Monday, March 28, 2016

How to Make Small Talk with a Pregnant Woman

So I'm pregnant. (Surprise!) In the last few months I've noticed something odd: people don't seem to know how to talk with a pregnant woman. At church, in the office, in line at the grocery store. What do you say to her?

Many people seem to be completely stumped as to how to converse with a woman who is with child. This is evidenced by A) inappropriate comments or questions or B) the same comments and questions every time. So to ease your discomfort (and hers!), I've prepared this handy guide on How to Make Small Talk with a Pregnant Woman*.  Enjoy!

*This guide assumes that you already know she is pregnant. If you are unsure, please reference my prior post on when it is appropriate to ask a woman if she's pregnant.  (Spoiler alert, the answer is never.)

1. Boring is better than offensive. The same 3 questions do get old. Very old. "How are you feeling? When are you due? Do you know if it's a boy or a girl?" But, I'd prefer to answer the same question the 50th time than to try to navigate a response to something that is inappropriate or offensive. When you tell me that I'm "as big as a house", do I answer with the snarky, sarcastic comments that probably aren't quite right for Sunday morning coffee hour, or do I laugh and pretend you aren't a jerk? Stick with asking when I'm due. You don't remember the answer from the last 6 times you asked, anyway.

2. Put your comments through the "Would my wife smack me if I said this to her" test. This handy test can help you avoid making the offensive comments from number 1. Before you let words out of your mouth, ask yourself if your wife (or mother, sister, friend, etc) would get upset hearing them. How would it go telling your wife that she's "getting HUGE" or is "as big as a house!" Where would you sleep that night? If a comment would make your wife upset, please don't say it to a hormonal, emotional woman. She might very well smack you, too.

3. Make sure your question doesn't make you look like an idiot. My 3 year old niece commonly asks me "do you still have that baby in your tummy?" It's adorable- because she's 3 and clearly doesn't have a firm grasp on the concept of pregnancy. When adults ask "you still haven't had that baby yet?" it just makes them seem... unintelligent. Do they think I already had the baby, but just left it in the car?
The same is true of the question "do you know what you're having?" Yes, I know what I'm having- it's a baby. Not a kitten or a koala or a basketball. Seriously- I know you mean to ask if I know the sex of the baby, but you literally just asked me WHAT might emerge from my nether regions. Even the 3 year-old knows it will be a baby.

4. Leave the horror stories for Halloween. Please. We don't want to hear about your 90 hour labor, or the cousin's friend who gave birth to a 15 pound baby and hasn't walked normally since then. Carrying and birthing a baby is scary enough without your story waking me up sobbing in the middle of the night. Just don't.

5. Don't ask a  question you don't want an honest answer to. There are parts of my pregnancy that you, kind almost-stranger, don't really want to know about. And I can't guarantee what sort of mood I'll be in when you ask. I could give you the polite answer, or you could get an entire list of every discomfort I've experienced AND every fear I have for the birthing room. There are some questions you'd best avoid if you're not prepared for a conversation about bodily fluids, functions, and parts.

6. Let the future miseries stay in the future. I am fully aware that when the baby comes I will not get very much sleep. I realize that my body will still have quirks and discomforts after the baby is born. I know parenting will be hard. You don't need to point it out to me. Especially not after I've made a comment about the current things I'm experiencing. My comment that I'm tired is really just an answer to how I'm feeling, not an invitation for you to tell me how much MORE tired I'll be at 2am a month from now when I haven't slept for more than 45 minutes at a time in weeks. The fact that I will be miserable in the future doesn't actually change the fact that I am somewhat miserable now. I AM tired now, even if I will be more tired tomorrow.

7. Don't fixate on our bodies. We are well aware of our bodies. Please let part of our conversation be about something OTHER than our growing bellies, swollen limbs, and tired feet. We are WELL aware of them. Our spirits, intellect, and emotions are also part of this whole baby growing thing we've got going on: feel free to ask us how we're coping, what we're excited about, or what we've found unexpected in this process.

8. Regular stuff is not off limits! Believe it or not, pregnant women are actually aware of the world beyond themselves. It is 100% acceptable to have a 'regular' conversation about weather, office shenanigans, or funny stories with a pregnant woman. If you're feeling stuck still, here are some great conversation starters that anyone would appreciate:

  • Have you seen [the newest movie]? I've heard it's great!
  • If you had unlimited money to take one vacation this year, where would you go and what would you do?
  • What are you looking forward to about the next year?
  • What's your favorite smell?
  • I'm not sure what to make for dinner tonight. What is your family having?


I hope this helpful guide has prepared you for wonderful conversations with the mothers-to-be in your life! I'd love to hear stories of your successes (or failures) in this area.
Happy conversing!
Nissa

Monday, March 14, 2016

How to Name a Baby

Now that the little peanut I'm incubating is getting close to joining the real world, the topic of baby names has been front and center in my mind.

Naming a human being is hard. Much harder than naming, say, a Barbie doll or stuffed animal, which is where most of my naming expertise lies.  I did once sit on a 7-person committee to name 5 kittens, but when there are more people than cats, you end up with your Mom declaring that one is named Fred, but spelled "Phred," and since you're only 12 you don't get a veto.

Fortunately, when you're naming a baby you're usually only on a committee of 2 or less. With major veto power. But it is still hard, so I've compiled this handy guide.

How to Name a Baby

1. Start when you're little. Imagine the name you'll give to your theoretical progeny. Write it in your diary. Tell your sister and your best friend. Like in Anne of Green Gables, where she decides that she wants to name her kids 'Denim' and 'Lace.' Get angry at anyone who ever says they like that name, because it is YOURS.

2. Once you find yourself in a situation where you are actually in charge of naming a human, eagerly pull out your childhood list of what you've been planning on naming children before puberty was even a speck on the horizon.

3. Gape in astonishment at your significant other (SO) when he tells you he doesn't have any sort of similar list. Apparently he hasn't been daydreaming about his theoretical future children since reading Anne of Green Gables (make a note to ask if he has ever actually READ Anne of Green Gables).

4. Realize that ALL the names on your list are actually terrible names. Especially 'Denim' and 'Lace.'  Maybe they were great for your Barbie dolls, but not for an actual human being born in this century.

5. Since your only existing list is now worthless, you have to create a new one with your SO. Buy or borrow a book of baby names. Take to the internet. Millions of names exist! Or can be created! Clearly the best way to find the RIGHT one is to look through all of them. In list form. EVERY SINGLE ONE.

6. Quickly get bored and overwhelmed by reading through alphabetical lists of names. Give up.

7. Realize you can't actually give up, because this human needs a name.

8. Make a plan that you and your SO will each make a list of your top 10 names and share them with each other before democratically narrowing down the choices and agreeing blissfully on the perfect name with no disagreement at all.

9. Make your list that day, and wait approximately forever for your SO's list.

10. While waiting for your SO's list, randomly ask him how he feels about a particular name. Perhaps particular names that happen to be on your own list. Ask both randomly and frequently. In the middle of dinner, when he gets home from work at 6 am, in the waiting room at the prenatal appointment, in the car on the way to church.

11. Spend more energy coming up with terrible names than actual possibilities of real names. Pick real winners, like 'Peter Peterson' and 'Schmarzando Nard.' Or Rocket.

DISCLAIMER: Ok, so at this point I feel that I should let you all know that I haven't ever completed this process. I've never successfully named a human. You've probably realized that I'm not an expert, but I'm also unexperienced. I've named a few dolls, and creatively dubbed my pink teddy bear 'Pinky', but no humans. Aside from snarky nicknames, of course, but those are usually secret, something for which Captain Fussypants Magoo would be grateful if they knew who they were.

Since I've never gotten this far, here's what I imagine goes down in the hospital after baby arrives:

12. After baby is born, scrap everything you'd decided prior to this point.

13. Select a name that wasn't ever being considered but you can both sort of agree on before the deadline for filling out the birth certificate.

14. Prepare yourself for a barrage of comments on why the name you picked was actually the worst. Decide you don't care, and get on with the joy of taking care of a baby, which should be a walk in the park now that the baby has a name.  (That's how it works, right?)

I hope this guide is extremely helpful for all of you struggling to name a human.
Best of luck to you!
Nissa