Free Resource · Wholistic Mental Health Care

Before BabyThe Conversations You Need to Have

A free, research-backed guide to the questions to ask before having a baby — the honest conversations about roles, values, and identity that determine whether your relationship survives the transition to parenthood, and deepens through it.

Written by an HPCSA Registered Counsellor · Grounded in Gottman's parenthood research
67%
of couples report a significant drop in relationship satisfaction after having a baby
33%
maintain or improve their relationship — and Gottman's research shows exactly what they did differently

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Babies don't damage relationships — unexamined expectations do

This guide is for couples asking "are we ready?" and for couples who've already said yes and want to prepare well. It isn't a checklist of readiness criteria. It's the set of conversations that determine whether your relationship is built on shared understanding, or on assumptions that fracture under the pressure of early parenthood — before exhaustion removes the option of nuance.


What's Inside

Six conversations, grounded in the research

PART 1

The Honest Picture

What Gottman's research actually found about babies and relationships — and the assumptions that predict the drop.

PART 2

The Relational Questions

The readiness questions nobody asks — mirrors, not pass-or-fail tests, for honest conversation between partners.

PART 3

What You Believe About Raising Children

Where couples most often discover they disagree — discipline, faith, education, and more.

PART 4

The Logistics That Become Emotional

Division of labour, mental load, and career — the arrangements that cause the most conflict when left unspoken.

PART 5

Identity and Loss

What each of you is giving up — and why naming it in advance changes how you meet it.

PART 6

The Relationship Protection Plan

What the 33% do differently — six small, deliberate practices from Gottman's research.

Grounded in real research, not generic advice

Every conversation in this guide is drawn from published studies on couples navigating the transition to parenthood.

Gottman's landmark study

His longitudinal research identified exactly what separates the 33% who thrive from the 67% who struggle — and it starts with conversation, not luck.

The mental load, named

Daminger's research on cognitive family labour found it falls disproportionately on one partner — a primary driver of early-parenthood resentment.

Why "why" matters

Research on parental motivation found couples with genuine, autonomous motivation to become parents report significantly higher relationship wellbeing.

Who this is for

This is for you if…

  • You're thinking about children, trying for them, or already expecting
  • You want to prepare your relationship, not just your nursery
  • You'd rather have the hard conversations now than discover the gaps at 3am
  • You want a shared, explicit understanding — not just an assumption that it'll sort itself out

This isn't for…

  • A readiness checklist that tells you whether you "pass"
  • Couples wanting purely practical or financial planning advice
  • Situations involving safety concerns, abuse, or coercion — please seek professional support directly

About the Practice

Written by Sumarie Engelbrecht

This guide was written by Sumarie Engelbrecht, Founder and Owner of Wholistic Mental Health Care. Wholistic specialises in premarital and couples counselling, grounded in Gottman-informed and attachment-based approaches — practical, evidence-based, and never reductive.

HPCSA Registered Counsellor · PRC 0042480

Common questions

Does having a baby really hurt your relationship?

Research shows 67% of couples experience a measurable drop in relationship satisfaction in the first three years after having a baby. But it isn't the baby itself — it's unspoken expectations and unresolved tension that were already present, now under far more pressure.

What questions should couples ask before having a baby?

Beyond the practical questions of finances and housing, the research points to relational ones: how you'll divide labour and mental load, what each of you believes about parenting, and what you're each afraid of losing. This guide walks through all of them.

How can we protect our relationship before having a baby?

Gottman's research identifies specific, small, deliberate habits — protecting daily rituals of connection, maintaining friendship, and explicitly discussing division of labour before it becomes a grievance. These are covered in Part 6 of this guide.

What percentage of couples maintain or improve their relationship after a baby?

Around 33%, according to Gottman's research. They aren't exceptional people — they're couples who had the conversations this guide is built around, before the baby arrived.

Is pre-parenthood or premarital counselling actually worth it?

The research is consistent: couples who engage with professional support before the hard moments arrive, rather than in crisis, show better outcomes on every measured dimension. It's considered one of the most evidence-based investments a couple can make.

Premarital & Pre-Parenthood Counselling · Wholistic Mental Health Care

Ready to PrepareTogether, With Support?

Wholistic runs premarital counselling retreats designed specifically for couples preparing for their next chapter — including the transition to parenthood. Three HPCSA Registered Counsellors, real conversations, and a plan you both leave with.

Learn About Our Retreats →
© Wholistic Mental Health Care · Sumarie Engelbrecht · HPCSA PRC 0042480 wholisticmhc.com

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