October 2018 Moms

PSA: Postpartum Mental Health

edited May 2018 in October 2018 Moms
I'm part of a local moms group on facebook, and this is currently a major discussion point because of a new movie (description in spoiler)

I won't go into details, because i'm sure some of us would like to go see this, but a major theme in the upcoming movie Tully is PPD and PPP (postpartum psychosis).

I thought it would be nice to have a safe space to discuss any postpartum mental health issue, including postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety, postpartum OCD, and postpartum psychosis.  I'm sure some of us have had personal experience with one or more of these, and can share stories, realizations, successes, fears, warning signs, resources, and words of encouragement. 

Re: PSA: Postpartum Mental Health

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  • @sammierose464 - of course, thank you for the suggestion!
  • I'm really nervous about having PPD. I'm worried I will feel tired and unmotivated and struggle to care for this baby. I know I'll be an amazing mom, but I'm scared of what my depression will do. That's one reason I was adamant about staying on my anti depressants.

    DH told me he's worried that I'll be frustrated about the weight I gain, struggle to lose it, and that it will increase my unhappiness. Which are all valid thoughts and concerns.
  • @sammierose464 you’re going to do great. Going into the postpartum phase knowing what to look for is a huge advantage. If your depression kicks up after delivery or starts to progress into PPD/PPA, you’ll be able to see someone and adjust immediately. The “I don’t need help, I don’t want to talk about mental health issues” thing took me until my second kid/second round with PPD/PPA, and going through it untreated the first time was miserable. Making the phone call is such a huge first step, and it sounds like it shouldn’t be that hard for you. As for the weight gain, I’d definitely mention that to your provider next time you see them. Some drugs are better than others with that, and hopefully they can guide you towards one that will work better for you. Also, you’ll have us! I’m sure you won’t be the only one dealing with postpartum weight issues (if, indeed that becomes an issue for you). In my last BMB we have a fitness group that’s really helped me.
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  • I am worried about ppd/ppa too but as the prior poster said, I’m feeling much more confident I and my Dh would recognize it this time based on earlier experience. 
  • I know I can Google it but does anyone have a good website for signs to look for? I am a first time mom but my biological father we think is bipolar. I would like to know what to look for (and my DH to know) for both ppd/ppa. 
  • edited May 2018
    @SweetSweetTooth PPP is the one linked to bipolar.  My friend was hallucinating. She would talk to her dead relatives or her living relatives that were not in the house but she’d insist they were there in the room with her (despite an actual living person telling her they weren’t there). She didn’t talk about harming herself or the baby, but those are also signs.  If you have those kinds of thoughts, you need to tell someone.

    If you do show signs of PPP, going to a psychiatric hospital if there’s one near you is better than going to a regular ER.  The friend’s husband’s friend is a dr and the one that told them to take her to the hospital, and he said specifically the psychiatric hospital.

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  • When not pregnant or bf I'm on medication for ADHD.  It's been linked to higher cases of PPD/PPA so I did a lot of research before my first son.  I did do placenta encapsulation after both kids (chose to not do raw).  I managed to not suffer from PPD/PPA either time, not sure if the pills worked or not but I'll be doing the same this time around.  Of course always be aware of the possibility and know to reach out.  Do not wait until you 6 week PP appt if you need help sooner.
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  • slizteesliztee member
    @lest12 YES to speaking your anxiety/shame! Every time I talk about what’s paralyzing my brain, it subsides a little more. It’s when I keep it in that I’m a danger to myself. 
  • lest12lest12 member
    @sliztee - Yes, absolutely! 

     

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  • ninji15ninji15 member
    This is long but I have never spoke to anyone about it so I have a lot to say lol. I have a lot of anxiety as I am sure it comes off in my posts. I am always worse when I am pregnant it seems, like now I am going through anxiety and depression issues I thought were squared away now that DD is almost 2. I don't know if PPA/PPD is possible before postpartum though. *TW some darker thoughts mentioned* After I had DD I had nothing but nightmares of horrible things happening to my family and family members and since I also lost both grandfathers within that year, death was also on my mind a lot. I had a lot of anxiety about working not just because I missed my baby (and holy shit I did miss her so much) but because I had it in my mind I wouldn't be there if something horrible happened. I was afraid to let DH out of the house because I was sure he would get in a horrible wreck. The list goes on. Some of it might have been normal but I feel like it was extreme even for me.

    I am showing signs I think already by worrying about DD in ways I don't think I would have before this pregnancy. I don't want her under trees because of falling tree branches, I am worrying about food I know she can eat well but I keep thinking she will choke, and I want to make sure I have multiple back up plans for ridiculous things that never would have occurred to me. I am worrying about things happening to her at the sitters again (and she has the best sitter, its stuff that can happen anywhere). And of course I freak out over this pregnancy too. Preterm labor, illnesses that can affect the baby, freak accidents. Things that should be in the back of someones mind as "could happen but probably won't" and in my mind its "its going to happen how do I prevent it".

    I never got help the first time around because its "normal" for me to always be worried about something, but I didn't notice it was affecting how I functioned and it put a big stress on my marriage because my husband treated my anxiety as dislike for him or something, he never stopped to really asses my behavior and I almost wish he would have. I am going to try to talk about different things to try this time around. I want to be in the more normalized range or worry I think.
  • @lest12 @sliztee I totally agree. Once I tell my anxiety over an issue that it isn’t a threat and it will not hurt me, it calms down.

    @ninji15 I can relate to a lot your story, mine has a lot of similarities. Is it possible that all of the things that you thought were squared away were actually just suppressed and are coming out again with the situation being similar. 
  • Here's my story. 
    After DS was born, I was a mess. I couldn't function, I would out and out sob over weird things and was really hard to live with. Breast feeding was not going well at all and I'd try to push through and make it work and DS was not having it. I let it go on until my 6 week appt, and H really wanted me to talk to the Dr about it, so I resolved I'd try. They put me on Zoloft, and it made a world of difference! Both DH and I said I should've been on it long time ago.
    It was really tough for me to do anything, because I had it in my mind from growing up, that you had to be really sick before you needed medicine for anything. I talked to my siblings about it, I was pretty sure some of them struggled with depression too and it does run in the family (pretty sure my dad is bipolar with other mental problems). 
    I told them, and want others to know, medication does not magically make your problems go away! Your problems will still be there, still need solving, but you will be able to cope, and able to deal with problems.  
    Your hormones will go bonkers right after baby is born, but it should slowly get better, not worse. So if it keeps getting worse, please talk to your Dr! 
    Hope this will maybe help someone when they need it!
    DS 6/6/10
    DD 3/15/12
    DD 6/3/14
    #4 Due 10/26/18!
  • HoosOnFirstHoosOnFirst member
    edited May 2018
    I think others mentioned this, but even though my diagnosis was PPD and PPA, it became clear that I probably always had untreated depression and anxiety but having an infant is what pushed it into a visible place. I didn’t even get diagnosed until dd was 8 months old. I kept filling out all the PPD forms they name you do at the pediatrician the whole time and expected to get “called out” and never did. Only once I had a panic attack driving and almost crashed my car did I decide to see a professional. Dh is incredibly supportive of therapy and psychiatrists and my family has a history of depression and anxiety and even STILL I couldn’t see it until it was way too far in. I felt better able to cope on lexapro but I gained weight, which actually made me feel bad, and Dh later told me I had less of an affect and maybe ignored issues TOO much. I went off after a year and did some cognitive behavioral therapy and now am doing ok, but I have no qualms using medicine again if things get rough again with LO.
  • I missed this thread the first time, but +1 to trying cognitive behaviour therapy for relieving anxiety. I went through some of it last year (and then unfortunately, my work schedule changed and I was in an HMO group where specialists only saw patients one day per week, so rescheduling anything was always a disaster) and although some of the exercises seemed hokey, it really made a difference for me. Voicing exactly what my concerns are and then creating a logical argument against those concerns is a strategy that I continue to use. I love traveling (the being other places part), but I have become steadily more and more anxious about planes over the past two decades. I came up with kind of a mantra to repeat to myself while flying, and I've done really well over the past year when I've flown, even once I got pregnant and couldn't take a mild anxiety pill anymore.
  • I’ve always been an anxious person but that’s my “normal”. I have had situational issues (major life decisions/events) with my anxiety in the past leading me to take medication. I was worried I’d be a mess during pregnancy with all the unknown, but I’ve done fairly well, better than I would have thought. I am worried about PPD and PPA though. I already start to stress and get teary sometimes thinking about how I’ll be able to handle taking care of a newborn, plus usual dog duties, for 8+ hours when he goes back to work after birth. My husband doesn’t really understand my anxiety, it just frustrates him when I’m in a bad place with anxiety. His coping mechanisms are so opposite. He doesn’t think about things that cause him anxiety and I get hung up on them and frustrated. Hopefully it goes well.
  • cjx95cjx95 member
    edited July 2018
    I didnt see this before either.. I think it's amazing so many of you were willing to share your stories and experiences. Taking the birth class yesterday she very briefly went over ppd/ppa and ppp and gave us a booklet. I feel like it could have been touched on more but I'm glad that I have this forum to go back to as well in case I feel off or like something isnt right.
  • @chopchop25 in regards to your question in the other thread. I think it’s hard to recognize mental health issues in yourself. I know I didn’t recognize my PPA/PPD until it got really bad. I may have mentioned earlier in this thread, but my mental health was great post birth. Then when DS was 9 weeks I went back to work on Monday and he was admitted to the hospital on Friday with RSV. That was my trigger and then it just gradually got worse. I didn’t realize it was a real issue until I started having intrusive thoughts. I strongly suggest talking to your partner now about your concerns. We never did and I think if we had I would have gotten help sooner.
  • I developed both PPD/PPA after DD, but would say it was more heavily the anxiety that I noticed. I was hell bent on BFing and was constantly freaking out that she wasn’t getting enough. It didn’t help that she wasn’t on any growth charts so we had to do weighed feeds with the LC all the time. She didn’t hit 1% for weight until 10 months and DH and I literally high fived! When I went back to work it only amplified my anxiety because I wasn’t getting to pump on a regular schedule and even though my dad was watching her, he had his own ideas of how a baby should be taken care of (didn’t understand pace feeding or the logic of over feeding). I ended up quitting my job 3 months later and then went back when just after her first birthday. 

    I was on medication that seemed to help, but stopped taking it when I found out I was pregnant again since the things I found said it wasn’t safe during pregnancy. There are times when I can feel that lump in my throat again, then I get overwhelmed and moody. I’m sure I will get back on the meds once I have the twins, but I at least know what signs to see in myself so I can ask for that help.
  • Half the battle is knowing what to look for. Mine struck at 7 months when my baby suddenly stopped nursing and i let it go until i was suicidal. It's easier said than done, but try to cross that bridge if you get to it. If you wind up struggling, there are so many resources out there-support groups, individual therapy, medications if you're open to them, etc. 
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  • Thanks for remembering we had this @purplegoldfish2! Lots to come back and read later today!
  • I also experienced PP anxiety, but I struggle(d) with anxiety before kids too so I was expecting it. 

    Mine hit really bad at 1 month PP. Reality hit and I was a mess. The big clue for me was that I wasn't sleeping. Even when the opportunity presented itself...i couldn't sleep. I was so anxious and all I could think about was my anxiety and how it was taking over.

    Went to doc, got back on meds and was much much better after a couple weeks.

    Anxiety is no joke. You need sleep, even if you aren't getting much of it.
  • I agree with @nasalot188 sleep is so important! Even now with my anxiety under control if I sleep poorly for a few days I noticed a higher level of anxiety. 
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