Post-Natal Depression – real Causes & real Cures

There is usually an exhausting, painful grief a new mother goes through – no matter how good her pregnancy turned out to be, or how thrilling the birth was, or how beautiful breastfeeding has ended up becoming, or how crazily in love she is with her new baby.

It is okay and normal for new mothers to sometimes feel at their wit’s end with the 24-7 role of motherhood, with its self-sacrificial relentless devotion and shocking loss of Self. We’re not bad to think that way. Heck, this is the one job we can never resign from and it’s unrealistic to expect that we should like our work all the time.

​However, about 15-20 percent of new mothers (though from my observations I believe it’s more like 20-25 percent) find that during their normal postpartum adjustment they experience an episode of moderate to severe depression. Inwardly you may feel an unrelenting sad hollowness, and be unable to understand why you’re feeling like such a moody, irritable, grumbling, crumbling lost-soul that is no longer living, just existing. You’re feeling like there’s no way out and life is never getting better, optimism is vanishing before your eyes, and is being replaced instead with an intense inability to chill-out anymore – like a pressure-cooker about to implode, and being sick and tired of feeling so sick and tired!

Some mums are clever enough to publicly maintain an everything-is-fine persona, while robotically functioning with tight-lipped martyrdom and seething resentment. These angry feelings then mutate into perpetuating shame, guilt at not feeling happy, and an inexplicable psychodynamic of aching darkness. You may be coping, or not, with your baby and household tasks, but you certainly are not enjoying your life!

Feeling like this is not normal – and like a tooth cavity, the decay won’t go away without treatment. This is a postnatal stress disorder or postpartum depressive reaction – with the most common variety being Post Natal Depression (also called Postpartum Depression).

Tragically, PND was historically viewed to be just a feeble-minded housewife who needed to simply ‘pull herself together’. Fortunately, neurological scientific research now clearly understands that for many mothers, PND is actually simply a physiological imbalance of neuro-transmitters (primarily serotonin) manifesting in the emotions of happiness and contentment being inhibited – primarily caused by the seismic hormonal upheaval of pregnancy and birth, and often intensified by REM (rapid-eye-movement) sleep-deprivation. Modern science and modern doctors know PND can be little to do with the woman’s personality, and much more to do with her collective predicament.

If you’re wondering if you have a postnatal depressive or distress disorder, then the first thing I recommend, is to read Chapter-11 of my OH BABY book. I provide very user-friendly specifics to assist you to identify which particular postnatal disorder you likely have developed, and some wonderful proven remedial cures.​

The other specific thing to do, is to complete the multi-choice questionnaire EPDS (Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale) which you can do at www.mothersmatter.co.nz/epds.htm .

If your EPDS score is 9-12 then know you are border-line. The herbal supplements of 5-HTP, Ginkgo Biloba or Siberian Ginseng could assist tremendously to improve things, along with a boost of Essential Amino Acids and general multi-vitamin.

For mild depression, a popular natural herb in Europe is St John’s Wort. [Note: Do not combine St John’s Wort with prescribed medications as its metabolic properties can cause detrimental drug-drug interactions, including deactivating the contraceptive pill. Also St John’s Wort, like pharmaceutical antidepressants, takes 2-6 weeks to become therapeutically beneficial.]

If your EPDS score is 13+ then know you probably have undiagnosed clinical depression, and really should visit a kind and caring GP doctor, who will probably prescribe you with an antidepressant such as Aropax SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor).

But at the end of the day, please know in your heart that there is NO wisdom in hesitating to find help. For ignoring your own needs mean you lose, your partner loses, and your baby loses. It is your job to look after your baby’s Mother.

Love & Light,

Kathy

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