Triplets

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NickyMaz

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Hi Everyone,

8 Months ago my life changed in a pretty significant way, my wife gave birth to triplets (two girls and a boy). They were born 8 weeks premature and spent time in the NICU. We went through some very challenging times but thankfully things are going well. They are growing well and sleeping (mostly) through the night. We were fortunate to have the support of family, neighbors and a great group of nannies. Now, we have another curve ball, my wife is pregnant again, with just one this time! Baby #4 is expected in late September.

Prayers are appreciated.

Anyone else have experience with multiples?
 
Yes. There is an organization in our area called Full House MOMS, but they also have ways to socialize and problem-solve online.
www.fullhousemoms.com
fullhousemoms.com/membership-benefits/

If you live near Portland, Oregon, they have all sorts of socializing opportunities and a very helpful periodic consignment sale. If you don’t, then in addition to looking online for groups in your area I’d take a gamble on contacting groups not in your area to see if they know someone who knows someone near you. Parents of multiples stick together, having been in the same boat! Joining a club for parents of multiples is very helpful, especially if you have one locally. (Expect to need that until they’re maybe three or four years old.)

We had twins who will graduate high school this spring. You will get through this and you can even have a lot of fun.

I’d suggest attaching everything the two of them could pull over on themselves to the walls very securely before they start walking because mobile multiples work together, including one running a distraction for the other two. We had all ceiling lights: no lamps and no furniture that two small children could move working together. Our twins decided they liked all of our chairs to be shoved up against the front door and besides we didn’t want one to be able to get up onto the dining room table via a chair while we were changing the other, so we kept the dining room chairs attached to each other under the table when we weren’t sitting in one.

You’ll find that parents with boy-boy-girl twins will have all sorts of strategies of their own to suggest for all sorts of situations. If nothing else, they can tell you it is OK to baby proof the daylights out of your house and then occasionally lock yourself in the bathroom for a just one moment to yourself out of the fray.

We were taught “one body (caretaker) per baby until they are 12 weeks old.” In other words, you have to have help. Again, asking those who have figured out how to handle three small children when you only have two hands will be the most help. It can be done, though.

People get their triplets happily through high school and sometimes even find the advantage in always having all three of your children attending only one school every year. One school program to go to. One place to pick them up and drop them off. They’re all eating mush at roughly the same time, then in high chairs with finger food at roughly the same time, then ready for the same kinds of vacations at roughly the same time.

Train them to stay in their chairs during meals for a meal time as long as a restaurant meal time takes by giving them something to do while you get dinner on the table. Then, if it turns out that they have the ability to focus and stay in a chair, you can take them to any restaurant you want. You will thank yourself for doing that! If nothing else, you’ll have a very good idea of which restaurants they’ll tolerate and which ones would be a very bad idea. We taught our children that everyone would notice how they acted in restaurants and everywhere else, because they’re twins. They’re going to be celebrities. It is much more fun to be the celebrity that people love to see coming back to visit again.

You really do have to look at it as three children at once instead of three children with three different ages, which gives you some advantages and some disadvantages. It isn’t fair to the children to compare the work of having one child with the work of having three.

OH–my number one thing I wish I’d done is to get my children used to some certain babysitter or babysitters before they started that stage where they didn’t want anything to do with a stranger!! I won’t go into the details, but you want to be ready for that stage by having some people to help you that your children have become well-acquainted with, preferably someone who’ll be available until they grow out of that stage.

While you are in the toughest stage, from when they start to walk until after they can talk and take themselves to the toilet, remember it does get better once they’re verbal and potty-trained. Then you have children who have someone to play with and a reason they don’t need any video games to keep themselves occupied.
 
Congrats! I have twins and an older daughter and am currently due in early September. (Though my kids are a bit older! 😃 )
 
I love having twins and pray to do so again one day. Maybe I’ll be “extra blessed” with triplets. You are so lucky!

My first kids we very close in age. We had a newborn, twin one year olds, a 2 yr old and a 3-almost-4 year old. It was very busy! Some things that helped were lowering my expectations of what is truly necessary. Some days if I ate and went to the bathroom I felt accomplished! As my kids started walking, we made use of slings and leashes. Strollers cold hold 3 of them, but the others were either walking on a leash or tied up on my back or chest. Eventually we taught them to hold on to a rope to walk, but that took awhile. At home I would block off areas that were safe enough for me to leave them long enough to use the bathroom. They would work together to climb out of cribs, playpens, baby gates, so we built a “baby corral” out of free pallets. Whatever works. We got rid of furniture. It was too easy for them to hurt each other. Couches were trampolines, tables were launching pads, chairs were jousting rams. Instead we were with sleeping mats and beanbags. Never owned a high chair. It seemed too much like asking for trouble.
 
Wow, an event like this can fill one with simultaneous excitement and terror. 😛 Just imagining having triplets myself gives me an imagined taste of both (though for me I think mostly excitement).

EasterJoy’s advice is great, and though I do not have advice to offer in the parenting department, I will say this: try your hardest not to let your little army of children completely end your prayer life at home. Finding those few minutes of solitude each day so you can say a few prayers or meditate will be very important.
 
Hi Everyone,

8 Months ago my life changed in a pretty significant way, my wife gave birth to triplets (two girls and a boy). They were born 8 weeks premature and spent time in the NICU. We went through some very challenging times but thankfully things are going well. They are growing well and sleeping (mostly) through the night. We were fortunate to have the support of family, neighbors and a great group of nannies. Now, we have another curve ball, my wife is pregnant again, with just one this time! Baby #4 is expected in late September.

Prayers are appreciated.

Anyone else have experience with multiples?
Ha! My wife is due in late September as well. Congratulations!

So by the time the baby is born, your triplets will be 17 months. 😃 That is an awesome age. I have six going on seven kids and it is pretty amazing, but only singletons. I have heard that they are a lot of work, but the good times will be a blast.

God bless!
Ut
 
Wow, an event like this can fill one with simultaneous excitement and terror. 😛 Just imagining having triplets myself gives me an imagined taste of both (though for me I think mostly excitement).

EasterJoy’s advice is great, and though I do not have advice to offer in the parenting department, I will say this: try your hardest not to let your little army of children completely end your prayer life at home. Finding those few minutes of solitude each day so you can say a few prayers or meditate will be very important.
Oh, mothers of multiples pray a lot. This is their favorite: OH, LORD, HELP!!

Seriously, though, you’re right. If you have to lock yourself in the bathroom in order to get a few minutes of quiet time because they just will not all nap at the same time, baby-proof the house and then do it. You can’t do much as a mom if you go insane.
 
You have my prayers:pray:t2: These are His children as well as yours:blush: He must know that you will be the parents this new child needs for His Kingdom. You ave my prayers , but recognize His providence in your lives:blush::pray:t2:
Blessings and prayers,
mlz
 
Oh, mothers of multiples pray a lot. This is their favorite: OH, LORD, HELP!!

Seriously, though, you’re right. If you have to lock yourself in the bathroom in order to get a few minutes of quiet time because they just will not all nap at the same time, baby-proof the house and then do it. You can’t do much as a mom if you go insane.
I was actually going to post this exact thing!
 
It is funny when you say it, but it is the absolute truth. It comes straight from the heart.

I had this psalm blown up to take up an 8 1/2 x 11 sheet of paper and taped up to my bathroom mirror. I’d run across it in the liturgy of the hours when the babies were very small (as in, under five and a half pounds) and it helped many times:

If the LORD were not my help,
I would long have been silent in the grave.
When I say, “My foot is slipping,”
your love, LORD, holds me up.
When cares increase within me,
your comfort gives me joy.

Psalm 94:17-19

I liked this one, too, especially the 2nd half. It is from the week 3 Wednesday of the Liturgy of the hours:

*Deliver us, O Lord, from our bondage
as streams in dry land.
Those who are sowing in tears
will sing when they reap.

They go out, they go out, full of tears,
carrying seed for the sowing:
they come back, they come back, full of song,
carrying their sheaves.
*
Ps. 126

It’s all so worth it. I’d do it all over again. They’ll be going off to college soon, but we’re very close. They’ve grown into men I really enjoy being with. There are times, though, when it all gets to be a bit much. You need support, and you need the kind that mere human beings alone can’t give. You need both adult support–someone who uses big words in full sentences with clauses and on topics that aren’t covered in Sandra Boynton board books, as charming as those are–and prayer, because it will turn you sideways once in awhile and you’ll just need that help.
 
I will offer the Mass for you and your family today. You are in my prayer.

Congratulations and i will pray also for a very healthy baby.

May God bless you and your family always.
 
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