Bringing a newborn home changes everything in a way no book, class, or Instagram post can fully prepare you for. Before my baby was born, I heard the same sentence again and again: newborns only eat, poop, cry, and sleep. It sounded almost funny, like people were trying to downplay the biggest transition of my life into four simple verbs. I nodded along, pretending I understood. Then I actually became a mother, and suddenly those four little words turned into the most intense, emotional, exhausting, and beautiful learning curve I’ve ever experienced.
The first days at home felt surreal. The world outside continued as usual, but inside our home, time moved differently. Nights blurred into mornings, mornings into afternoons, and I often found myself staring at this tiny human in my arms, wondering how someone so small could take up so much space in my heart and my mind at the same time. I had imagined I would feel confident, maternal, and instinctively capable. What I actually felt was a strange mix of deep love, fear of doing something wrong, tenderness, and moments of quiet panic. No one really tells you how loud the silence can feel when you’re alone with a newborn for the first time. No nurse call button, no reassurance that you’re doing it “right.” Just you and your baby, learning each other from scratch.


