Archive for the ‘Postpartum Depression’ Category

Thanks- July 25, 2011

Monday, July 25th, 2011

It’s been more than a month since I emotionally vomited on your computer screen with this post.  I was so hesitant to spew all that, but I’m so glad I did.  Out of the chunks of my PPD puke came wonderful responses.

This text from an old friend made me feel supported….

“Read your blog post from yesterday.  I love you and good for you for getting help!!!!”
This comment from a reader/friend made me feel not so alone…
“To be honest, I’ve not yet met a mom who didn’t have the repeated visions of the baby getting run over by a car, falling off a pier, getting burned with boiling water, all those things that flash through our minds and make us recoil at the thought. I think to some extent, those thoughts help us to be a bit more careful with the new fragile life that we’re safe-guarding. Those thoughts are obstrusive and disturbing, though. I did end up getting back on meds after John because of the rage I kept having. Rage at my husband, at my two-year-old, at the baby… you name it. Then my other OCD symptoms came back (non-baby-related) so I refilled my Rx and didn’t look back. When I went for my post-partum check up, the doctor asked me if I’d had suicidal or homicidal thoughts. I had not, but I had some really abusive thoughts which was reason enough for me to rejoin the ranks of the medicated.”  

This Tweet made me feel like I had made a difference….

 Fun Mama 

@ 

A call from an old friend in tears who said she called a therapist after reading was just the beginning.  (Love you!  You know who you are.)  So many of my family and friends called.  I couldn’t believe how many women told me they went through the same thing.  I NEVER KNEW!  

Blair hooked me up with this site.  Katherine is amazing!  Her site is wonderful and so many women have told their stories.  

So the moral of the story is, I feel so much better since I admitted everything.  I’m a little more than a week away from my 30th birthday and I’m feeling very blessed.  This blog, and the connections I’ve made are part of those blessings.  Thank you readers.  Thank you.  
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She ain’t no "Teen Mom"- June 14, 2011

Tuesday, June 14th, 2011

I tuned in to one of the 10-thousandth replays of the MTV Movie Awards this weekend.  I heard there would be “World Exclusive Premieres” for both Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows Part 2, and Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1.  I really needed a fix for my addiction to teen literature so I watched for awhile.

It has been a long time since I watched anything on MTV.  I used to watch the Movie Awards to see Alicia Silverstone, Jared Leto, and other celebrities high school freshman cared about in ’95-96.  This time I watched Robert Pattinson go up for every ridiculous category.

Much like blogs, award shows are really self-indulgent silliness.  Only one celebrity wow’d me during the show.  I was SO excited to see Bryce Dallas Howard and to see that she was pregnant!  She played Victoria in Twilight Saga: Eclipse and was accepting the award for “Best Fight”.

I learned about her after reading about her story of overcoming Postpartum Depression, and there she was, accepting an award for a hit movie and expecting again.  Way to go!

www.celebrity-gossip.net (Howard is on the left.)  
Watching the show and realizing how excited I got when I saw her, I had to chuckle.  I realized how little MTV had changed, and how much I had.  
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The post I should have written long ago- June 12, 2011

Sunday, June 12th, 2011

I wasn’t going to write this post.  I didn’t want to write this post.  In fact, I’ve been not writing this post in my head for 7 months.

Call it “Baby Blues”, postpartum depression, or “PPD” as it’s commonly known on the Internet.  Call it what you want, but it’s real.  I knew I had a big red “X” on my back.  Marked for PPD.  I have a history of mental illness after all.  I had been on Prozac for years.  Not because of depression but because of the OCD I struggled with during my eating disorder as a teen.  I’ve told ya’ll before, I was diagnosed with Anorexia at age 15, but I beat it with inpatient and outpatient treatment.  I don’t talk about it much because I don’t have to.  It’s not really a part of me anymore.

Before we ditched the birth control and decided to start “trying” I successfully weaned off Prozac.  I had read there was a .0001 chance of some rare lung disorder my baby could get if I was taking Prozac in the 1st trimester when the moon is full if stood on one foot.  I didn’t want to take that chance even though the OB/GYN warned me about PPD.  There was my mistake.

When I got pregnant, suddenly I was afraid of heights.  Me, the woman who went skydiving with her husband on our first anniversary.  Me, the teen who leaned forward and pressed my head against the glass at the top of the Eiffel Tower a-la Ferris Bueller.  Before we went to the beach last summer I had these terrible visions of my little step-nephew or niece falling over the edge of the second story deck at our beach house.  I even had thoughts of Ginger suddenly slipping from my hands, her soulful, innocent eyes desperately falling away from me.

But no food issues.  I wasn’t OCD with my food, I wasn’t anxious about weight gain.  I did great.  I thought, “Perfect, I won’t need drugs after the baby.  I’m cured of all mental illness!  It’s a miracle!  No anti-depressants in my breast milk!”

I thought PPD was something that built up over time.  I thought it was a product of extreme fatigue and breastfeeding woes that came about after a few weeks of living with a newborn.  I had no idea I would have the problems I had in the recovery room the night my sweet baby was born.

The nurse asked me if I wanted to keep Charlotte with us in the room or take her to the nursery.  Everything we had heard was “Let the baby go to the nursery so you can sleep.”  I was very hesitant because I wanted her near me, but I said okay because I was worried she would stop breathing and we would be asleep and no nurses would be around.  I figured in the nursery, the nurses would constantly monitor her.

When they rolled her away and I tried to sleep it began.  I had visions of Charlotte falling out of my hands over the top deck of our beach house.  I would startle, toss and turn.  Then she was falling over the edge of the loft in our house onto the hardwood below.  Then I stepped on her.  Then she was suffocating.  Then she was bleeding.  One horrific thought after another.  I confessed to Mom and Greyson in the hospital I was feeling anxious, but I left it at that.

I did okay leaving the hospital and welcoming guests that first week she was home.  What no one knows is when I would go into our room and close the door to nurse Charlotte, I was desperately flipping through my pregnancy and baby books, looking up postpartum depression symptoms.  I was perfectly fine on the surface to everyone else.  I was happily caring for my baby the best way I knew how.  I was doting.  I took a million pictures.  I was even sleeping pretty well.  Everyone kept telling me how well I was doing as a new mom.

Leaving the hospital.  

I was doing well.  I loved being a new mom.  Except for the terrible, scary, invasive thoughts that out of no where would batter my brain.  I knew in my rational mind I would never hurt my baby.  I knew the odds of anyone else hurting her were slim.  But my mind wasn’t rational.  I couldn’t hold a knife in the kitchen, use the microwave, or back out the car without thinking of how those everyday things would harm her.

The worst part about it, and it makes me feel sick to even type this….was sometimes, it was me who was hurting her.  You know how in Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix, Harry had the dream of the snake trying to kill Mr. Weasley?  Except Harry was the snake.  Harry was horrified by this thought.  He would  never hurt Mr. Weasley because he loved him, but he was possessed by Lord Voldemort.  That’s how I was.

In those first few weeks when I was home by myself I would hold Charlotte and cry.  I would rock her and promise her over and over I would never hurt her and that I loved her.  I was so scared someone was going to take her away from me, that I was some terrible Susan Smith-type that didn’t deserve such a perfectly beautiful baby.

I was mad.  So mad.  Mad that this was happening to me.  I’ve been-there-done-that with mental illness.  I thought maybe I’d be okay since I had an easy pregnancy and easy labor and delivery.  Charlotte was a really good baby and I had a supportive spouse.  This sucks!

I would hurt myself before I hurt my baby.  That’s not good either. I knew.  I knew I needed help.  One day when Charlotte was just 2 weeks old I ran across a description for Postpartum Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.  “Uncomfortable or obtrusive thoughts, scary or invasive thoughts, particularly about harm to the baby.”  I nearly jumped off the couch.  “That’s it!”  I called the doctor.  We had a long discussion about Zoloft in breast milk.  He assured me any problems with Zoloft for nursing mothers/babies was minimal.  He said with my history, if I felt like I should get on the medicine, I should.  I called for an appointment with a therapist, but she couldn’t see me for almost a month!

Blair is the one who inspired me.  I called her for lunch under the disguise of her meeting Charlotte.   I admire her so much.  Her blog is amazing, her fight against PPD is amazing. I really just wanted to tell her everything.  I knew she would understand.  I wanted to unload everything to someone who had fought the hard fight with PPD.  But, I didn’t say much about it.  I was worried she was still struggling and I didn’t want to overwhelm her.

I thought about all the women in generations before me who couldn’t talk about it because, “You just didn’t talk about those things.”

I finally went and talked to the therapist.  It helped.  But what really helped was being honest.  I came to the decision in my own mind that I was no longer going to be a victim of mental illness, because that’s what PPD is.  It’s a mental illness, just like an eating disorder.  So I talked it out, took my medicine, and fought on.  Why?  Because I didn’t want to miss anything.  I had dreamed my whole life about becoming a mother, and I didn’t want to miss a moment.

Guess what?  I haven’t.  I haven’t missed anything because I took action early.  I have very few invasive thoughts.  If I do, I can cope.  I’m gonna be okay.

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