Pregnant Fathers: The First Trimester
by Bruce Linton, Ph.D.
Congratulations, your partner (and you) are now pregnant! Your
baby is beginning its life inside the womb. All the care and nurturing
your baby needs is happening in your partner's belly! The transition
to parenthood and becoming a father is slowly starting to take hold
of you. Your going to be a dad...Yikes!- -Wow!--Incredible! What
should you expect during this first trimester?
Most men have a positive reaction to finding out about the pregnancy,
but they may also have doubts and confusion. An unplanned pregnancy
can begin with feelings of ambivalence. For expectant fathers pregnancy
seems to stimulate feelings of both fear and hope. Understanding
your feelings during this time can help you begin to see how your
role from "man to dad" is developing.
Common anxieties in the first trimester are fears about your partner's
health, worries about money, and concerns about what type of father
you will be.
In the first few months, as your partner's body adjusts to the
pregnancy she may experience morning sickness, sleeplessness, mood
swings, fatigue and changes in eating habits. Although these symptoms
are normal, you may not be use to seeing your wife this uncomfortable.
You may wonder what can you do to help?
Many expectant dads start to look ahead and feel worried about
how having a baby will affect their finances. If both you and your
partner have been working, you may begin to think about how you
will be effected by the change in income if your wife will be off
work for a while. Concerns about the need for a larger house, a
new car or how to anticipate what new expenses you will have once
the baby has arrived are common anxieties in the early stages of
pregnancy.
Finally, many expectant fathers are concerned about what type
of father they will be. You may begin to think about what it was
like for your father when you were born. How prepared was your dad
when he became a father? What opportunities do you feel you have
as an expectant dad that your father didn't?
All these new "anxieties" are the normal feelings that are "stirred-up"
by finding out that you will be a father in less than a year.
In our society we don't make many accommodations for expectant
dads. We are not sure what they need and what their role should
be during pregnancy. It has been my experience that the sooner expectant
dads can be involved the more included they will feel in their new
"family." Going to the doctor's visits with your partner, talking
with other fathers, beginning to look at a few of the new books
on parenting are all ways to begin your transition to parenthood.
Here are a few practical tips that pregnant dads have shared with
me during the 1st trimester of pregnancy.
For your wife/partner:
* Talk with your wife about the hopes and dreams, fears and anxieties,
of having a child together.
* Make time to regularly go on walks together.
* Talk about how your lives can slow down, how you can both do less
in the coming months and enjoy the pregnancy.
For yourself:
* Choose the friends you want to share the news about "being pregnant"
with.
* Go to a bookstore and look through the books on parenting, choose
one for yourself.
* Take time alone to reflect on your feelings about becoming a father.

|