It is no secret that pregnancy and motherhood are exhausting, demanding, and stressful. But what may be kept a little more out of the public eye is postpartum depression. Postpartum depression can mean different things, but mainly it is a feeling of anxiety, stress, and not feeling love/connection with your baby for more than two weeks after birth. Similarly, the ‘baby blues’ is a term used for how some new mothers feel sad, worried, or exhausted in the days immediately after giving birth. If these feelings stretch into weeks or months after the birth, it may indicate postpartum depression.
Some other symptoms of postpartum depression:
- angry/moody
- sad/hopeless
- feeling guilty/worthless
- eating/sleeping more or less than usual
- unusual crying/sadness
- withdrawing from family/friends
- possible thoughts of harming the baby or yourself
For new mothers who probably were excited for their baby to arrive, it probably is a shocking experience to feel so lonely or sad after birth. And some mothers may feel like something is wrong with them. In reality, one in eight mothers report feeling symptoms of postpartum depression for the year after birth.
Giving birth means that your body and mind go through many drastic changes, and it’s hard for your body to go back to looking like it did before birth, as well as for you to feel as rested or unstressed.
I think that mothers who are experiencing postpartum depression may feel as though they are poor mothers, or something is wrong with them. However, the cause of PPD is not known and the depressional systems are often out of the mother’s control. Hormones changing so quickly from high levels of estrogen and progesterone to regular levels right after birth is one theory that could explain why some mothers develop PPD.
Social media and the carefully curated photos that are shown on Instagram may not be representative of reality. That goes without saying for basically all social media posts, but for mothers feeling alone or inferior, just a thought 🙂
SOURCE:
https://www.womenshealth.gov/mental-health/mental-health-conditions/postpartum-depression