Becoming new parents can be joyous and wonderful, but it can also be challenging to your relationship which can make you feel guilty.
The Challenges of Being New Parents
Some of the challenges of being a new parents are fairly well known:
- Being sleep deprived especially during the first few months
- Feeling irritable due to sleep deprivation
- Experiencing poor concentration due to lack of sleep
- Experiencing increased stress and anxiety (see my article: Recognizing the Signs That You're Under Too Much Stress)
- Losing patience with your partner and yourself
- Feeling anxious about being a new parent (see my article: Self Help Tips For Dealing With Anxiety)
- Feeling like you are not a "good enough" parent
- Experiencing postpartum depression
- Feeling jealous that your partner pays more attention to the baby than to you
- Feeling like you are neglecting yourself (see my article: Is Self Care Selfish?)
- Feeling like you and your partner are neglecting your needs as a couple
- Feeling the need to take a break from parenting
- Realizing you and your partner have different parenting styles
- Feeling like you have lost control of your life, your relationship and your household
- Not feeling like a sexual being (see my article: What is Sexual Desire Discrepancy?)
- Feeling less physically attractive
- Feeling less sexually attracted to your partner (see my article: What is Attraction?)
- Having less sex in your relationship (see my article: Have You and Your Partner Stopped Having Sex?).
- Listening to seemingly endless advice and childrearing stories from relatives and friends
- Coping with visits from relatives and friends when you're exhausted (see my article: Coping With Difficult In-Laws).
- Re-experiencing traumatic memories from your own childhood
Awareness and Acceptance That Your Relationship Has Changed
Before you had the baby, the two of you probably had more time to do whatever you wanted to do or to just relax at home.
The two of you could focus on yourself as individuals and your relationship as a couple.
Before you had the baby, you probably knew your lives would change and you both would need to adjust, but knowing it and actually experiencing the changes are two different things.
Now, in addition to being a couple, you're both parents and parenting will take up most of your time and energy. You don't have as much time to nurture your relationship as you did before the baby because the baby's needs are the priority.
In the past, when two or three generations lived close by, new parents had more help, but things have changed in recent years and many new parents don't have close relatives who can help. So, all the responsibilities of taking care of a baby fall on the new parents, which adds to their stress and anxiety.
All of these factors and more can have a negative impact on your relationship as you both realize how much your life has changed.
How to Navigate the Change to Your Relationship as New Parents
- Cultivate awareness and acceptance that your life and your relationship have changed (see my article: Change, Awareness and Acceptance).
- Find ways to practice self care even if these practices are small (see my article: Finding Time for Self Care).
- Approach these new life changes as a team (see my article: Improving Your Relationship By Practicing Teamwork).
- Develop open communication about how you feel about your new role as a parent and feelings it might bring up about your relationship.
- Make time for each other, even in small ways. This can help you to maintain an emotional connection with each other.
- Share responsibilities for the baby and other household responsibilities fairly (see my article: Sharing the Mental Load).
- Reassess the need to shift responsibilities from time to time so neither of you feel resentful.
- Be patient with yourself and each other as you both navigate these changes.
- Get help from a licensed mental health professional if the changes have put a strain on your relationship.
Getting Help in Couples Therapy
Adding another commitment to your schedule might feel like the last thing you want to do with all your new responsibilities, but if your relationship is suffering due to all the new changes that parenthood brings, you could benefit from seeing a couples therapist to salvage your relationship.
A skilled couples therapist can help you to adjust to the changes to your relationship so you can approach the changes as a team.
Rather than waiting until your relationship problems get worse, seek help early so you can have a more fulfilling relationship.
About Me
I am a licensed New York City psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, EFT (for couples), Somatic Experiencing and Sex Therapist.
I have over 20 years of experiencing helping individual adults and couples.
To find out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.
To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me.