Skip to main navigation. Skip to main content.
workhealthlife
 
Your Employee Assistance Program is a support service that can help you take the first step toward change.
 
 
  • Register
  • |
  • Log in
  • |
  • Search organization
Morneau Shepell
Woman walking on the beach, leaving footsteps in the sand.

Welcome to your Beneficiary Assistance Program.

If you do not know your username please call 800-227-8620 for assistance or contact your administrator.

workhealthlife
 
Your Employee Assistance Program is a support service that can help you take the first step toward change.
 
Woman walking on the beach, leaving footsteps in the sand.

Take the first step towards change

We're an Employee Assistance Program (EAP) that provides you and your family with immediate and confidential support to help resolve work, health, and life challenges to improve your life. Let us help you find solutions so you can reach your goals at any age or stage of life. We help millions of people worldwide live healthy, happy, and productive lives.

Ready to start? You can login or search for your organization for faster access to your resources and tools.
Not a member yet? Join today for free
or

    We found several matches. If you cannot find your organization in the list below, please refine your search by entering more characters or checking the full name of your organization. If you continue to experience challenges, please contact us.
    Don't know your organization? It could be where you work, your union, state, or an association you belong to.

    If you are still not sure, browse as a guest or call 1.866.468.9461

    Why members use the program

    Always

    Always confidential

    Access and use of the program is completely confidential. No one, including your employer, coworkers or family, will ever know that you used the program unless you choose to tell them.
    Help

    Help you need

    Having a baby or buying a new home? Want to improve your relationship or manage stress better? We have resources and tools to help on just about any topic.
    Help

    Help how you want

    Find the support that is right for your lifestyle and comfort level. Choose from online programs, consultation by phone, live chat, and more.
    Available

    Available anytime, anywhere

    You're constantly on the move, switching from your computer to your phone at a moment's notice. We have you covered with confidential access to support anywhere and everywhere you go.
    Pick

    Pick your support

    When you connect with us, we'll help you pick the right support. Within a few minutes, you'll be set up to take your first step towards change.
    No

    No cost

    There is no cost to you to use the program. This benefit is provided to you by your employer, insurance carrier, association, or other party.
    Home
    • Home
    • my services
      Log in or tell us your organization to view your services.
      Is your organization interested in offering these services?
      • Professional Counseling
      • Financial Support
      • Legal Support
      • Nutrition Support
      • Family Support
      • Health Coaching
      • Naturopathic Services
      • Fitness Support
    • health & well-being

      Your physical and mental well-being has a significant impact on your day-to-day life. The more you know, the better you'll feel.

      • Emotional Well-being (articles 50)
      • Mental Health (articles 42)
      • Family & Relationships (articles 50)
      • Diversity and inclusion (articles 9)
      • Addictions (articles 32)
      • Diseases & Conditions (articles 7)
      • COVID-19 resources (articles 46)
      • Physical Well-being (articles 21)
    • career & workplace

      Let us help you manage your career, better handle workplace relationships and find work-life balance.

      • Health & Attitude (articles 43)
      • Coping With Change on the Job (articles 16)
      • Time Management (articles 16)
      • Stress/Burnout (articles 17)
      • Traumatic Events (articles 13)
      • Career Development & Continuing Education (articles 24)
      • Conflict & Communication (articles 48)
      • Workplace Leave (articles 9)
    • financial security

      We can all use a little help understanding and managing finances. Learn more through educational articles, resources, and tools to support you in achieving financial well-being.

      • Financial Planning (articles 18)
      • Credit & Debt Management (articles 6)
      • Budgeting (articles 22)
      • Investing (articles 5)
      • Retirement (articles 11)
      • Will Preparation (articles 3)
      • Legal (articles 5)
      • Real Estate/Mortgages (articles 10)
    • life events

      Find information on a wide variety of topics to better inform and support you during life events and times of change.

      • Death of a Loved One (articles 4)
      • Planning Retirement (articles 10)
      • Dealing with a Disability/Serious Illness (articles 13)
      • Getting Separated/Divorced (articles 7)
      • Parenting (articles 24)
      • Buying/Selling a House (articles 3)
      • New Employee (articles 33)
      • Getting Married (including common law) (articles 4)
      • Having a Baby (or Adopting) (articles 15)
    health & well-being COVID-19 resources
    • Home »
    • health & well-being »
    • COVID-19 resources »
    • Family and parenting »

    Rekindling the Couple Relationship After Having a Baby

    Bookmark Article

    The arrival of a baby, especially a first child, is perhaps the most significant event in a couple's life. The transition from couple to family is much anticipated, and yet one for which most couples are not truly prepared. With the arrival of a new family member comes a host of responsibilities and challenges for new parents.

    How and to what degree a couple's relationship is affected by the birth of their first child depends on a number of complex factors. One common ingredient, however, is how knowledgeable the couple is about what may happen in their relationship after the first child comes into their lives. Perhaps the best method of preventing any negative impact to the relationship, is to be well-informed about what to expect as you make the transition from couple to family.

    Division of Household Tasks

    During and immediately following the transition into parenthood, there seems to be a more traditional division of household tasks, with males focused on paid work outside the home and females focused on child care and other household responsibilities. Fathers tend to feel a greater responsibility based on having to provide for their family. Women generally leave their employment at this stage to take care of the baby and, at the same time, they increase the number of household tasks they perform.

    Many women report disappointment and dissatisfaction because of this change in household responsibilities. How household tasks and child care responsibilities get carried out actually varies greatly from couple to couple. Couples who are sensitive to the issue can often discuss and problem-solve the issue well in advance, before it leads to negative feelings on either side.

    Leisure, Companionship and Intimacy

    After the birth of a child, the time that couples spend together changes not in terms of amount, but in terms of content. That is, couples spend just as much time together as prior to the baby's arrival, but they do very different things during this time. Couples have less leisure time and the time that they do have tends to include watching over the new baby.

    A general lack of intimacy is a chief complaint of new parents. Changes in the sexual relationship are reported by many couples. Lack of sleep and fatigue often affect sexual desire. New parents also find it difficult to be as spontaneous as they were before the baby. For all of these reasons, couples may encounter problems in rekindling their sexual relationship after the baby is born on both a physical and emotional level. Again, couples vary and these types of changes may be short-lived or more long-term.

    Emotions in the Couple Relationship

    Couples generally report less expression of affection, an increase in arguments and conflict, and general tension in the marital relationship after a new child is born.

    Females tend to be more unsatisfied than males with the couple relationship following the arrival of a first child. Increased preparation for parenthood will help couples maintain a positive level of relationship satisfaction after the new baby arrives. Again, these findings vary widely across couples and being sensitive to the issue can head off troubles later on.

    How to Maintain Your Relationship

    What can couples do to maintain the quality of relationship that they desire? The following tips will help you focus on your relationship when your life becomes centered on the new baby:

    Find time to connect. This may seem very difficult when couples have less time and are more tired. You don't have to spend long periods of time together, and you don't even have to leave the home to do this. During the course of the days and evenings, there are pockets of time that are opportunities for couple connecting. For example, when baby is sleeping, instead of focusing on doing one more load of laundry or another household task, spend some quiet time with your partner to catch up on each other's lives.

    Connections can also be made by telephone during the day or by leaving notes. Find ways to let your partner know that they make a positive difference in your life. By reconnecting as soon as possible after baby is born, couples can establish a pattern of intimacy early on that will help keep them stay connected and get them through the rough.

    Communicate with your partner. Communication is key, especially since both of you are experiencing this time very differently. In expressing your feelings and listening to what your partner is going through, you will have a better picture of what is really happening in your situation. You may also find that some of your feelings are similar, for example, the feeling of abandonment, but for different reasons. In understanding what is happening in the relationship and why each individual is behaving as they are, you have an excellent place to start rekindling and reconnecting.

    Share:

    • 1
    • 2


    Related Articles

    New Baby Stress and Your Relationship, Will We Make It?
    Tips for a Healthy Pregnancy
    Blurring the Boundaries Between Work and Home: Watch for Red Flag Behavior
    Understanding and Overcoming Postpartum Depression
    View all resources
    • Home
    • |
    • My Services
    • Health & Well-being
    • |
    • Career & Workplace
    • |
    • Financial Security
    • |
    • Life Events
    • Site Map
    • |
    • Your Privacy
    • |
    • Terms of Use
    • |
    • Accessibility
    • |
    • About Us
    Tech Support
    © 2025 LifeWorks (US) Ltd.
    COC
    Back to top
    CTOR-UAT360C
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    Processing

    Processing