The Quick Brief
Two weeks in, and you're likely running on fumes. This week brings your first pediatrician visit and the all-important weight check—a concrete metric that tells you feeding is working. Your mission: keep everyone alive while the household finds its chaotic rhythm.
What's Happening with Baby
Your newborn is still operating on pure instinct, spending 16-17 hours per day sleeping in short bursts. At two weeks, baby's stomach is about the size of an egg, which explains why feeding happens every 2-3 hours around the clock—yes, including 2 AM, 4 AM, and 6 AM.
The weight check matters because babies typically lose 5-10% of their birth weight in the first few days, then should regain it by week two. This is the first objective data point that confirms feeding is going well. If you're a numbers person, you'll appreciate this concrete feedback.
Watch for these normal newborn behaviors: jerky movements, startle reflexes that wake them up, cluster feeding (especially evenings), and what seems like random crying. Baby's vision is about 8-12 inches—roughly the distance to a face during feeding. They can't really see you across the room yet.
Also watch for signs of jaundice: yellowing of the skin or eyes, especially if it's spreading below the chest. Mention any yellowing to your pediatrician. Most cases resolve naturally, but some need phototherapy treatment.
What's Happening with Mom
Two weeks postpartum is still deep in physical recovery territory. If she had a vaginal delivery, she's dealing with healing tissue, likely still bleeding (lochia continues for weeks), and potentially stitches. C-section recovery means she's managing major abdominal surgery with lifting restrictions.
Sleep deprivation is hitting hard. Her body is simultaneously healing from birth, producing milk (if breastfeeding), and dealing with massive hormonal shifts. The "baby blues"—mood swings, crying spells, feeling overwhelmed—affect up to 80% of new mothers and typically peak around days 3-5 but can linger.
Watch for signs that go beyond normal baby blues: persistent hopelessness, inability to sleep even when baby sleeps, intrusive thoughts, or feeling disconnected from the baby. These could indicate postpartum depression or anxiety, which require professional support. The two-week mark is actually a common screening point.
She's also navigating breastfeeding if applicable—this is not the "natural" easy process many expect. Latch issues, nipple pain, and supply concerns are extremely common and frustrating.
What Dad Should Do Now
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Attend the weight check appointment. This isn't optional. You need to know the pediatrician, understand the feeding assessment, and ask your own questions. Write down questions beforehand. Common ones: "Is weight gain on track?" "Any concerns we should watch?" "When should we call versus wait?"
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Own the night feed logistics. Even if you can't breastfeed, you can change the diaper before feeds, handle burping after, resettle baby, and let her go immediately back to sleep. If bottle feeding, take full night feeds so she can get one 4-hour stretch.
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Manage the household infrastructure. Dishes, laundry (so much laundry), groceries, trash, pet care—these are yours now. Don't wait to be asked. Walk through the house and identify what needs doing. Then do it.
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Control the visitor situation. People want to meet the baby. She may not have the bandwidth to say no. You can. "We're not doing visitors until week four" is a complete sentence. Handle the awkward conversations so she doesn't have to.
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Track the inputs and outputs. If the pediatrician wants feeding logs, be the one who maintains them. Wet diapers (should be 6+ per day by now), dirty diapers, and feeding times/duration. This data helps identify issues early.
The Relationship Check-In
You're both exhausted in ways you didn't know were possible, and that exhaustion is not a good foundation for emotional generosity. Lower your expectations for connection right now. A check-in can be as simple as: "What's one thing I can do in the next two hours to make your life easier?"
Don't take short tempers personally. Don't expect gratitude for doing your share—this is both your baby, and household labor during crisis mode doesn't earn extra credit. Express appreciation for what she's doing physically with feeding and recovery. Physical intimacy is off the table (typically 6-week clearance), but a shoulder rub or taking the baby so she can shower alone goes a long way.
What's Coming Up
Around weeks 4-6, you'll see the first real social smile—and it will rewire your brain. Before that, you'll likely experience "purple crying," a period where crying increases and peaks. It's not something you're doing wrong; it's developmental. Your next milestone to watch for is that first genuine smile that happens in response to your face.
Quick Reference Box
| Age | 2 weeks |
| Key milestone | Regaining birth weight |
| Dad priority | Attend pediatrician visit, own the nights |
| Source | CDC Milestone Checklists |
Sources:
- CDC Milestones: https://www.cdc.gov/act-early/milestones/index.html
- NIH Postpartum: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK565875/
- CDC Parent Info (Infants): https://www.cdc.gov/parents/infants/milestones-and-schedules.html
Sources
- CDC Milestones: https://www.cdc.gov/act-early/milestones/index.html
- NIH Postpartum: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK565875/
- CDC Parent Info (Infants): https://www.cdc.gov/parents/infants/milestones-and-schedules.html
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