The story of Baby Taylor’s hospital stay in January this
year is a desperate one. Desperately sad, but also a desperate warning to other
mothers not to make the same mistakes I did.
In hindsight, I knew that there was something wrong with
Baby Taylor from him being about two weeks old. He was a snacky, fidgety feeder
and he would often throw up an entire feed just minutes after finishing it. The
vomiting probably distressed me more than it did him, but he was clearly
uncomfortable most of the time and I tried everything to persuade him to feed.
I administered gallons of Infacol and gripe water, rocked him until he was
almost asleep so he would take the bottle more willingly, tried every milk on
the market once I’d realised that breastfeeding just wasn’t an option
anymore... You name it, I tried it. But nothing worked. Alongside this, Baby
Taylor did nothing but cry. He would cry and cry for hours and there was
nothing I could do to comfort him. And he wouldn’t sleep. When he woke up in
the night for a feed, there was often nothing I could do to get him to go back
to sleep. Once, after trying for two hours to settle him in his Moses basket, I
told my husband I couldn’t cope anymore, got in my car and drove up into the
forestry where I slept in the passenger seat under a blanket for a couple of
hours.
I took Baby Taylor to see a doctor who said he probably had
reflux and sent him home with a box of infant Gaviscon. That worked for less
than 24 hours. Another doctor gave him a prescription for Ranitidine, but
neglected to tell us that the dosage would change with his weight, so that
worked for a week or so, then we were back to square one. Nobody seemed to want
to help us.
Things finally came to a head when I had spent a whole day
failing to feed Baby Taylor or get him to sleep. My husband was at work and my
mom came round to find me clutching Toddler Taylor and sobbing my heart out
while Baby Taylor screamed in his cot upstairs. I said some awful things that
day. Things like I wished somebody would just come and take him away, or that I
wanted to leave him somewhere and drive away because I simply couldn’t cope
with him anymore. I said I didn’t love him, didn’t want him, wished I’d never
had him. I can forgive myself for these things now because I know that I was
mentally ill at the time from all of the stress and the crippling lack of
sleep. But saying them made me feel sick. Saying them made me hate myself.
My mom had no idea what to do, so she called 111 and they
decided to send an ambulance. When the paramedics arrived, they asked me some
questions and I tried to explain the hell that we had been going through. They
decided to take both of us in and we were quickly taken into an assessment room
where a triage nurse took our details and checked Baby Taylor over, then we
were left alone for a while until a doctor came to see us. As is always the
case with A&E, I explained our story again. I was honest about the fact
that I no longer felt able to cope, which was when he asked me “have you ever
thought about hurting your son?” I replied, “No, but I can empathise with a
person who gets to the end of their rope and shakes their baby.” I knew it
would be a red light. I knew exactly what would happen next, but I’d reached a
point where I had to be honest. A point where I knew we needed help, whatever
the personal cost.
After that, I wasn’t allowed to be alone with Baby Taylor.
Even when my husband arrived, the door to the room had to be left open. Then
another nurse came and took him away to the children’s ward. I was told that I
wasn’t allowed to stay with him, but that someone would come to see me when
he’d been assessed and take me down to the ward so I could see him and know
that he would be properly looked after. I was in shock. I couldn’t even cry.
I’d known what would happen, but I felt like a monster. Even though I knew that
I would never do anything to hurt my child, I felt like a criminal.
A crisis meeting was arranged for that night, so we hung
around at the hospital once we’d seen Baby Taylor and been assured by the staff
on the paediatric ward that they couldn’t feed him either and that they didn’t
believe for one minute that I was a risk to my son. The doctor on the ward told me that she felt
it was very brave of me to admit to feeling so helpless and out of control, but
all I could feel was shame and disgust. It was, and still is, the darkest night
of my life.
The social worker who came to assess me said he felt it was
ridiculous to keep me at the hospital well into the night when it was clearly
obvious that what I really needed was to sleep. I shrugged, told him we’d all
seen the horror stories about shaken babies and children beaten to death by
those who were supposed to protect them. I understood why I was there, why it
was necessary. I answered his questions honestly and he told me that he thought
I was probably depressed, but that he in no way believed I would harm either of
my children. I was finally allowed to say goodbye to Baby Taylor, given a
strong sleeping pill and sent home.
Baby Taylor was kept in the hospital for four nights. During
that time, my husband and I had a meeting with the team who were looking after
him. One of the nurses in that meeting asked me why I had struggled with him
for so long, essentially on my own. I replied “I didn’t think I had a choice.”
I explained that I had spent the last three months feeling like a complete
failure, and an amazing thing happened; a whole roomful of medical
professionals told me that they all thought the fact that I had somehow managed
to feed Baby Taylor and do a pretty decent job of keeping his weight up in
light of the severity of his reflux was nothing short of a miracle. They told
me they thought I was remarkable.
Later that week I was also psychiatrically assessed and
diagnosed as being borderline depressed, but it was suggested that that was
largely due to the stress of Baby Taylor’s condition rather than anything that
would require medication. Also, I was assured that there was no question of me
being considered a danger to my children. Looking back, I don’t think anyone
ever really believed that I was, but I know that it was necessary for them to
check me out. For a while we got extra help with childcare so I could get some
rest, and everyone in our families finally knew what we’d been going through.
I’m not going to dress it up; it was a shitty time. Having Social Services
involved was terrifying, but it was something we had to go through to get the
help that we needed.
What I took away from the experience – aside from the fact
that I am not, in fact, Wonder Woman – was that mothers don’t talk about this
stuff enough. We all pretend that we can cope with anything. Who knows; maybe
there are some women out there who can. But I’m not one of them, yet I
pretended for months that I was fine even though I felt like I was drowning.
And what I’ve realised, at the risk of sounding melodramatic, is that it’s
actually really dangerous to internalise parenting problems. It might seem like
every other mother you know is sailing through on a sea of endless patience,
but I can almost guarantee you that that isn’t the case. If just one mother who
feels like she isn’t coping reads this post and opens up to a relative, friend
or health visitor – anyone – then my work is done. Being a parent is hard and being
a mother can be very lonely. Don’t make it worse by pretending you’re okay if
you’re really, really not. Believe it or not (and I certainly wouldn’t have a
year ago) no one is going to think you’re a monster if you admit that you’re
struggling.
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