The first year

The first year, day by day.

The fourth trimester, sleep, feeding, recovery — and the version of you nobody warned you about. Day by day, with people who’ve been there.

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First-year classes to start with.

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Who you'll learn from

Specialists who work this stage

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AMK Counseling

Counselors/Therapists, LCSW/LCPC/LSW/LPC

At AMK Counseling, we help women navigate emotional and mental health challenges with clarity, confidence, and personalized care.

Perinatal therapists

Angela Fishman

Pelvic Physical Therapist

Birth preparation, postpartum recovery, and lifelong pelvic floor support for women.

Other

Anne Nasson

Pediatric Occupational Therapist, MS, OTR/L

Pediatric occupational therapist empowering new moms to confidently support their baby’s motor and sensory development with simple, playful routines.

Pediatric OTs

Bryn Yozzo

Certified Labor and Postpartum Doula, Childbirth Educator, New Parent Educator, NICU Doula and Lactation Educator

Postpartum doula, educator, and founder of New England Doula Support, rooted in thoughtful, relationship-centered care.

Lactation (IBCLCs)

Carina E. Lane

MS.Ed, MSW, LSW, IECMH, DT, PMH-C Infant and Early Childhood Developmental/Infant Mental Health Specialist Perinatal Mental Health Specialist

Perinatal mental health education and guidance in understanding children’s communication for parents and programs.

Perinatal therapists
KU

Dr. Kate Uttech

Pelvic Health and Perinatal Physical Therapist

We are the prenatal, postpartum, and pelvic health specialists here to help you prepare for birth, recover postpartum, and feel like you again!

Other
Highland Par, IL, USAVirtual okView profile →
Common questions

The things people actually Google.

How do I get a newborn to sleep?+

In the first weeks you don’t train, you shape: full feeds, a dark room, and catching sleepy cues before the overtired cliff. Newborns wake to eat, and that’s normal — early on the goal is rest for everyone, not a schedule.

What is the 4-month sleep regression?+

Around four months your baby’s sleep matures into adult-like cycles, so they wake between them and need help linking back. It’s a developmental leap, not a step backward — and it passes. A few small shifts make it survivable.

Why does breastfeeding hurt?+

Some tenderness early is common, but real pain usually means something fixable — often a shallow latch, sometimes a tongue-tie. It shouldn’t be something you grit your teeth through; an IBCLC can often sort it in one session.

How long does postpartum recovery take?+

The common line is six weeks, but the honest answer is months — your body, your hormones, and your sense of self all recover on their own timelines. Be as patient with yourself as you’d be with a friend.

When should I start tummy time?+

You can start from day one — a few minutes, a few times a day, building up as your baby tolerates it. Chest-to-chest counts. It builds the neck and shoulder strength for rolling, sitting, and crawling later.

How do I know if my baby is eating enough?+

Watch the output, not the ounces: steady weight gain, plenty of wet and dirty diapers, and a baby who settles after feeds. If you’re worried, your pediatrician or an IBCLC can weigh a feed and reassure you.

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