Tuesday, October 18, 2016

How did it compare?

Us, as a family of four
One question that I've gotten quite a bit since Baby H came along is: How has having a baby in the US compare to having a baby in Switzerland? They were very different experiences in a number of ways, some good, some bad, but different. My doctor was also very interested, as in her opinion, Switzerland is viewed as the pinnacle of socialized medicine.

As I said, they were different. To start off with, before the baby arrives in the US you start going to the doctor once per week. I don't recall doing this with K Bear; maybe it was every two weeks when we got to 36 weeks? Additionally, if you are going to a public hospital in Switzerland, your doctor will not deliver the baby, as they don't have privileges at the hospital.

I had one appointment with the hospital doctor who would deliver K Bear prior to her arrival so she could get familiarized with us and we could meet her, but other than that I saw my doctor until I delivered, then not again until my six-week follow up after K Bear arrived. One HUGE advantage of this is that your doctor is generally on time for her routine appointments, as opposed to the ones in the US where who knows how long you'll have to wait.
 
As far as the delivery experience, I can't really compare. Mostly because Baby H came so much faster than K Bear. We were at the hospital for about 15 hours before K Bear arrived, and it was a total of three before we had Baby H in our arms. And yes, I did have time to get an epidural...I don't know how people do it without. Both were good experiences- loved our midwife in Switzerland and loved our nurse here too. In both places, the doctor pretty much comes in to catch the baby upon arrival.

Post-delivery is where Switzerland really outdoes itself, and I can now see why my friends in the US thought I was crazy when I said we would stay in the hospital for a number of days. We stayed in the hospital for about four days after K Bear was born, and it was a great experience. In the US, not so much. After 36 hours I was so ready to get out of there and get home.

In Switzerland you typically have one nurse caring for you who only disturbs you when necessary; not meaning for random crap they think they need, they typically come into your room if you want them there for something. In the US, on the other hand, they tell you is that you need to rest, but I have never seen so many people come in and out of a room at all hours of the day and night as I did at the hospital here. BK finally had to tell the head nurse to put a sign on the door for no one to come in to do things. Whether it was taking my vitals, doing a test on Baby H, cleaning, bringing a meal, or whatever...there was constantly someone in and out of my room. It was crazy, and I couldn't wait to get out of there!

The other thing is how much it costs to have a baby here. With private "first tier" insurance in Switzerland, having K Bear did not cost us anything. As in, zero dollars. I think we have pretty good insurance here through BK's employer, but we're getting bill after bill for Baby H's delivery, hospital stay and random other stuff, and it adds up.

On a side note, I know many of you may be thinking...it's because Switzerland's taxes are so high that medical care is so good and so affordable. Not so much. Our tax rate in the US is higher than in Switzerland. So yes, I do think there is a solution to our health care system mess the US is in right now.

The last thing would be more about aftercare. In Switzerland, a midwife comes to your home for 10 visits after the baby is born. She does all of the routine things that you do when you see your pediatrician here at two days, two weeks, one month, etc., such as weighing, checking on eating, helping with breastfeeding, and checking mom to make sure things are normal there. In fact, in Switzerland, you don't actually see your pediatrician until you go in at two months for your child's first vaccination. So having to get out and go to the pediatrician when we were a day out of the hospital was a bit of a shock.

And even though I didn't deal with this, Switzerland actually has the "worst" maternity leave in Europe, with only 14 weeks paid leave (80% pay). Most women I knew on maternity leave actually took way more time than that. And even though being a stay-at-home mom is not for me, I also very much realize that I am not, and would not, be ready to leave Baby H at daycare right now. And don't worry, I also very much realize how fortunate I am to have this choice right now.
Baby H's arrival



Thursday, October 6, 2016

My three bullet points

We still need our outside time!
A couple of weeks ago BK and I went out for some brief shopping and a date night. It wasn't our first night out, but after adjusting to life as a family of four, it was our first one after again realizing that we really had to make time for ourselves and our relationship, not being distracted by everything happening in our lives or only talking about K Bear and Baby H. We hit up The Usual and Ellerbe Fine Foods, both great places on Magnolia. Ellerbe might be my new favorite place to eat in Fort Worth.

One of BK's questions at dinner was: "If I had to identify three bullet points about our life since we'd moved back, what would they be?" For those of you who know BK, this is such a him question, but it led to lots of good conversation about what we'd both experienced here since moving back home. I don't think he even gave me his bullet points, but here are mine. 
Our general feeling about Baby H (Photo credit: Rooted in Love)
I feel like my life can really move forward now that Baby H has come along.
Not that I didn't have a life before, but with all the moving, shipment stuff, getting settled, finishing renovations, and getting ready for Baby H, now that he's here, I feel like I can start thinking about what happens next for me. It's kind of like, our life is in order and we actually live here, so now I can think about what I'll do next. 

One thing that goes with this is that I am so not meant to be a full-time stay at home mom. When I've said this to family and close friends, they all act like this is obvious and, of course I'm not meant to be at home. I'm not sure what's so different about the US versus Switzerland, but it is just not my thing. I'm not quite sure what my professional life will look like, but it will look like something.
Mawmaw with her four
Nani with her four
We wanted family and we definitely have it!
This is a good thing, don't worry, but SO different from what we've had for the past three years. Friends often ask if we see one of my family members every day. It's not every day, but I would say we probably see someone from either my or BK's family probably four out of seven days during the week. In the past week it has been Thursday (both), Friday (both), Saturday (both), Sunday (his), Monday (his), Tuesday (his), and Thursday (mine). Even on the days we don't actually see someone, we typically FaceTime with someone. Yes I know it's a lot, and it's not for everyone, but it's been good for us.

On most weeks, seeing family also includes someone watching the littles for us so we can go out. Win-win for everyone! I keep asking BK if/when he thinks the new will wear off! This brings me to my third bullet point...
The one pic of BK and I since Baby H has arrived
BK and I are still working to figure out how we work being back here.
Even though we've lived here before, we lived here as a family of two, both successful in our careers, no kids, and pretty much doing whatever we wanted to do. Obviously things have changed a bit now that we're back, and we're working on navigating what that means for us as a couple. Just like living in Switzerland, where for the first time in our marriage we were completely by ourselves (no family or friends close) and had to learn what it meant for us, and how we would work there as well. Moving back here is the same, just with different circumstances.

A couple of weeks ago BK came home and said he was trying to do a good job at balancing home, work and friends, to which I replied that I pretty much only had home right now, so I really didn't want to hear how he was balancing, because I felt as if I didn't have anything to balance at the moment. Not exactly the case, but like I said, we're trying to figure things out, and it's a work in progress. Adding Baby H to our family would have taken adjustment regardless, but add making a move back home from being abroad to that, and you have a few things to adjust to.

So yeah, that's where we are right now, always a work in progress and figuring things out. The one question we always get is: Is it good to be back in the US? Most definitely.