Archive for the 'Getting Help' Category

Book review: Twin Set

I read this book with a twinge of nostalgia – and nausea.

My twins have now outgrown all-night breast-bottle feedings, infant bouts of inexplicable crying and multiple poops a day. The toddler years are not exactly peaceful, but that sickening sleep deprivation and round-the-clock care of the first year is over. Reading Twin Set brought back both the difficulties of those first few months as well as the sheer amazement of giving birth to, and caring for two tiny twins.

Twin Set is a practical guide to pregnancy, birth and the first years of parenting twins. The book doesn’t aim to be a comprehensive guide to parenting in general. If you want details on prenatal care, breastfeeding or toilet training, you’ll have to supplement with other books. But Twin Set does a good job of highlighting differences between parenting twins and parenting singletons. And as mothers of twins know, almost everything is different: pregnancy, birth, post-natal care (both for you and the babies), feeding, bathing, getting out of the house, discipline, starting school – and everything in between.

The best part of this book is that the advice is not simply the authors’ opinion but was gathered through a survey. According to the introduction, the authors surveyed 300 mothers of twins “from around the country” (presumably the US). The scientist in me wanted to know much more about this survey: how it was conducted; what questions were asked; how the mothers were chosen etc. Still, there is wisdom among 300 mothers, and that shows in the book.

Twin Set would be most useful for parents about to give birth to twins. No one is reading just after the birth, and within a year or so you will have figured it all out anyway. But for the parents-to-be there are many useful insights: just how difficult bathing two slippery, crying infants can be; the importance of recording all feeding and pooping in the first few months because you’ll forget who did what and when; that grocery shopping will never be as quick and easy, partly because most shopping carts have only one kid’s seat.

I do have a couple of gripes with the book.

The information is very (although implicitly) US-centered. Some things, like a “Snap ‘N Go” or leaving your kids in the car while you run back to the house, may not make sense outside America.

I also got tired of the book’s cutesy language and general dumbing-down. Consultant pediatricians, for instance, are called “Mommy Doc” and “Daddy Doc”. Really, we can handle a real name and title! And I’ve yet to meet a mother who would spend precious alone-time getting a manicure or doing word-puzzles.

My biggest gripe was with the book’s slant on the environment. Buying bottled water by the case-load (or at all) is simply irresponsible. Trying filtering. And, sorry, teaching your kids to play with empty toilet rolls does not negate thousands of disposable diapers in the land fill. Yes, there is debate on cloth versus disposable diapers (see The Great Disposable Diaper Debate) but telling parents to just “stop worrying” rather than make a conscious and informed decision seems, again, irresponsible (as is failing to disclose Twin Sets partnership with Pampers!).

Gripes aside, this is a useful and realistic book for parents embarking on the head-spinning adventure of raising multiples.

(Thanks to Random House for the review copy.)

Do not try this alone

Advice to expectant parents of multiples usually includes the deceptively simple “Get extra help” or “Accept any offers of help”. Frankly, when it comes to caring for my kids, I won’t accept “any” offers of help. I am, like most parents, extremely picky. Consequently, getting help has been a long and stressful process.

My obstetrician ordered me off work during the 26th week of pregnancy. Although I wasn’t confined to bed, I was to avoid any type of exertion including shopping, cleaning, extensive walking and lifting - even lifting my one-year-old son. These restrictions were to reduce the risk of pre-term labour and, according to my obstetrician, aren’t unusual for twin pregnancies. It was a surprise for us, however. With my husband working full-time and travelling for business, we needed extra help well before the due date.

We were lucky in that my parents were able to help us during the remaining months of my pregnancy, and through the first month after the twins were born. We would have been in rough(er) shape without them. As extremely grateful as we were, it’s a lot to ask of anyone. The days were long, the nights even longer. I was almost incapacitated with complications from the c-section, and was not up to full speed for about 2 months. We needed a nanny.

We were again fortunate in finding a half-time nanny who specializes in emergency I-need-you-now situations. Eleven months later, she is still with us partly because she loves our kids and they love her, but also because we have been unable to find a full-time nanny willing to care for three children under two years old. We tried agencies hiring from overseas but found them cold (as if overseas nannies were commodities) and vague (it was difficult to determine if a nanny was a good fit with our family). We tried local nanny agencies but they simply had no one willing to take the job. We tried canadiannanny.ca, an online bulletin board, but were not impressed with the qualifications of the listings.

So we continue, happily, to depend on our half-time nanny, a fantastic home-care provider for our older son - both of whom we found through word-of-mouth – and extraordinary family and friends.

My advice? Don’t pretend you can do this alone. Plan far in advance, ideally from the moment you discover you’re a “multiple mom”. Look for someone who has cared for multiples or for several children close in age, has a lot of energy, even more patience, and truly loves babies. Tell everyone you know that you’re looking for a nanny, and ask for references. Accept offers of help from friends and family, but warn them that they may be assigned to less desirable jobs than cuddling babies. Ask them to wash the dishes, fill bottles, shovel the driveway, put in a load of laundry or make dinner, while you cuddle your babies.