on my body Oh my goodness, you
Kristen:think that like, yeah, you you recover from after birth and it's like, okay.
Kristen:Yep.
Kristen:Now i'm back to myself Oh my god, like carrying around two 25 pound
Kristen:kids because I do carry both of them at the same time It's the most
Kristen:efficient because i'm not going up and down the stairs multiple times.
Kristen:Ain't nobody got time for that I have definitely noticed that that change in
Kristen:my physical body and like, yeah, Katie said, being like an old mom, I'm not in my
Kristen:20s, like early 20s and like, can't just like whip up and do these things anymore.
Kristen:I have had this issue with my thumb.
Kristen:Like it's called like mom thumb or something.
Kristen:Of
Arlene:course, or bad bitch thumb, right
Kristen:Katie?
Kristen:Yes, exactly.
Kristen:Yes.
Kristen:Bad bitch thumb.
Kristen:That's what it's called.
Caite:I had forgotten about the fucking mom thumb.
Caite:I did not even know mom thumb was a thing.
Caite:Thank you for that, Kristen.
Caite:Speaking of cortisone shots.
Caite:Yeah, also mom thumb.
Caite:Yeah, I was just like.
Caite:It's, and it's so stupid because it's like, Oh, my badge of honor, my mom
Kristen:thumb.
Kristen:Right?
Kristen:Comes down to that.
Kristen:Cool.
Caite:It, it feels like it belongs in the same place that when I found out I
Caite:was having a C section with the first baby and I was a little like, not upset,
Caite:but just like, back footed because, same as here, I had, I had a whole birth
Caite:plan and the C section was not on it.
Caite:And the nurse, this sweet young thing, she's like 19 and she's
Caite:real cute, you know, and I was 35 when my daughter was born.
Caite:And the nurse goes, Well, don't worry, they do see sections so low now,
Caite:you'll still be able to wear a bikini.
Caite:And I was like, What are you going to do about the rest of me?
Caite:Oh
Caite:my!
Caite:Like, honey, a scar.
Caite:Would never stop me from wearing a bathing suit.
Caite:And like, fine if it does.
Caite:Like, fine if you're not comfortable with that.
Caite:But the rest of my existence would stop me from wearing a bikini.
Caite:And not even in like, a body shaming way, but in a like, I have a hard
Caite:enough time not flashing people wearing a like, neck high one piece.
Caite:Like, it's just not a thing.
Caite:And then they're like, oh, and you got tendinitis in your thumb,
Caite:and it's called Mom's Thumb.
Caite:That's great, yeah.
Caite:Fuck off!
Caite:Oh, just...
Caite:Just fuck off with that.
Caite:Like, no.
Caite:I refuse
Kristen:to accept this.
Kristen:Yeah, yeah, that's my, my bad bitch thumb is my badge of
Kristen:honor from having two babies.
Kristen:Like, this is, it's, yeah, it's like the epitome of like, I feel
Kristen:like it's like the worst thing, like the, the suckiest injury.
Kristen:I'm like, my thumb hurts.
Kristen:Like, I feel like I'm being a whiny baby.
Kristen:Oh, my thumb hurts, but it's like, no, it really freaking hurts.
Kristen:And every time I like, you pick up your kid and you put your
Kristen:hand under their, their crotch and you hold them up like that.
Kristen:It's like, Oh my god, the end of the day.
Kristen:It's just like holy shit.
Kristen:Like and yeah, like just trying to like Type on my computer.
Kristen:I'm like, why do I feel like i'm 80 years old here?
Kristen:Yeah, it is the worst thing.
Kristen:So sorry.
Kristen:I just wanted to jump back to that to say sarah.
Kristen:I need I need your help girl Um, but in uh in all reality relationship
Kristen:wise, yeah, that has definitely been um I would say ups and downs as well.
Kristen:Like the early days you're kind of in this haze where you don't really know what's
Kristen:going on and whatnot with your partner.
Kristen:And you kind of know that each other are there for us.
Kristen:And we were just kind of like.
Kristen:And with two, really, my husband never had an opportunity to say no
Kristen:because, you know, I was outnumbered and I'm like, here, have a baby.
Kristen:And to his full credit, night feedings, we both got up every
Kristen:time and fed the babies together.
Kristen:Um, so having Having two babies means both parents step up to the plate for us.
Kristen:And that just really worked because then it wasn't, you know, feed
Kristen:one baby, put them down, feed the next baby, put them down.
Kristen:It was like, okay, how can we do this efficiently as possible?
Kristen:That was our whole modus operandi as parents is efficiency.
Kristen:And so I'm very thankful that he does, um, He was able to, to be home and to be, um,
Kristen:that extra set of hands that I needed, um, in those early days, and even now still,
Kristen:like, carrying two kids to the car, for instance, like, they're kind of on the
Kristen:brink of walking right now, they're sort of, like, toppling and, like, wobbly on
Kristen:their feet, but it's still pick them up and carry them everywhere, and that is
Kristen:a lot for one person, um, but in terms of, in terms of our relationship, kind of
Kristen:how it's, It's changed in our marriage.
Kristen:Um, I would, I would have to say that we're probably in a better
Kristen:place now than we were before.
Kristen:And a few, few different reasons for that.
Kristen:Um, like Sarah said, that communications piece, um, it's forced us to really have
Kristen:some of those tough conversations and
Kristen:to just be really open and honest.
Kristen:And I'm not going to say it's been easy getting here because there were some.
Kristen:Those early days when I was really struggling with my own anxiety and I
Kristen:couldn't communicate What I was feeling um, because I just felt like I was failing
Kristen:at everything as a mom and as a person like I just felt like I could not do a
Kristen:single thing right, even if I was able to, you know, have dinner made and, you
Kristen:know, have showered that day, it still felt like a complete failure, which, as
Kristen:a mom to, you know, two newborn twins, like, that was, like, the, the most, the
Kristen:best possible situation for me, but I just constantly felt like I was failing,
Kristen:um, and I can remember vividly, like, after a stretch of just, like, struggle,
Kristen:you know, I was changing a diaper and downstairs in our living room and I just
Kristen:remember feeling so overwhelmed and I said to Tony, I'm just like, you know, I, I
Kristen:just don't know what's wrong with them.
Kristen:I don't know what's wrong.
Kristen:I need to figure out what is wrong with them and he just like completely
Kristen:stopped and it was just like, He looked at me and he's like, Kristen,
Kristen:you're not doing anything wrong.
Kristen:Like, you are a good mom.
Kristen:You are doing everything that you can.
Kristen:You know, this is just outside of our control right now.
Kristen:And it was just kind of a bit of a A reconnection point again to
Kristen:say like, Hey, you've got my back.
Kristen:You know, yes, this is hard.
Kristen:This is a struggle right now.
Kristen:You know, we, we want the perfect, you know, the perfect family and the perfect
Kristen:baby, and that was the other thing.
Kristen:Every time, you know, we would meet someone out or, you know, when
Kristen:we would talk about our family, like, Oh, you have a boy and a
Kristen:girl, Oh, what a perfect family.
Kristen:And I was like, our family ain't perfect.
Kristen:Like, this is sure we have the boy and the girl and the golden retriever dog.
Kristen:But let me tell you, there is nothing perfect about this.
Kristen:Um, but I felt like I, I had to like, live up to that standard, right?
Kristen:Like there was just this pressure that like, oh yes, I have the
Kristen:perfect family and I must love my children and have a clean house.
Kristen:And you know, it took me a lot of time.
Kristen:Just to be comfortable having toys on the floor and like my my OCD clean cleanliness
Kristen:Like I am a person of minimalism.
Kristen:I don't like clutter.
Kristen:I don't like mess I don't like, you know, all of that stuff really like
Kristen:I it creates anxiety at me I don't say OCD like in a flippant way.
Kristen:Like I seriously have like a Um, it, it affects me, and so having these two
Kristen:little hurricanes running through my house nowadays, I'm just like, oh my god.
Kristen:But, with a lot of communication, and you know, now I look at it very
Kristen:differently with my husband, and that we're a team to tackle this.
Kristen:So, yeah, the house is a complete disaster during the day, I
Kristen:don't fucking care anymore.
Kristen:You show up to my door.
Kristen:This is what it is.
Kristen:I, you know, take it or leave it, you know, and at the end of
Kristen:the day, we work together, um, to get all of those things done.
Kristen:And so the division of responsibilities, like Sarah was saying, um, that was
Kristen:something that had to kind of evolve.
Kristen:And we had to talk through that as well.
Kristen:It wasn't something that was just like.
Kristen:You know, at the start, I was just doing everything because that's,
Kristen:you know, how it was before.
Kristen:We have very traditional roles in our marriage, and I'm okay
Kristen:with that because, you know, he has his strength and I have mine.
Kristen:We tackle and conquer together.
Kristen:Um, but at the end of the day, when you have nothing left to give, and
Kristen:your house is a disaster, and the dog needs to be walked, and oh yeah,
Kristen:there's no food in the fridge anymore, Well, how are we going to do this?
Kristen:Is it all on me again?
Kristen:Because guess what?
Kristen:I, I can't.
Kristen:I just can't.
Kristen:Um, so those divisions of responsibilities, um have been A growing
Kristen:pain of ours, but I think that we're in a good place now where, you know, we,
Kristen:we also openly communicate about it.
Kristen:So after we put the kids to bed at night, our routine is typically one
Kristen:person takes the dog for a walk and one person cleans up, um, the dishes
Kristen:and, uh, and the toys in the house.
Kristen:And so oftentimes we'll just, you know, check in with each other and
Kristen:be like, which one do you want to do?
Kristen:Do you need time out of the house?
Kristen:Do you want to clean up?
Kristen:You know, just kind of those little things that just kind of yeah, okay It's not
Kristen:just assumed that okay, you're gonna take care of all of it and i'm gonna go sit
Kristen:on the couch and watch tv Um, you know how you're feeling in that moment, too.
Kristen:How can I help out?
Kristen:How can I step up?
Kristen:And what can we do together?
Kristen:So Our, our marriage has definitely shifted and changed, and I really am
Kristen:enjoying the phase that we're in now with young toddlers, um, because we are able
Kristen:to connect with the kids a lot more, and to really, like, just spending that time,
Kristen:that family time, after, after they have a bath, we play up in our loft area.
Kristen:And to see my husband, you know, acting goofy, and, you know, cuddling
Kristen:with my kids, and that sort of stuff.
Kristen:That is something that I didn't anticipate just really, um, you know, having,
Kristen:like, giving me the warm and fuzzies.
Kristen:Like, oh, you know what?
Kristen:This is what it's all worth.
Kristen:This is what this hellish year has all been worth.
Kristen:Right here, right now.
Kristen:It's the little moments and it's those things where I see him kiss my son on the
Kristen:forehead and then grab him in a bear hug and they both giggle and laugh together
Kristen:like that has really been incredible.
Kristen:Um, but I also want to acknowledge that, um, like Sarah, I've had many
Kristen:friends have babies over the last year, either their first one or multiple.
Kristen:kids to their family.
Kristen:And a lot of times, um, we don't often talk about how motherhood and
Kristen:parenthood changes our marriages.
Kristen:And it's something that I think It can be a huge challenge if it's not, you know,
Kristen:going in a positive direction for you.
Kristen:Um, and I've certainly had some conversations with some
Kristen:really close friends that are really struggling right now.
Kristen:And that is a hard thing, and it's not just, yes, becoming a parent,
Kristen:but becoming a part of a family unit.
Kristen:Um, your relationship does change and you, you again, can't anticipate how
Kristen:it will, um, but as women, you know, we tend to just kind of, um, put everybody
Kristen:else first again and, and set that aside.
Kristen:And so it is something that I'm really appreciate that both of you,
Kristen:you know, brought this up in the conversation that we can talk about
Kristen:this because it is an important part.
Kristen:And, you know, we.
Kristen:We started a family for a reason because we love each other.
Kristen:So is that love still there?
Kristen:And, and trying to nurture that and know what's good for you and your family
Kristen:is, um, is something that often can get lost in just the chaos of, of this
Kristen:whole first year and, and beyond that.
Sarah:Kristen, one thing I want to add, because when you were talking
Sarah:about that, it made me remember, like, I, we were talking about grieving our
Sarah:old selves, and I feel like I also grieved our old relationship, in,
Kristen:in the relationship itself, but also, like, I
Sarah:was his only priority and now I'm not and that feels so selfish,
Sarah:but that's really how I felt,
Kristen:you know, and not that I was like, jealous of my child for
Sarah:taking up love and attention, but also like, it was just a weird thing to
Sarah:suddenly have to share, you know, and I think that, um, When you, like, have big
Sarah:changes like that, like, like I was able to tell Zach that, you know what I mean?
Sarah:But sometimes, it took me a while to even realize that that's what I was feeling.
Sarah:And so, I feel like if you, if that kind of sneaks up on you or you're not
Sarah:able to verbalize it in a way that you
Kristen:can get it off your chest and your partner can actually understand
Sarah:and do something about it, I feel like that can eat, eat away
Sarah:at a relationship really quickly.
Caite:Sarah, I find it interesting because I feel like I felt the reverse of
Caite:that when our first child was born because for nine months she had just been mine.
Caite:It was just me and her.
Caite:And having to share her and have it, I don't know that I've ever felt that
Caite:lonely in my life as that transition from being able to literally feel her inside
Caite:my body 24 hours a day to her just Being out doing her own thing, you know, and
Caite:I mean now she's six, so she's actually like out doing stuff, but just that she
Caite:could do something without me and just like, and it's weird to be like, that's
Caite:my baby, give it back, but also like, coupled with the anxiety, then to have
Caite:this feeling of like, I am the only person who's known her this whole time.
Caite:And now I just have to share her with, like, the rest of you?
Caite:Like, no, get your own.
Caite:Make your own damn
Arlene:baby.
Arlene:I guess that's where Kristen has the advantage.
Arlene:She had two, so she could hold on to one and give the other one.
Arlene:Yeah.
Arlene:Who's being better behaved right now?
Arlene:I'll take that one.
Caite:That's the one I want.
Kristen:Absolutely.
Kristen:That 100%.
Kristen:I, I've always said throughout this last year, I love my kids,
Kristen:but I don't always like them.
Kristen:And whoever I like less in that moment goes to somebody else.
Kristen:But Katie, I also really felt that as well after the kids and
Kristen:even, even more recently too.
Kristen:Um, Kind of like a possessiveness over my kids.
Kristen:Like I was very like, no, these are my children.
Kristen:And like, and it's not that I don't want them to, you know, um, make
Kristen:connections with other people and to, you know, have their own relationships
Kristen:with my family and that kind of stuff.
Kristen:But it was almost like I caught myself a couple times and I can't
Kristen:think of a specific instance right now, but I would just feel this
Kristen:overwhelming, like that's my baby.
Kristen:And it was.
Kristen:with people who were very close to me in my life and I'm like, Nuh uh,
Kristen:like you, this is mine, give it back.
Kristen:And I, like, I just wanted to, like, keep them for myself.
Kristen:And it was such a weird feeling because coupled with that, I didn't really feel
Kristen:that super, super strong maternalistic, like, loving, absolutely everything.
Kristen:Um, idea of, yeah, of my kids.
Kristen:And so that was a, I, I felt that too, and I didn't know how, how to understand
Kristen:it until I talked with it about my therapist and surprise, childhood trauma.
Kristen:Um, that kind of stuff starts to come back up.
Kristen:And so part of, part of me, yeah, really felt that strongly as well.
Kristen:And I'm still working through it.
Kristen:It's
Caite:for me when I was really pregnant with our son.
Caite:And I kept getting told that I was imagining it, and then we
Caite:caught it on ultrasound, but my son would practice breathe.
Caite:And he would be far enough up under my diaphragm that I could
Caite:feel him breathing inside my body.
Caite:And like, to be that, literally that close to another person, and then
Caite:to just let other people share them?
Caite:No!
Caite:Which brings me to my next question.
Caite:Kristen, I know that you had said that you have paid child care now, and I
Caite:think Sarah does not, is that correct?
Caite:Um, and Sarah, what you were saying about feeling beholden to people
Caite:if they're, you know, doing you favors by helping with stuff.
Caite:Um, Kristen, once I've gotten past the worst of the sobbing every time
Caite:I leave my kids with someone because why should I have to share them?
Caite:Um It's fucking amazing to leave your kids With somebody who's paid to watch
Caite:them because I don't feel bad about it at all They're getting paid to watch them.
Caite:This is literally their job And it's such a sense of freedom once you get past the
Caite:mommy guilt about how they're probably gonna spend all day crying and they're
Caite:probably gonna die and God knows what else horrible things are happening that you
Caite:can just go do your shit and like not have to worry about it and it's incredible.
Caite:So I'm wondering how that Sarah's like, I'm gonna write
Caite:down the names of some daycares.
Caite:Daycare's fucking expensive, but worth it.
Caite:I'm wondering how that transition has been for you.
Caite:And Arlene, were your kids ever in And paid trial.
Caite:Second,
Arlene:third, fourth, besides, like I did, I mean, I guess school kind
Arlene:created a preschool program for them.
Arlene:We don't really have preschool here, but I found a daycare that would take them
Arlene:a, you know, like one or two days a week, the year before they started kindergarten.
Arlene:But for the most part, no.
Arlene:I was a stay at home parent for, well, I guess our taxes are paying for it.
Arlene:Um, the, my oldest, no, my second.
Arlene:All of their first years, but our kids start school earlier
Arlene:than than yours do to our.
Caite:And I'm.
Arlene:We're starting school at three and a half.
Arlene:So, well, depending on their birthdates, but yeah, ours were
Arlene:ours were in kindergarten at three
Caite:and a half.
Caite:Absolutely not negating being a stay at home parent, either, but as
Caite:someone who is trying to work with.
Caite:You know, work
Arlene:off farm a very near And I mean, there, I was, it was a choice to be a
Arlene:state owned parent, and I was, at that time, not working on the farm, or a very
Arlene:small amount, and when, uh, for the most part, my job was caring for our kids.
Arlene:I wasn't trying to do that, and I give lots of credit to the
Arlene:people who are doing that, too.
Arlene:I mean, there's, there's lots of ways to.
Arlene:Look after our kids and paid childcare is a great option.
Arlene:Perform a full time job and look after kids at the same time.
Arlene:And I know that there are families who are doing...
Arlene:So, I think Katie's question was, How are you feeling about the daycare transition?
Arlene:At this stage, Kristen, or how is that going?
Kristen:The house is quiet and it is fabulous.
Kristen:And I, I am thankful I'm in a place now where I do not feel an inch of guilt
Kristen:in saying that because, um, yeah, the transition itself, I definitely First of
Kristen:all, we were very fortunate, um, to find paid childcare, um, in Ontario right now.
Kristen:It is very difficult, and I know in lots of other areas, it is very
Kristen:difficult to even find childcare.
Kristen:Um, and I made the mistake of, you know, oh, we'll just figure it out.
Kristen:Uh, once I've done school, and when I, uh, when I decide to go to school.
Kristen:And two, exactly.
Kristen:And I'm like, there is no frickin way I am driving one to
Kristen:one daycare and one to another.
Kristen:And so I needed to find two spots at the same time.
Kristen:Um, location, uh, to care for my children and basically give them all
Kristen:of our money that we'll ever earn.
Kristen:And so, um, yes, we are very fortunate to have found a provider.
Kristen:All of our licensed, um, programs, they, I think they basically
Kristen:laugh at you now to be like, Ha!
Kristen:You think you're good?
Kristen:The one was, um, it was a year and a half, uh, wait time, um, to, to get in.
Kristen:And I think that's actually on the shorter side, unfortunately.
Kristen:So, um, I was a little bit behind the eight ball, but, uh, we have found
Kristen:a provider, uh, for the twins, who, honestly, I am so incredibly thankful for.
Kristen:Uh, she is fantastic.
Kristen:And I have to say, I was a little...
Kristen:Bit freaked out before going, uh, to daycare and starting that transition.
Kristen:Cause I had heard, um, some horror stories from really close friends about
Kristen:how, you know, their kids just like.
Kristen:Really struggled sleep was an issue.
Kristen:Everything came back up.
Kristen:It was just like nightmarish.
Kristen:And so going into it, um, we did a little bit of a transition with our
Kristen:provider where we started out kind of like on a part time basis, but
Kristen:paying full time for the first month.
Kristen:So that was fun.
Kristen:Um, but, uh, just to kind of work the kids up to it because again, they've
Kristen:spent this whole first year with, you know, us as their primary caregivers and.
Kristen:Yeah.
Kristen:They'd had a couple, you know, sleepovers at my parents and whatnot,
Kristen:but pretty much with us most of the time, um, so let alone a stranger.
Kristen:So we brought them to daycare kind of one day, one week, two
Kristen:days the next, and yada, yada, yada, and so they've transitioned,
Kristen:uh, to full time care right now.
Kristen:Um, drop off is an absolute shitshow, huge tears, big emotions all the time.
Kristen:Even to the point now, we only live about, it's about a seven minute drive, thank
Kristen:God, from our house to, uh, our provider.
Kristen:Um, but now when I put my daughter in her car seat, she starts to
Kristen:do the little sniffle and I'm like, Ellie, don't you dare.
Kristen:So, we pump the music, we, you know, sing songs on this, on our seven minute drive
Kristen:to kind of like, get them all excited.
Kristen:And then I drop them off there, they scream their heads off and I leave.
Kristen:And, um, yeah, it's been, um, very good for myself, um, to have that break.
Kristen:And I didn't really...
Kristen:really anticipate how good it would feel.
Kristen:Um, because up until then it was typically, you know, people would come
Kristen:over and they'd watch the kids at the house and I would still be doing stuff.
Kristen:So they were always within the vicinity, right?
Kristen:Like I always could still hear them or I'd be, yeah, run out to the grocery
Kristen:store, do some errands, and then come home and they're still here.
Kristen:But actually being home without them here is like, The best treat ever.
Kristen:So.
Kristen:And it just feels like it's grown up time.
Caite:Kristen, as a mom who works from home and has two kids who come home from
Caite:daycare, Do you find that your anxiety spikes when the noise level goes back
Caite:through the roof or are your kids not, I mean, two of them at a year old, I assume
Caite:they're pretty damn loud by now, right?
Caite:Because it took me the longest time to figure out why my anxiety went through
Caite:the roof at five o'clock every night.
Caite:And it's, yeah.
Caite:Have you found any routines or anything that have made that transition easier?
Sarah:Yeah.
Sarah:I'm legit asking for myself
Caite:at this point.
Caite:I definitely feel that.
Caite:Because I'm still not really figured this out.
Caite:And it's...
Arlene:Yeah,
Kristen:yeah.
Kristen:It is, it's hard to go from that, yeah, kind of like grown up quiet time to
Kristen:just like all out chaos in like the matter of a open the door and brrm, here
Kristen:they are, um, little hurricanes, um.
Kristen:The, what I've started doing, so my husband does pick up, um, at night,
Kristen:and, um, first of all, I send a snack with him in the car so that they're not
Kristen:hungry little gremlins when they get home because I don't know how much they've
Kristen:eaten throughout the day, like, you know, I can't control that, so I make
Kristen:sure they have a snack so they're not hangry when they get home, um, and, um,
Kristen:typically around that time I'm starting to kind of prep dinner, so I'm downstairs
Kristen:in our kitchen and living room area, and what I do Is just to kind of start
Kristen:to acclimatize myself to the volume as I turn the tv on and I just have like
Kristen:something playing in The background or turn the radio on and just kind of like
Kristen:try to like be moving around and whatnot and prepare myself Like okay, the kids
Kristen:are coming home uh, and you know just kind of like Start to increase the volume
Kristen:level so that when they do come in, it's not like brrrr, like zero to a hundred
Kristen:all in the matter of like a few seconds.
Kristen:Um, because it, that was a transition, especially before
Kristen:I figured out the snack trick.
Kristen:Um, was that they would come home and they would sit on the kitchen
Kristen:floor and just like scream and I'm like, Did you have a bad day?
Kristen:Are you hurt?
Kristen:Like, what's going on?
Kristen:Like, can I help you?
Kristen:Meanwhile, I've got like hot supper on the oven, like on the stovetop trying
Kristen:to figure that out and two screaming kids and my husband's You know bringing
Kristen:in all their shit from the day and I'm just like, oh my god, what is going on?
Kristen:That took a little bit of, you know, understanding like,
Kristen:oh, okay, you're hungry.
Kristen:Like, let's just make sure your basic needs are met Okay, let's, yeah, once
Kristen:we got that covered Um, that was okay.
Kristen:And we also, so my kids are still young enough now, um, that they do nap twice
Kristen:a day still, so, um, I've also found it, um, if I don't know how they've napped
Kristen:through the day, I don't know how to structure our nighttime routine, uh, to
Kristen:make sure that they're not overtired.
Kristen:And so, Sleep for me, throughout the whole twin, like throughout,
Kristen:since the twins were born, um, sleep has been a priority for them.
Kristen:Like, if they're not sleeping well, um, you know, figuring out their wake
Kristen:windows and all of that was really, um, something that I had no idea
Kristen:about before becoming a mom, but, uh, quickly read all of the, the blogs
Kristen:and the, the experts advice and stuff.
Kristen:And so, Part of managing my anxiety is understanding how their day
Kristen:has gone, have they had enough rest, have they eaten enough.
Kristen:Um, and then I can kind of tweak that nighttime routine to try to make it as
Kristen:enjoyable as possible for all of us.
Kristen:Because I don't want to deal with, you know, little gremlins at night
Kristen:because that just sets me off
Caite:too.
Caite:The other thing I've found that has been a huge help is those loop earplugs that
Caite:just decrease the decibels by quite a bit.
Caite:So, Because especially our kids still tend to take baths
Caite:together, which is great, you know.
Caite:And yes, they're a boy and a girl, but they're little.
Caite:They don't care.
Caite:Um, but we have a very small bathroom.
Caite:And when they start screaming in there, it is...
Caite:just
Caite:noping out.
Caite:And so the, the earplugs, huge.
Caite:Um, Sarah, real quick.
Caite:It says that Riverside, you have other tabs open with Riverside in them.
Caite:It just wants you to, it just wants you to close other tabs.
Caite:Ah, well, I guess I wouldn't worry about it then.
Caite:If it wants something, it'll figure it out later.
Caite:Whatever.
Caite:It's fine.
Caite:Yeah, I don't know how...
Caite:I still have her.
Sarah:I can't find the
Caite:other tab.
Caite:Maybe you're in her other tab, Arlene.
Caite:Okay, so.
Caite:I'm sorry.
Caite:Oh, so Sarah, we did a baby shower episode with you.
Caite:Was any of what we said helpful?
Caite:And feel free to tell us no if it wasn't.
Caite:Like, I'd rather not give people terrible advice.
Kristen:Yes.
Arlene:No, a lot of it.
Sarah:A lot of it was super helpful.
Sarah:So, um, we had talked about, like, baby wearing.
Sarah:That was really helpful.
Sarah:Um, and either, like, stick to a schedule or read their cues.
Sarah:Kind of do both and figure out what works for you.
Sarah:And so, I, um, kind of, like, watched her cues and then that
Sarah:quickly worked into a pattern.
Sarah:So, I...
Kristen:Like to say,
Sarah:like, I'm not a schedule person, but we have a rhythm to our day, and
Sarah:it's pretty consistent day to day.
Sarah:Um, with that being said, also, like, doing a few different things every once
Sarah:in a while has been really helpful, too, because then, like, if she skips
Sarah:a nap, we skip a meal, we eat early, we eat late, it's kind of no big deal.
Sarah:She's good with some change, and I think that that's good, too, because, um...
Sarah:My, my sister is one who like hates a change in the schedule and like, I
Sarah:need kids who are going to be flexible.
Sarah:So, um, that was really good advice.
Sarah:Um, somebody had said, um, uh, to keep your vacuum
Kristen:in the living room.
Kristen:Then you can say, Oh, it's just going to vacuum.
Sarah:That is solid.
Sarah:solid advice.
Sarah:Um, crabs need water, right?
Sarah:Like
Kristen:if they're crabby, take them outside or put them in the bathtub.
Kristen:Still do that.
Sarah:That is that is a great, great advice.
Sarah:Um, somebody said to give them
Kristen:a bottle every once in a while.
Sarah:So that way they will, um, take a bottle like when you have to leave.
Sarah:And that was again really helpful.
Sarah:I started Leaving her, um, just for like a couple hours at a time pretty early.
Sarah:And so that was really helpful too.
Sarah:Then she would take a bottle and, um, that turned out to be really,
Sarah:really great because then there was no like hesitation for her.
Sarah:Um, also I tried, I kind of got her.
Sarah:on like one different kind of bottle, but then switch.
Sarah:So she would take like multiple different, um, types of bottles,
Sarah:nipples, temperature of milk, which was really helpful to just to get her used
Sarah:to a little bit of change in variety.
Sarah:So, um, yeah, that was, there was a
Kristen:lot of great advice in there.
Kristen:A lot
Sarah:of helpful, helpful tidbits.
Sarah:Of course.
Sarah:No, all the time.
Sarah:You
Caite:saw all the time.
Caite:I'm glad that we said something useful.
Caite:Or that other people said something useful, I guess.
Caite:I know, you know, I mean, there are kids who are less able to hang, just like
Caite:there are adults who are less flexible, but I do think that anything you can do
Caite:to encourage any and all members of your family to be even slightly more chill.
Caite:than they are naturally, as someone who is not chill by nature, um, is helpful.
Caite:So, for both of you, what's been the best part so far?
Caite:I
Sarah:think watching her discover new things is so much fun.
Sarah:So much fun.
Sarah:Like, just like, the first time I put her in the grass, it was like, warm, the
Sarah:snow had melted, and watching her like, discover grass, and Sunshine, not like
Sarah:discover sunshine, but like just feel like
Kristen:warmth outside and
Sarah:discover grass and like look at flowers.
Kristen:I took her to the butterfly
Sarah:house and like just to watch her amazement looking at all the
Sarah:butterflies is really, really cool.
Sarah:And I remind myself often that like I have to slow down in order to catch
Sarah:those moments, but it's so worth it.
Sarah:So do it.
Sarah:Slow down, catch those moments, and be sure to keep that a priority,
Sarah:because there might be 400 million in a day, and that can get annoying,
Sarah:but also, um, you know, I think that that is, that's what it's all about.
Sarah:And so that's been really my favorite
Kristen:part, I think.
Kristen:Amazing.
Kristen:Yeah, I guess for me, um, having the twins, um, you know, I, I joked earlier
Kristen:on, uh, that it's a bit of a psychology experiment having two kids at once.
Kristen:Um, but really watching their bond, um, has been something that's been
Kristen:really special for me as a mom.
Kristen:Um, and also as someone who grew up with a big family.
Kristen:Um, this is the end of our family.
Kristen:We are not planning to have any more kids.
Kristen:Um, we're, you know, one in, one and done, one pregnancy and two kids and done.
Kristen:Um, but really watching them, um, kind of discover each other, see
Kristen:their differences at the same time.
Kristen:And then getting to be a kid again, like getting to play.
Kristen:I think as adults, we don't, you know, you, you reach a certain age and you
Kristen:just kind of, you know, you don't get that childish, um, excitement
Kristen:anymore in life and you just are so focused on the realities of life
Kristen:because yes, we have to be, but.
Kristen:You know, the times when we just get to play with our kids and sometimes,
Kristen:you know, going to the park.
Kristen:Um, we went to the park on the weekend and as a kid that was not something on the
Kristen:farm that we ever did because we stayed on the farm because there was work to do,
Kristen:you could play on the farm, you did that.
Kristen:Um, but just really, you know, getting to go to a park with your kids,
Kristen:um, that's something that's really special that I didn't anticipate but
Kristen:that really are those small moments that Sarah said that happened so
Kristen:many times in a day that pausing and just Feeling that gratitude and that
Kristen:gratefulness has really given me a lot of, of good feelings about parenting.
Arlene:I find the unmute on this program takes so much longer.
Arlene:Anyway, so I'm stealing Katie's usual question, but I switched it up since
Arlene:we already asked both of you what you would dominate at the county fair.
Arlene:I'm now going to ask, say it's like the baby show or, you
Arlene:know, like the junior category.
Arlene:Sarah, what would your baby dominate at the county fair?
Sarah:Um, 100 percent a cat show, okay?
Sarah:This kid loves a cat.
Sarah:And I remember my sister showed a cat at the county fair, and we
Sarah:were all kind of like, how do you show a cat, like, what is this all
Kristen:about?
Kristen:And you like, Pet its fur backward, pet its fur, er, pet its fur the right
Kristen:way, pet its fur the wrong way, stretch out its belly, stretch out its tail.
Kristen:Scout's got that dumb pat.
Kristen:Like, her and the cat just cuddle and snuggle, and she's
Kristen:constantly, like, messing up its fur and then petting it back down.
Kristen:Messing up its fur, petting
Sarah:it back down.
Sarah:So, um, she would, she would be the cat show, cat show girl.
Sarah:Not sure, uh,
Kristen:she would be very good
Sarah:at the cat show, um, but she's...
Kristen:All about, all
Arlene:about the cat.
Arlene:That is great.
Arlene:And then she'd be around other cats, too, so she'd be in her glory.
Arlene:Yeah, 100%.
Arlene:So, Kristen, what are your, what are your babies going to, uh, dominate?
Kristen:Yeah, so the twins, um, they're both very, very different.
Kristen:So being a boy and a girl, it's amazing how you can start to see the
Kristen:differences in gender so early on, um, with like very little input, right?
Kristen:Like I, that's something that's also kind of amazed me.
Kristen:Um, but for Ellie, for our girl, um, she is just the spiciest little thing in life.
Kristen:And so I think she would just.
Kristen:Yeah, she's got lots of attitude, um, is not afraid to just like
Kristen:let all of her emotions out.
Kristen:Um, so definitely if there was a category, a 4 H category for
Kristen:spiciness, I think that's her to a T.
Kristen:Um, and I really hope, um, being a woman, That she takes that with her in
Kristen:life and that it does not get muted in life because I know so many times We are
Kristen:influenced by society and all of those pressures as women um that If I do one
Kristen:thing right as a mother, I hope that I foster and nurture that characteristic
Kristen:within her Um, our little boy Knox.
Kristen:He is just such a little tinkerer and curious mind Very similar
Kristen:to my husband, uh in that way.
Kristen:And so I can just see him like He's just so interested in how things are, you
Kristen:know, how things work, and figuring it out, and taking things apart, and putting
Kristen:it back together, and you can kind of just see like the little gears working
Kristen:in his, in his brain, and so whatever that, you know, that Um, I'm just like,
Kristen:Manifest in him in terms of his passions and his, uh, and his, uh, desires in life.
Kristen:I hope that that kind of takes him forward.
Kristen:Um, and as parents, we, my husband and I, talk a lot about, um, trying
Kristen:not to impose, you know, our love and hobbies and whatnot onto our children.
Kristen:And I think, In agriculture, you know, we want our kids to be like, Oh, we want
Kristen:them to farm and all of this so much.
Kristen:So, um, but, we really, we talk very openly about trying to give
Kristen:them other experiences other than, you know, what we want them to do.
Kristen:Um, and so, as a parent, I just really hope to Um, and to facilitate
Kristen:that and to, to let them grow and find their own passions in life.
Kristen:That's a
Arlene:hard one, right?
Arlene:Because it's like, oh, they're so cute and they would be so cute
Arlene:doing this thing that I love and then we could enjoy it together.
Arlene:But yeah, fostering what they really love too is a hard balance as they get older.
Arlene:Um, before I move into our cussing and discussing section, I just didn't know
Arlene:if either of you had any other, um, Reflections on listening back to your
Arlene:episodes or things that you, uh, laughed at yourself for saying, or anything
Arlene:else you wanted to comment on before we move into the, to wrapping up the show.
Arlene:Sarah, was there anything?
Arlene:The
Sarah:only thing is, I think that it remains important to laugh at ourselves
Sarah:and how we thought things would be.
Arlene:Yeah.
Kristen:I would definitely, yeah, echo that.
Kristen:Absolutely.
Kristen:You know, you think things are going to go one way and if becoming a
Kristen:parent has taught you anything, it's going to be the complete 180 to that.
Kristen:I would absolutely echo your sentiments there, Sarah.
Arlene:And I, I even, uh, I didn't include it with the questions here
Arlene:because we've been, we've been talking a lot, but there was, I quoted
Arlene:Katie, I think it was in Kristen's episode saying, nothing will go how
Arlene:you expected, but it'll all be fine.
Arlene:So that's kind of the summary of today, right?
Arlene:Nothing went exactly as you expected, but it was.
Arlene:It was still fine.
Arlene:So we'll go into our usual Cussing and Discussing segment.
Arlene:So for listeners, if you want to submit yours, go to the show notes and go to
Arlene:our speak pipe or the email, and you can send us your Cussing and Discussing.
Arlene:Katie, do you want to start?
Arlene:What's your Cussing and Discussing for today?
Caite:I will, and this is actually my parenting advice for you guys for the
Caite:next, well until next year when we do this again and talk about all the things
Caite:that have been bizarre in the last year.
Caite:Second year.
Caite:There will come a day.
Caite:Yeah, there will come a day when you will have the perfect gift for your
Caite:child, or the perfect experience.
Caite:You will have come up with something that is like the manifestation
Caite:of everything that is right and good in your child's world.
Caite:And you will be so excited, and you will give it to them.
Caite:And they will not give a flying fuck.
Caite:About whatever this thing is.
Caite:No matter how I could bring home a live unicorn at this point and feel
Caite:fairly sure that the girl child would go, I wanted a pink one.
Caite:And it's not even being bratty, which is what I grew up thinking it was.
Caite:But that they have such a strong mind about what is the right thing
Caite:to do and the right way to do it.
Caite:The Any deviation from that just, it's close but it's not good enough.
Caite:And I know like we all joke about kids playing with the box instead
Caite:of with the toy and that's, that's like the first step.
Caite:But then they will just, I'm trying to remember what it was that I brought
Caite:one of the kids last week, just so sure that it would like, lead to a
Caite:tearful meltdown of gratitude for my bringing them into a world so perfect
Caite:that this this experience would exist in it and my kid was just like oh
Arlene:Yeah, or you take them, yeah, you take them somewhere
Arlene:and they've had a fantastic day, but they drop their ice cream and
Arlene:that's the only thing they remember.
Arlene:Like you've, you had, you had almost the perfect experience, even if,
Arlene:you know, you brought them somewhere and it was, it was the thing you had
Arlene:the experience you wanted, but the only thing they remember is that bad
Arlene:moment where they dropped something or somebody stepped on their toe or, you
Arlene:know, the, the animal at the zoo that they wanted to see turn the wrong way.
Arlene:And it's.
Arlene:It's like, could we, like, can we focus on the other things,
Arlene:but, but sometimes we as adults
Caite:do the same, I think a lot of my, my cussing about it is that
Caite:it brings out the most, there are starving children in Africa who would
Caite:love to have this toy unicorn thing in myself, you know, that's just like, I
Arlene:know better than you.
Arlene:Yeah, because that doesn't make
Caite:them feel more grateful.
Caite:No, it just makes them mad.
Caite:Which...
Caite:Anyway, um, Sarah, what do you have to discuss
Sarah:this week?
Sarah:There is something getting into my chicken coop, and I don't know what it is.
Sarah:They have killed 11 chickens over the last 3 days, and I keep, like,
Sarah:fortifying it more and more every day.
Sarah:And every day there's just more dead chickens, and it just, I just don't know
Sarah:what to do, and I can't figure out how they're getting in, and I just want to,
Sarah:like, hook up a 12 volt battery to the...
Sarah:I don't know, I don't, for the life of me, cannot figure out what to do.
Sarah:We've put cameras up, the cameras don't catch anything, and we have like
Sarah:green kind of around the chicken coop, so the cameras can't actually see
Sarah:into the chicken coop, so I think I need to move my cameras, but uh, it's
Sarah:something weird, I don't know what it is.
Sarah:We, I thought it was a big raccoon underneath of it, underneath, like, the
Sarah:house that could go up into the run.
Sarah:Um, but I blocked that off and I still have dead chickens, so I don't know.
Sarah:I don't know what it
Kristen:is and it's
Sarah:driving me crazy!
Caite:What, uh, what kind of damage are they doing, Sarah?
Caite:So,
Sarah:sometimes the heads are ripped off and sometimes not.
Sarah:Sometimes the guts are eaten out and sometimes not.
Sarah:They're sometimes ripped apart.
Sarah:Um, like...
Sarah:Leg over here, body over here, but not always.
Sarah:Um, they have eaten, um, quite a bit of the meat.
Sarah:But then also, like, I have probably close to 15 that I just
Sarah:have no idea where they're at.
Sarah:So that made me think that they're pulling it under the
Sarah:coop, that I, like, can't get to.
Sarah:So, yesterday we put a smoke bomb under the coop, and like...
Sarah:Nothing came out.
Sarah:So, then I fenced in underneath the coop and put rocks all the way around it.
Sarah:So, like, if there's something getting in under there, like,
Sarah:they're stuck under there now.
Sarah:But then there were still dead ones this morning.
Sarah:So, I don't know.
Sarah:We caught a raccoon and a possum in the last two days.
Sarah:Or, like, two days ago and three days ago, but then this morning
Sarah:there were still dead ones.
Sarah:So, like, there's something
Kristen:else.
Kristen:Something else going on in there.
Caite:So, here's my, my three thoughts on this.
Caite:This has just become an advice segment instead.
Caite:One, I was having a similar issue.
Caite:I put those long electric fence insulators, those like four inch ones,
Caite:with wire about six inches off the ground and hooked it up to a two mile battery.
Caite:Uh, that'll slow down anything bigger by a lot.
Caite:Two, it's entirely possible that you have a weasel that's killing them
Caite:and a raccoon that's eating them.
Caite:Um.
Caite:Because weasels can get in anywhere, but raccoons do a lot more physical damage.
Caite:And three, join the Barnyard Language Facebook group.
Caite:And go ask Ryan Marquart because Ryan will tell you more about ways that chickens
Caite:can die than you ever wanted to know.
Caite:He's a high school friend who has apparently made quite a study
Caite:of things that kill chickens and he has excellent advice.
Caite:And for anyone else who, uh, needs advice on dead chickens.
Caite:Or parenting.
Caite:Or really anything else.
Caite:You should also go to a chicken stand parent.
Caite:Or parenting.
Sarah:I will do all three of those.
Sarah:So, thank you, Katie, for that.
Sarah:Tidbit of knowledge.
Sarah:Interesting that it could be two things.
Sarah:Because, yeah, sometimes the heads are off.
Sarah:So that made me think it was like a weasel or a mink or something like that.
Sarah:Um, but not always, you know.
Arlene:So, Kristen, do you have any non chicken related questions?
Arlene:I
Kristen:do.
Kristen:We do not own any chickens.
Kristen:Um, but, uh.
Kristen:We are battling the, um, onset of another teething phase with the twins.
Kristen:So that has been a fucking nightmare.
Kristen:We went through a really good So my son has eight teeth, and my daughter has six,
Kristen:and now she's gotten some more bottom ones, and I'm like, oh my fucking god.
Kristen:Yeah, she is I say I love her spiciness, but it's also, like, can be, like I
Kristen:don't want to call her dramatic because I don't like that, um, descriptor of women,
Kristen:but she like, you know, notches it up.
Kristen:She lets
Arlene:you know how she feels, yeah.
Kristen:Oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Kristen:Which, I mean, in all fairness...
Kristen:Getting teeth is not a fun thing for anybody.
Kristen:Like, I do not blame her for that.
Kristen:She did not choose to not be born with teeth and then get them,
Kristen:you know, pushed into her mouth.
Kristen:Um, whoever decided that this was how kids should have, should get teeth and
Kristen:then fall out and then get some more, I really want to set up a meeting with
Kristen:them and have, have a little discussion.
Kristen:Um, because it is just a nightmare for everyone.
Kristen:There's so
Arlene:much drama about, around teeth for so many years.
Arlene:Because then they finally get them all and then they start to lose them and then
Arlene:there's all the drama of like, Oh, well, I can't eat because I have a wiggly tooth.
Arlene:No, you can't brush my teeth because I have a wiggly tooth.
Arlene:And then I lost my tooth and the Tooth Fairy forgot three nights in a row.
Kristen:Which is the finest.
Kristen:Yeah, and then, like, God forbid,
Caite:like.
Caite:Our Tooth Fairy finally just bought toys, Arlene.
Caite:The Tooth Fairy said, I don't want you to have to hold on to this loose
Caite:money, so I'm just gonna buy some toys and that'll be your Tooth Fairy money.
Caite:So
Arlene:like one toy and then they're done for all the rest of their teeth?
Arlene:Brilliant.
Arlene:See, that's
Kristen:the thing, because the teeth last forever.
Kristen:I've got
Arlene:four kids multiplied by however many teeth fall out, right?
Arlene:So it's just like, you never know when someone's, and as they get older,
Arlene:they don't always tell you or complain about the loose teeth, which is great.
Arlene:But then I've got an older kid who loses a tooth and then I still feel
Arlene:like I need to give them money so that the younger one still believes.
Arlene:So then it's like, yeah, Oh, by the way, there's a tooth.
Arlene:I left it on the counter.
Arlene:I have taken the teeth out of the bedroom.
Arlene:There's no sneaking into bedrooms.
Arlene:The teeth in our house go on the, go on the kitchen counter behind
Arlene:the sink, and that's where the tooth fairy leaves money because
Arlene:I'm not sneaking into anyone's room.
Kristen:That is, I'm gonna take that and hide that in my back pocket.
Kristen:That's smart.
Arlene:Don't talk about pillows or anything in the bedroom.
Arlene:Yeah, it doesn't, the tooth fairy can just come right in any part of the house.
Arlene:Love it.
Arlene:So, I guess mine is Tooth Fairies, but my other cussing
Arlene:and disgusting was Oh, sorry.
Caite:That's alright.
Caite:You were going to think as much as I hate sneaking into the kids rooms.
Caite:I feel like this is my secret shame as a big, tough farm mom.
Caite:I am so grossed out by fingernail clippings, hair clippings, and
Caite:teeth that the idea of finding teeth on my kitchen counter...
Caite:I kind of want to die just thinking about it.
Arlene:I've got one there right now, want to come over?
Arlene:I don't...
Arlene:Gah!
Arlene:She's trying to
Kristen:make her gag.
Kristen:You could make it a
Sarah:bathroom counter or like, uh,
Kristen:the shop sink or something like that.
Kristen:There's been gross
Arlene:things.
Arlene:Yeah, there's gross things in my kitchen a lot of the time.
Arlene:So you wouldn't be one of those people that makes that like old,
Arlene:like, you've seen those like gross pictures of like tooth jewelry,
Arlene:you know, like that people made.
Arlene:Now everyone's gagging.
Caite:I read a, I read a book a few years ago by the same author who wrote Gone
Caite:Girl that involves dollhouse decorated teeth, and I just Did you stop reading?
Caite:Yeah!
Caite:No, see?
Caite:See, there's not gonna be any, I was probably fine with teeth.
Caite:That's that.
Kristen:That's, yeah.
Kristen:That's gross.
Kristen:Oh, man.
Kristen:Well, Katie, I do have a, as as kids, kids on the dairy farm, we used to, when
Kristen:we were like little tots and uh, would play in like the feed bunk and stuff
Kristen:like that, we would often find cow teeth.
Kristen:The cow
Arlene:teeth.
Arlene:Yeah.
Arlene:Bring em to school.
Kristen:Bring.
Kristen:We would bring them in the house and my mom would find them and now thinking about
Kristen:it, it totally, like, grosses me out, but we thought it was the coolest thing
Kristen:ever because they were massive teeth.
Kristen:Yeah, they're so big.
Kristen:Like a dinosaur, but yeah, the thought of it now, if my children do
Kristen:that, I, that, I am stopping that.
Caite:I'll say it.
Caite:I have a shed snake skin in the middle of our dining room table right now.
Caite:I have a mummified bat in the china cabinet.
Caite:Like, animal teeth?
Caite:Fine.
Caite:It's just humans.
Arlene:Okay, so, but you can't handle the kid tooth in your
Caite:kitchen.
Caite:Humans, man.
Caite:Humans.
Arlene:So the one I was actually thinking of during our multi hour long
Arlene:conversation was that I love doing this podcast because we get to meet so many
Arlene:amazing people, but we live too far apart and I want this conversation to like
Arlene:extend over like dinner and maybe a glass of wine and to not have to drive all the
Arlene:way to Michigan to meet Sarah someday.
Arlene:But anyway, I just want to thank you both ladies for joining us.
Arlene:today and for being so open and honest and these are exactly the kinds
Arlene:of conversations that we wanted to have when we started this podcast.
Arlene:So thank you for coming back and thank you for supporting us and
Arlene:building community and being honest about the way the journey is.
Arlene:going.
Arlene:And Sarah, do you want to just remind people where they can find you?
Arlene:Because you also have a podcast that people can listen to.
Arlene:Absolutely.
Arlene:First off,
Sarah:thank you guys for having me.
Sarah:This has been so much fun.
Sarah:If you ever are in Michigan, look me up and I'll do the same
Sarah:if I'm up toward your direction.
Sarah:Um, so thank you guys.
Sarah:My podcast is
Kristen:called throwing wrenches,
Sarah:mending fences, and you can follow me on social media, Facebook, Instagram,
Sarah:all the places, um, at the same name.
Sarah:So throwing wrenches, mending fences.
Sarah:And again, thank you guys.
Sarah:This has been so much fun.
Sarah:And Kristen, it's been fun to
Kristen:chat about our babes.
Arlene:Yes.
Arlene:And, uh, Sarah actually does some pretty funny stuff on TikTok.
Arlene:I'm not a huge, uh, Katie and I have failed miserably on doing anything on
Arlene:Tik Tok, um, but Sarah is hilarious.
Arlene:And so you should definitely follow her there and all the other places.
Arlene:Um, Kristen, if people want to get in touch with you,
Arlene:where should they find you?
Arlene:Yeah,
Kristen:for sure.
Kristen:I just also just want to say a huge thank you to both of you.
Kristen:And also congratulations.
Kristen:Like.
Kristen:What an amazing thing that you're continuing to do this.
Kristen:I think that this is such an amazing community that you've built.
Kristen:I love, uh, tuning in and connecting with all kinds of diversity.
Kristen:Like, I think you guys just do such a good job of covering a vast, um, array of
Kristen:topics and featuring people that really are the stories that need to be heard.
Kristen:Um, so thank you so much for that and thank you for the
Kristen:opportunity to join you again.
Kristen:It's been a pleasure.
Kristen:Um, I am mostly an Instagram, uh, user these days, uh, so you can find me, just
Kristen:my name, Kristen Kelderman, um, over there and, um, yeah, just kind of focusing on
Kristen:mental health, but also sharing some of those parenting struggles along the way
Kristen:and, uh, some cute pics of my dog as well.
Kristen:So that's where I am.
Arlene:Thank you both so much.
Arlene:This was a great conversation and, uh, yeah, like Katie said, maybe
Arlene:we'll meet up again in a year.
Caite:Thank you for joining us on Barnyard Language.
Caite:If you enjoy the show, we encourage you to support us by becoming a patron.
Caite:Go to www.
Caite:patreon.
Caite:com backslash barnyard language to make a small monthly donation to help
Caite:cover the costs of making the show.
Arlene:Please rate and review the podcast and follow the show
Arlene:so you never miss an episode.
Caite:You can find us on Facebook, as Barnyard Language
Caite:and on Twitter we are BarnyardPod.
Caite:If you want to connect with other farming families, you can join our
Caite:private Barnyard Language Facebook group.
Arlene:We are always in search of guests for the podcast.
Arlene:If you or someone you know would like to chat with us, please get in touch.
Arlene:We are a proud member of the Positively Farming Media Podcast Network.
Caite:Thank you for joining us on Barnyard Language.
Caite:If you enjoy this show, we encourage you to support us by becoming a patron.
Caite:Go to www.
Caite:patreon.
Caite:com backslash barnyard language to make a small monthly donation to help
Caite:cover the costs of making this show.
Arlene:Please rate and review the podcast and follow the show so you never miss an
Caite:episode.
Caite:You can find us on Facebook, as Barnyard Language and on
Caite:Twitter we are BarnyardPod.
Caite:If you want to connect with other farming families, you can join our
Caite:private Barnyard Language Facebook group.
Arlene:We are always in search of guests for the podcast.
Arlene:If you or someone you know would like to chat with us, please get in touch.
Arlene:We are a proud member of the Positively Farming Media Podcast Network.