My fling with PND lasted about an hour. I say fling because
it wasn’t a full blown relationship. We met, we checked each other out, we had
a bit of a pash and then I realised PND was a complete bastard and wanted
nothing to do with it, so I dumped it.
When I had my first baby, I was so thrilled that I’d finally
conceived after a year of trying and getting really close to intervention, that
I literally threw myself into mothering her. I jumped every time she squawked.
I leaped out of bed enthusiastically in the middle of the night to feed and soothe her. I
prolonged every phase of her development; mostly because I was too
inexperienced to read the signs that she needed to change, but also because I
indulged in the established routine and was afraid to alter it. With support
and information, we got there in the end. She ate solid food and weaned off the
breast easily, she slept through the night, she rolled, crawled and walked, she got
teeth, she’s talking and she even sits on the loo every now and then and
actually goes. Even when I was tired and frustrated and confused though, I was
never really depressed. I never felt utter despair. I didn’t feel rage. I
wasn’t confused to the point of sobbing. I was content and happy. For the
majority of the time it was me and her in the trenches. Her dad at work during
the day and during the night, I insisted he sleep so he could function at work
the next day, knowing I could rest when she napped.
When the twins came along she was 18 months old. Again we
were thrilled to be having not only another baby; a much wanted sibling for
her, but two healthy little girls. Our family was going to be full, abundant;
something we dreamed of, but weren’t sure we were going to achieve. Despite
everyone’s shocked warnings of how busy we would be and the necessary banter
about the chaos that would ensue, we were truly excited and thrilled. We
weren’t under any illusions that it was going to be easy, but we felt prepared.
Raising our first through that first year was still fresh in our minds and we
learned a lot. We knew it wouldn’t be the same though. There were two babies at
the same time and a toddler who’s nurturing still needed to be observed and
progressed milestone by milestone. We were going to become masters of multi
tasking, champions of triage, expert jugglers. Well I was mostly, because let’s
face it, I’m the primary carer whether I care to admit it or not. Yes I have
support; my husband and parents do their best to help me. However, the majority
of care giving for all three children at this early stage is my sole responsibility.
It was my choice, my preference and I can do it. I do it pretty well. But it’s
bloody hard and sometimes, it doesn’t have to be, but it is. Sometimes there
are more obstacles and hurdles to jump than there needs to be.
I first flirted with PND shortly after settling back at home
from hospital with the twins. I’d had another caesarean and was in a fair bit
of pain, but luckily the hospital sent me home with a small supply of Endone. I
have a lot of feelings and rationalisations about both my caesarean birthing
experiences. Bottom line is I did not give birth vaginally. I say vaginally not
naturally because that implies that it’s a competition between natural and
artificial birth simply defined by which part of your body the baby came out
of. And people are too shy and uptight to say the word vaginally....vagina. It is so much more complicated than that. Yes, a caesarean operation is
medicalised and involves a lot of artificial intervention for want of better
words, but vaginal births are rarely without assistance too. I am completely in
awe of women who go into labour naturally and give birth without any drugs and
no intervention like episiotomy, forceps, vacuums, tearing and no assistance to
the baby afterwards either. Heaps of women do it and have done throughout
history. More women are aiming for that these days and when everything aligns
and there is a perfectly healthy, low risk pregnancy, strong supportive
networks around the pregnant woman, intelligent and woman focused midwifery and
doula services, progressive medical systems to fall back on, education, money, comfort,
time, peace of mind – so many factors; when all those circumstances combine and
harmonise, it is definitely more possible and desirable for a completely natural birth to
happen. When it doesn’t go completely perfectly, we are lucky enough to live in
a country where medical birthing support is available and accessible and whether a
woman needs a little help or a lot, her birthing experience can still be
positive with the desired end result that everyone aims for; a healthy, safe AND
HAPPY mum and baby. I needed a lot of medical support both times. The first
time I wasn’t prepared for it, the second time with the twins I was, but still
needed more than I thought I would. I was in excellent hands. I was surrounded
by incredibly kind and capable people at both hospitals; one was public the
other private and I learned a massive lesson; that so many expectations are
placed on birthing women, so many false assumptions are promoted and there is a
lot of misinformation out there. We as a species are still evolving
biologically, emotionally, psychologically and culturally and all these factors
contribute to our birthing experience. It is the single most important and
profound human experience there is; perpetuation of our species and next to
death and physical illness or injury the hardest thing a human will have to
endure. Really. What else is harder or more profound? Don’t get me wrong. In
saying that, I am not saying that a choice or otherwise not to experience that
leaves you lacking; there are other human endeavours that are just as challenging in
other ways, but giving birth and raising a child is intense and unique. We need
to honour that better as a species and acknowledge what is necessary in a
collective way to ensure that the experience has the best possible outcome for
everyone. At the moment we don’t do that all the time. This is reflected in so
many aspects of society. The administration of medical support to pregnant women to facilitate self determination in their birthing experience, the gender
inequality women experience in the workplace and in society generally, how
public spaces cater to parents, children and families and how we address issues
surrounding depression and mental illness to name a few. We don’t look after
our planet either, we don’t look after each other. We need a Revolution. Right now I’m
reading Russell Brand’s book by the same name. It says everything I am trying
to say so much more concisely.
So the drugs ran out, I was making sense of my birthing experience; mine and the whole idea of birth generally and at the same time trying to fall into a new routine with two newborns and a toddler. When I say I was thinking about it generally, I was thinking how lucky I was, even though I felt obligated to explain or defend my experience of a very medicalised birth to many people. When you have a caesarean you have to explain what went wrong. It is not how I experienced it. Everything went right. I didn’t die and neither did my babies. I was surrounded by kindness and made comfortable in every possible way and I was surrounded by the love of the closest people in my life at all times. What more did I want? What more did I have to do to demonstrate and prove to people that although I would have liked to have given birth vaginally both times and everything I came across – people and information – preparing me for birth was telling me that was the proper way to do it, I actually had no control over how my body behaved and could only trust that the intervention I received would ensure a good outcome? I thought about women who have none of that. They may give birth vaginally and drug free, euphorically and safely, but they may have no other choice and if something goes wrong, it goes terribly wrong. They may be living in a remote community or in a war zone or a refugee camp. They may have no family or medical experts to cajole them through the pain and terror and have to muster the strength through their own self determination and survive the consequences no matter what happens. I started to think about birth on a global scale and this was magnified with every little experience I confronted. Whenever I found myself lamenting over a particular aspect of my experience, I imagined the alternatives. I found gratitude. I reasoned that it could be worse and how can I make it better for myself and for others. This story helped me immensely.
I took the babies and continued to take the toddler to the
health clinic for their periodical check ups. At the end you do a little tick a
box quiz, which I love and have absolutely no cynicism about how leading they
are (eye roll) and I always scored pretty well. I always answered completely
honestly, because I am up for the discussion with the nurse and ready to rant
about how I feel about the label Post Natal Depression. Again, it’s not that I
don’t believe it exists. I am certain it does and that there is a spectrum.
However I understand where I’m at on that spectrum and my critical analysis is
that you can’t put a woman in a pressure cooker and expect her to remain cool
as a cucumber in a crisper all the time. That’s just madness. I always answered
the questions truthfully and I especially loved the one about the sense of
humour. That is my measure for my state of mind. Can I still laugh at things?
Am I still able to find the comedy? The answer is almost always yes. The other
good ones are about crying and raging. Do I cry and rage often? Not like the
normal amount that is expected when you are elbow deep in shit most days, when
you are exhausted from broken sleep and waking through the night sometimes
hourly, when your body is being ravaged by breastfeeding and mastitis – I’m on
my sixth bout and this time the site of infection was right behind the nipple
and one of the twins has teeth…..yep excruciating. When you are alone with
three babies most days and you’re doing most of the feeding, lifting, napping
(them not me), changing, cleaning, singing, entertaining, routine monitoring,
cooking and food preparation, thinking and planning and observing….what do they
call that these days? Hypervigilance.
So at around the babies’ 6 month check, which was really at
8 months because we were delayed after one of them had a minor cleft operation
at 4 months; it was at this appointment that I answered truthfully; I hadn’t
had a good belly laugh in ages. I cry more than normal – when the babies refuse
to sleep, when I am in pain, when I feel unfit and frumpy, when I haven’t got
time to write or crochet, when I’m bored of the same three rooms and I despair
at a world that is cruel to women and girls and I am raising three. I rage more
often than I used to. I nag my husband and my toddler; I pick fights with them
and my parents. I get the shits with the general public (OK I did this most of
my adult life, but now it’s for different reasons like why are they taking up
the pram parking when they don’t have children, why is their trolley abandoned
in the middle of the isle, why is the neighbour continually slamming doors or using
power tools beneath my bedroom window, why do people have to mow lawns so often, why are
people so impolite, rude, indifferent, conceited, incompetent, complacent….why
am I so angry all the time.)
The baby health nurse listened to me and validated my
feelings. She said everything I was going through was understandable. I’m in
the thick of it and she recognised that I am very self aware. I made a
commitment to take some time out and go back to looking after my body and mind
through yoga. I have now bought a ten class pass and started classes.
When the teacher asked at the first class if there was
anything in particular we wanted to address at the session I had to bite my
tongue. People said their lower backs and neck hurt, some wanted a good stretch
– I wanted to address my deep seeded rage and existential confusion; I didn’t
say it out loud. At one part of the class we were lying on our backs and he
asked us to take a deep breath and release it with a loud sigh; I fought the
urge to scream out MOTHERFUCKER.
It’s a start. I’m trying to do one or two sessions a week
and I’m already seeing the benefits. For some people who are experiencing Post
Natal Depression it is much more serious and complicated than that. Maybe they
don’t have the tools to critically analyse and understand what they are
experiencing and only see the symptoms independent of the causes. For me it
isn’t like that. I can’t control feeling like crap; crying and getting angry,
feeling overwhelmed and confused, feeling lonely and isolated and desperate
that everything is bleak and hopeless. But when the moment passes I can make sense
of it and I understand that I feel those things not because of something inside
me that is dysfunctional or broken, but instead I see it as a very normal
response to what I am experiencing being a stay at home mum to three babies
under the age of two. I think that if mums didn’t respond with the emotional
and psychological behaviours that we associate with depression after making a
human or two or more in their bodies, having given birth and being suddenly
bombarded with the immense responsibility of taking care of babies; if they
were all calm and positive and well groomed and happy all the time; that would
be psychotic. That would be dysfunctional and not a normal response to the
stimuli.
For some women, medication is absolutely appropriate. I am
afraid to take anti depressants because I think I will like them too much. I
recognised something very sinister in myself when the Endone ran out and I
faced the prospect of having no more pain killers. I felt a bit like a junky that
needed their next fix and was not going to be able to score. I have an
indulgent and addictive streak that I need to keep an eye on. I am very good at
utilising tools like wine for example, to self medicate and keep me calm. This
hasn’t been an option until recently because I don’t like to drink at all while
I’m breastfeeding, but the babies have cut back on feeds and I’ve been allowing
a glass or two each night and it has made an immense difference. I can get a
good buzz on with just a small amount and it is helping me get through the
nights. The babies still don’t sleep through and I think the nights are the
hardest for people who experience depression. On second thought, the nights are
hard on most normal human people who are engaged with the nature of existing
and have a mind and emotions. The nights are dark and silent and the self and
the mind are alone to dwell and reflect. The self is awake to dance up a storm
of despair and uncertainty that the day time can easily mute and hide in the light. If it
was legal, I’d smoke a joint once in a while.
I guess my point is this. PND is very real and very
debilitating for some women, but it isn’t a flaw in them. It isn’t a condition
that is inherent in their nature. It is a response to a situation that will
push any normal person to their absolute limit. Women all deal with this
pressure differently and we all make choices and sometimes have no control over
how we experience pregnancy, child birth and parenting.
I’ll end with one of my favourite quotes.
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