Back to Home > Sunday, Dec 18, 2005 Lifestyles email this print this reprint or license this ');... Making time for Mom...

Submitted by admin on Sun, 2005-12-18 12:03.

You have to get out of the house. You have to make some new friends who also have babies. And if you don't do either one pretty soon, you're going to go quietly, deeply bonkers.

It might have been easier to forge common ground with other mothers in earlier times, when fewer women worked full time outside the home, and relatives seldom strayed far from their hometowns. Today, however, many Bay Area women can find themselves on maternity leave without knowing a single mother who lives nearby.

The resulting isolation and loneliness new mothers often feel can lower self-esteem and exacerbate postpartum depression, says Karen Friedland-Brown, parent education coordinator at the Parents Place family resource center in Palo Alto.

The enforced solitude that comes with raising a baby in the early months can make your life miserable whether you plan to go back to your job soon or raise kids full time for awhile. And it's even worse for mothers of colicky or otherwise high-maintenance babies.

Friedland-Brown often assigns the mothers she counsels to make a plan for getting out of the house every single day. A daily outing, whether for a Gymboree class, support group meeting or even a walk around the block, requires showering and putting on clothes, ``a powerful act'' that makes women feel human again, she says.

Hera Hong-Lee recalls trying to do it all on her own when her first child, Brody, was born in April. Her husband went back to work a week after the baby came, and she knew precious few people in San Jose, having recently moved here from Boston when she was pregnant.

Making new friends was important to Hong-Lee, who worked in hospital administration and for a bridal designer in Boston: She plans to stay home while considering a career change. So she checked out a support group for new mothers run by Good Samaritan Hospital in San Jose.

Wemusa subscribes to the ``it takes a village'' philosophy not just for raising children, but also for taking care of herself. After being active in Las Madres, a well-known mothers group based in San Jose, Wemusa started a Gilroy chapter of Mocha Moms, a national mothers group for women of color. Her involvement in mothers groups has been a lifesaver, she says, and has handed her lasting friendships.

``It totally keeps you sane, especially if you've been a career woman,'' said Wemusa, a staffing program manager who took time off to care for her daughter and now wants to return to work full time.

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