Pregnant and Paralyzed: Making Adjustments
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Become an AdvocateNext is the impossibility of a crib: the side is too tall for me to reach over and access the baby. Somehow our market hasn’t caught onto this need, so the crib needed a DIY solution: my father-in-law split the crib’s long side in two, put it both ends on sliders, and lifted it off the ground so I can roll right to it. It’s perfect. There are a few variations of this solution on the internet, but all, unfortunately, must be custom-built.
The next two hurdles have similar solutions, depending on the situation. The possibilities of the baby falling off my lap, getting injured, and/or being excluded from things due to my inabilities were both bummers. I “solved” both with a baby front carrier and an infant seating aid that attaches around my waist. I plan on using them wholly: to take walks in our neighborhood, move him around the house, sit at my desk with me, and take him to his father whenever he has a stinky diaper.
I’m kidding about that last part, but only kinda.
There are things I’ve had to step down from, too, things I’ll just have to accept help on: putting baby into a car seat, into a highchair at mealtime, and general movement once he’s too big for the wrap. I’ve had to accept that I’ll need help with some things, and that accepting help is okay. But please believe the first thing I’ll teach him is how to crawl himself onto mama’s lap.
This isn’t a complete list and it varies depending on your abilities, but just know that you aren’t alone and aren’t the first to bear a child with a disability. The answers and the support are both out there.