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In this chapter, the women narrate experiences of birth and the early (6–8) weeks of first-time mothering/motherhood. In contrast to antenatal anticipation, the visceral, physical and embodied changes, which accompany birth and early mothering, provide new narrative vantage points. But in the earlier motherhood study, some women found it hard to voice their experiences of new motherhood at this point, only later revealing experiences they felt had run counter to idealised versions of motherhood. But in the contemporary study, the increased number of unexpectedly interventionist births (which did not go to ‘plan’), together with more readily available 24/7 digital access to other mothers, provided new modes of collective support. However, a key question arises in the contemporary study, in which first-time motherhood also occurs at an older age and where cascading intervention is experienced during labour and birth. This concerns how preparations in the antenatal period correspond to birth outcomes that are statistically more likely to include surgical intervention and emergency C-sections. A disjunction between antenatal preparation and labour and birth demands further attention, which is returned to in a later chapter.
Conception, pregnancy and childbirth in older mothers involve increased physical risks to both the mother and the offspring. After the age of 31 years, the probability of conception falls rapidly and older women take longer to conceive and are more likely to require reproductive assistance. Older mothers felt a lack of preparation for the material needs of the baby and a tendency to put aside thoughts of being a mother but younger infertile women were more likely to have irrational idealistic cognitions about pregnancy and parenthood. Maternal age is likely to be associated with different domains of parenting and parenting outcomes. The three distinct parenting theories are: the intuitive parenting theory, linear relationship of age to parenting, and Rossi's timing of events model. Older couples are likely to have been in a longer term partnership, on average 3-5 years longer, than younger couples, creating an altered parenting context.
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