Itβs a refrain weβve all heardβif youβre having a baby, youβre going to be tired. It comes in the form of unsolicited advice, gentle ribbing and glances of pity. Unfortunately, the well-meaning commenters are often rightβnew parents get very little sleep. But itβs more than just a cranky baby that causes a perpetual feeling of exhaustion that defines the first few months of parenthood. Here are five reasons why new parents are tired, even if theyβve got a good sleeper.
1. Labour and delivery are exhausting
Whether you gave birth vaginally or surgically, having a baby is tiring. The mental toll of labour and delivery cannot be understated, and the process can come with challenges and major decision-making for everyone involved at a time when emotions are already running high. Physically, holding the weight of your infant, placenta and amniotic fluid is no easy feat, and some labours can last days, causing sleep deprivation even before active labour and pushing or prepping for a c-section has even started. Labour also causes yourΒ heart to work 80Β percent harder (higher βcardiac outputβ), which can take up to two months postpartum to return to normal. Labour and delivery are emotionally and physically taxing, so itβs not unusual to feel tired even before your little once has made their entrance.
2. Post-delivery recovery takes time
Good news! The aftermath of delivering a baby can be euphoric. But it also requires a good recovery period. Your body has been through a lot, even if you were lucky enough to have a straightforward birth or short labour. Your blood volume decreases over eight weeks postpartum, and kidney function (filtering of fluid) must shift to accommodate the change. During recovery, the uterus will change and start to decrease in size, but you still have a good amount of the hormone relaxin in your system which, during pregnancy, kept your ligaments all loosey goosey in preparation for delivery. It can take up to a year for those ligaments, muscles and joints to recover and become stable again. All these processes take time and energy to coordinate and complete, whichβyou guessed itβcan really contribute to those feelings of exhaustion.
3. Pregnancy and postpartum brain changes take brain power
Early parenthood requires a lot of adaptation. These are the days you start learning about your baby and their needs. Youβll continue to develop new abilities and skills as a parent and that takes a good amount of brain power.
The maternal brain undergoes a lot of remodelling both during pregnancy and after. Certain areas of the brain actually decrease in sizeβa change that can last up to two years postpartum. Meanwhile, receptors for oxytocin are enriched and activated, allowing you to take advantage of skin-to-skin and cuddle time with your baby. These oxytocin signals are incredibly important for milk production and parent-infant attachment. Your sensory system also becomes heightened, allowing you to be super in-tune with your baby. Like a spidey-sense that alerts you when your baby needs you.
4. Making milk, feeding and/or pumping uses up energy
The process of making nutrient-dense milk and chest/breastfeeding (should you decide to do so) is a demanding post-partum process. The nutrients found in your milk (which include omega-3 fatty acids, Choline, Vitamin A, B-vitamins, Vitamin D, iron, and more) are taken from your bodyβs stores or you own diet or supplementation. Itβs recommended to continue taking your prenatal vitamin during this time to ensure you and your newborn are both getting all the nutrients you needβmany find it hard to cook nutritious meals or even to remember to eat in those first few weeks with a baby. When chest/breastfeeding or pumping, you can burn around 500 extra calories per dayΒβso it is so important to get those nutrients in postpartum to keep your energy up.
Whether youβre using formula, are nursing or doing a combination of both, a newborn feeding schedule can look very different to your pre-baby mealtimes. For starters, the first few weeks (at the very least) your newborn will need food every three or so hoursβyes, even at night. Which means you (and your partner or support system) are on-call day and night. Many babies donβt sleep through the night for weeks, months or even years, which, unsurprisingly, can be super tiring for parents.
If that wasnβt enough, many new parents opt to pump, which allows more people to help out with feeding (yay!)βthough it often comes with a strict pump schedule in order to maintain supply (boo!). Prolactin, the milk-producing hormone, is highest in concentration in the middle of the night, which forces many new moms to wake, sometimes multiples times in the night, to pump.
Newborn feeding is complicated no matter what route you choose to nourish your child, and they all tend to include middle-of-the-night eating. The result? Broken sleep cycles and short stretches of shut eye that result in a lack of rest.
5. No consistent sleep schedule means no consistent sleep
While you may be obsessively watching wake windows and sleep cues, your baby is unlikely to offer much consistency in the early days. Despite your best efforts, your baby will refuse to nap at some point and throw the day into chaos. Plus, leaps in your babyβs development over the first year also can change their needs and behaviourβand disrupt their rest with dreaded sleep regressions. Itβs not easy growing up, and for an infant, those leaps in brain development alone can be distressing and exhausting. Babies can have periods of being clingy or fussy, alternating with periods of calmness and happiness that last days or weeks, but are often hard to predict and prepare for. If you used to be able to count on a certain number of hours of sleep per night, chances are that has changed post-baby and you are always at risk of having your sleep interrupted with a little one around.
While some parents can try to catch up on sleep by napping when baby naps (easier said than done), many parents need to go back to work, some as early as four weeks, after welcoming a newborn.
When you canβt depend on a solid eight hours of rest a nightβsometimes for weeks or months at a timeβbut still need to be up, alert and attentive all day, itβs no wonder that new parents are tired. Remember to be kind and gentle with yourself during this period.