The Introvert's Guide to Surviving Parenthood
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A baby can be a good excuse to skip a party, but . . . goodbye alone time, hello awkward new social obligations. All parents want the same things: to balance work and home life, to raise happy kids, to never attend a baby drumming class, and to build a secret room in their home where they can hide (preferably not the bathroom). Yes, an introverted parent would more keenly want to be free of the slew of attention and expectations that accompany both pregnancy and parenthood, but even the most outgoing person is sure to reach their limit eventually. Here, with laugh-out-loud humor and well-earned experience, Julie Vick offers coping mechanisms for everything from sharing the news that you are becoming a parent to the moment the baby is born (one way or another, it will happen), from managing doctor’s visits to handling playdates. She offers advice on finding childcare and ignoring the nursing versus formula conversation with strangers. Witty yet valuable, her tips, checklists, and the occasional chart focus on the time from pregnancy through preschool.
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As an introvert, this was the first pregnancy book that I found on my own - so I'm here to say, if you're an introvert and you're pregnant, I highly recommend this book. It's short, it's funny - I often found myself reading parts aloud to my husband (such as the part where she jokes about leaving the country so you don't have to tell anyone you're pregnant), and definitely made me feel a little more comfortable knowing that there are people with lots of the same thoughts and feeling as me. This is also the first pregnancy book that I finished while pregnant - a must read for stressed out introverts!