Teaching about Visitor Boundaries: Helping Families Protect the Postnatal Bubble

teaching about visitor boundaries in antenatal classes

If there’s one topic that consistently makes expectant parents squirm in antenatal classes, it’s visitor boundaries. Not breathing. Not birth plans. Visitors. That’s why Teaching about Visitor Boundaries is an important part of antenatal preparation for expectant parents.

Everyone loves the idea of support after the baby arrives… until Aunt Brenda turns up unannounced, stays three hours, and wants a cuddle while the birthing parent is topless, hormonal, and googling “is this amount of bleeding normal”.

As antenatal teachers, doulas, midwives, and birth workers, we are perfectly placed to help families prepare for this part of the postnatal period before emotions are high and sleep is low.

Let’s talk about how to teach visitor boundaries in a way that feels empowering rather than awkward.


Why Visitor Boundaries Matter (More Than People Think)

Visitor boundaries aren’t about being rude, ungrateful, or “over the top”. They are about:

  • Protecting physical recovery
  • Supporting mental health
  • Safeguarding feeding journeys
  • Allowing bonding time
  • Reducing overwhelm and resentment

When boundaries aren’t discussed in advance, families often default to people-pleasing. That’s when stress creeps in and confidence takes a nosedive.

Framing boundaries as postnatal care, not social rules, helps parents take them seriously.


Top Visitor Boundaries to Encourage Families to Set

Encourage parents to choose boundaries that suit their family, not what social media or relatives expect.

1. Timing of Visits

  • No visitors for the first X days
  • Short visits only
  • Visiting hours (yes, even at home!)

👉 Helpful reframe: “This is recovery time, not hosting time.”

2. Health and Hygiene Rules

  • No visits if unwell (even “just a sniffle”)
  • Hand washing on arrival
  • NO kissing the baby

This is about safety, not paranoia.

3. Baby Holding Expectations

  • Asking before holding the baby
  • Returning baby immediately when asked
  • No passing baby around like a party platter

Babies are people, not communal property.

4. Support, Not Spectating

Encourage families to be clear that visitors are there to:

  • Make tea
  • Bring food
  • Walk the dog
  • Fold laundry

Not to sit on the sofa holding the baby while the parents host.

5. Length and Frequency of Visits

Short and sweet is the goal. This protects energy and avoids burnout before it even begins.


How to Communicate Boundaries (Without Panic or Apologies)

This is where many parents freeze. Teaching them about visitor boundaries and that they don’t need long explanations or emotional disclaimers.

Use Clear, Calm Language

  • “We’re keeping visits short while we recover.”
  • “We’ll let you know when we’re ready for visitors.”
  • “We’re asking everyone to wash hands before holding the baby.”

Simple. Kind. Firm.

Encourage a United Front

Boundaries land better when they come from both parents. Encourage couples to agree in advance and stick together. No throwing each other under the bus.

Normalise Scripts

Providing ready-made phrases in your classes or resources can be a game-changer. When people are tired, they don’t want to invent wording – they want to copy and paste.


How to Help Visitors Actually Follow the “Rules”

Because let’s be honest… some people hear boundaries and think they’re suggestions.

Set Expectations Early

When teaching about visitor boundaries explain to expectant parents that the earlier boundaries are shared (pregnancy is ideal), the less shocking they feel later.

Put It in Writing

A gentle message, group text, or family update can prevent endless individual conversations. Less admin, more rest.

Repetition Is Not Rudeness

Remind parents that repeating a boundary doesn’t make them difficult – it means the boundary is important.

Give Permission to Enforce

Teach parents that it’s okay to:

  • End a visit early
  • Say “not today”
  • Take the baby back
  • Change their minds

Boundaries without follow-through quickly disappear.


How Birth Workers Can Teach This Confidently

  • Introduce visitor boundaries as a standard part of postnatal planning
  • Use real-life examples (parents love these)
  • Role-play tricky conversations
  • Reinforce that boundaries can change over time
  • Remind parents: protecting your peace protects your baby

When we normalise these conversations, parents feel less alone and more confident advocating for themselves.


Final Thought

Visitor boundaries aren’t about shutting people out – they’re about letting the right support in, at the right time, in the right way.

When parents are rested, supported, and respected, everyone benefits… including the visitors.

And if Aunt Brenda needs a reminder? Well, that’s what scripts are for 😉

Free Download:

Download my handout for free here:

Online Birth Preparation Course only £35!

Please also check out my online course! No videos, just text and images to learn in your own time. Includes hypnobirthing mp3s, scripts, workbook, handouts, infographics and much more! Lots and lots of information at your fingertips! Includes:

  • hypnobirthing mp3s
  • hypnobirthing scripts
  • written information
  • infographics and other imagery
  • printable handouts
  • printable workbook/journal

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