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lizzle
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Topic: PND Posted: 30 June 2010 at 7:40am |
Now, this is not meant to stir - genuine interst here.
I am 32 so lots of my friends are having/had children and it seems to me, the ones who accidentally got preggers didn't get PND, while the ones that TTCed DID get PND. My theory is that we people who got UTD accidentally weren't so keen on motherhood so didn't build it up in our heads, so when the baby arrived, we didn't expect it to be sunshine and rainbows, but my friends that TTCed for years (high school friends) were disappointed and upset with themselves when the darling baby they had longed for, at times was annoying and loud.
So how true is my theory? Baring in mind my research was completely anecdotal and limited to about four people I know who talked about having PND who just hapenned to have TTCed
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Bizzy
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 8:41am |
i suppose that if motherhood doesnt meet your expectations, as quite often happens when you really really really want something, then you could leave yourself more open to get PND. I dont think there is a link though as PND isnt just a state of mind (from what i understand).
i know for me i really wanted a baby and tried for a long time but i didnt get PND, but i know i have trouble reconciling the dream with the reality.
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BeLoved
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 8:51am |
We TTC'd for a year or so but I did not get PND, I thought the same as Bizzy that it was not just a state of mind, but related to chemical imbalances etc. caused by pregnancy etc. I did take a alot of supplements etc. that I had read would help to keep things in balance but I don't know if they actually made any difference. I was at risk of having PND due to a complicated last trimester with GD and other issues.
I do think in general the ideal and the reality are very different things and anyone at anytime can be left feeling "something does not quite add up here"
edited to add geez sorry for all the etc. etc!
Edited by HeidisMum
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anon
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 9:17am |
Well, this could definitely become a sensitive topic but I will stick up my hand and say that I TTC for 3wks and got pregnant pretty much as soon as possible once we started trying after getting married - and I have PND. There is no one single cause of PND. There are a whole lot of factors. One factor CAN BE that people's expectations of what birth/feeding/motherhood is going to be like don't eventuate. But many mothers experience that because motherhood is always full of surprises. However, if you combine it with other factors, such as:
- history of mental illness
- little support (friends/family/partner)
- difficult baby, eg. sleep issues, reflux/colic, poor feeding
- personality, eg. need to control things or high expectations of yourself, low self-esteem
- difficult labour
- baby blues lasting longer than usual
Obviously you don't have to have all of those factors but some of them - and there are others, but I can't think what they are just now.
The most important thing is that even if you have unmet expectations or a certain personality type, you may not end up with PND at all... And it's also important to add that it is not anyone's fault that they might get PND. It's unhelpful to think along the lines of "if I wasn't such a control freak or if I had not believed it was all going to be a bed of roses then I may not have got it!" That is incorrect and far too simplistic as well as unhelpful blaming yourself! It is helpful though if you are planning a baby to consider and challenge the expectations you do have of your birth, feeding and motherhood in general so that you are as prepared as you can be. Although I would add nothing prepares you for it really because I tried to prepare myself but I hadn't realised what it was going to really be like.
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luvmylittlies
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 9:28am |
Interesting observation.
I wonder if it might have something to do with the fact that those with unexpected pregnancies had to work through that as a life changing thing before they even got to having the baby. Whereas possibly those TTC for ages have so much expectation riding on the actual baby that reality is hard to match it.
These are just thoughts okay - no-one bite my head off here!
But in saying that I've not had any issues with PND and we were trying to have a baby for 3 years. Actually thinking about it - in my coffee group those with PND or signs I think were mostly the ones that didn't have any trouble conceiving.
ETA: I've had issues in the past with depression so I thought I'd be a sitter for PND.
Edited by thesaff
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Bobbie
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 9:59am |
I attribute my PND to my inability to handle the influx of female hormones. Every time I went on the pill I went a bit nutso and PND was really a sustained version of that.
I did plan both my pregnancies.First time I had a text book baby, second time I had a reflux baby who had feeding issues and didn't sleep. I had great family support both times. I  'd my birth experiences. I didn't have any expectations of how having a baby would be so I don't think there was any unrealistic goals set.
Both times I didn't have baby blues and actually was fine for ages and then at about 4 months the PND just hit.
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Babe
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 10:36am |
I had PND and Psychosis with Jake - my surprise baby and no PND (as yet  ) with Tyler - my planned baby. Though when I say planned I mean we discussed it abit, DP came round to the idea, we got a BFP 2 weeks later
Lizzle I think it could def be a factor for some people getting PND though coz like newlywed said there are a huge amount of factors and PND kinda covers a broad spectrum - it doesn't refer to JUST chemical depression IYKWIM... Hmmm I'm wondering if *I* know what I mean
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Richie
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 11:08am |
Isla wasn't planned, but not exactly an accident iykwim..... and I have PND but I was expecting it anyway due to a history of depression and not being able to handle situations where I'm not 100% in control. So sometimes not knowing why Isla was upset would really do my head in, still does. I didn't have much in the way of expectations of what motherhood was going to be like. I certainly didn't think it was going to be easy, or fun all the time so haven't been let down in anyway.
It's an interesting observation you have made but I think it's just coincidence. I have friends who have surprise babies and friends with planned babies and many of them have PND......
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anon
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 11:20am |
Bobbie -hormones definitely come into it. The list (incomplete) that I made were RISK FACTORS rather than a list of criteria...
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Jelly
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 12:28pm |
Bobbie wrote:
I attribute my PND to my inability to handle the influx of female hormones. Every time I went on the pill I went a bit nutso and PND was really a sustained version of that. |
That's actually a really interesting theory... I go a bit mental on the pill too, overly agressive etc. and the baby blues hit me quite hard. (Panic attacks at dinner time 3 days in a row anyone?) I don't think I have PND though and I have everything crossed that I don't get it out of the blue suddenly!
I do have a history of depression and towards the end of pregnancy I was prepping DP to handle me when PND hit, but I guess it's never predictable is it?
ETA: We weren't TTC, but were really bad with protection so we kinda expected a BFP at some point.
Edited by Jelly
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tishy
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 1:14pm |
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ElfsMum
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 1:37pm |
well i am true to that theory.. planned both my babies with military precision:) but I also think losing a baby before Ethan and one after (12 and 6 week mc's) and not dealing with those caused it too.. (and the hormone thing as well it certainly makes my OCD way worse)
I also think while i expected motherhood to be hard i didnt expect it to be so.. draining 24/7 and I dont deal with lack of sleep very well so i find this first bit where i am up every single night for months with no break to be very tough:) and that doesnt help!
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High9
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 1:58pm |
Lily wasn't planned, but wasn't prevented. Irresponsible I know!
I know the day she was conceived, and straight after I had a little feeling about it before I went to sleep. The 3 weeks later or there abouts when I was late I thought about it but didn't actually find out until 9 weeks!
Anyway I thought about every aspect of parenthood, babies etc so when she was born it wasn't a shock or anything and I think I have done really well. Don't have pnd.
Although that is sorta questionable imo... I am 100% enjoying being a mum, it's just when she's asleep etc and I am not looking after her that I feel down.
I did have mild depression as a teenager, but went to counseling for it.
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High9
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 2:00pm |
Yeah, I've found my moods are uncontrollable since being on the pill, and also when I was on depo. I never had this problem with just condoms, but that is how dd ended up being.
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RinTinTin
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 2:57pm |
Well we TTC'd, no PND here.
I have a history of depression as well so was on a high rsk list for PND, I had MMH and my own personal counsellor watching me like a hawk but I managed to dodge the bullet.
I think that was partly due to the fact that I never expected it to be easy and that I fell in love with my baby so deeply from the moment I got my BFP and I swore to my baby that no matter happened I would love it and stick by it and never give up on it.
I also contribute my bullet dodging to a mother/baby class I joined when Mac was 8 weeks old because of the beautiful stress free and respectful way of parenting that it promoted.
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scribe
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 3:51pm |
Could it be that the people more likely to get pregnant TTC rather than accidentally are the people with that certain "personality, eg. need to control things" so are more likely to get PND... (what do they call that, a causal link or something?)
ETA: or should I have said, the people more likely to get UTD accidentally are the kind of "relaxed" (for want of a better word!) people who aren't likely to get PND...
I tend to like to control and plan my life, and so it would be quite unlikely that I got pregnant by accident ... and I had mild postnatal depression (but I had other risk factors from newlywed's list as well). I probably would've had full-blown PND if it had not been for a fantastically supportive husband working from home who was there to step in when things got too much.
Edited by anakk
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LittleBug
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Posted: 30 June 2010 at 10:12pm |
Bobbie wrote:
I attribute my PND to my inability to handle the influx of female hormones. Every time I went on the pill I went a bit nutso and PND was really a sustained version of that.
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Same here Bobbie... I was the same on the pill, and with pregnancy/postnatal period. I think a combination of that and a difficult first baby, and then getting pregnant again when Chloe was only 4 months old, all contributed!
In short, I wasn't trying to TTC and I got PND.
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kazzam34
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Posted: 09 July 2010 at 10:17am |
I know this discussion has faded away now...but just saw it and think it's really interesting. I had PND with my son - I conceived within a month of trying, so wasn't one of those people who had been TTC for a long time.
Interestingly though, I had also had big problems with the contraceptive pill. When I first started taking it I was in a very good place, very happy and within a week was depressed, anxious, tearful. I came off of it, and never went back on it.
I would also say that what I got fell in to the category of PNA ie post-natal anxiety. I was so anxious and exhausted all the time as basically I did not know what to do with a baby, especially once who didn't sleep and had difficulties feeding! Our ante-natal classes had been crap, there was only one session on caring for a baby the rest had all been about labour. I didn't have any family support, my relationship with my mother was terrible (again, one of the risk factors for PND). I didn't drive and was stuck in an isolated house miles away from anywhere. There was no breast-feeding support and the midwife only came about twice after the birth and that was it...
so, all in all, it would have been a miracle to have not had PND!
My theory on PND is that lack of supportive family and community networks has a lot to do with it. Also the modern generation of women like me were educated to be like men, to do all the career stuff. Whereas 40 years ago the expectation was that women would be mothers, and the education system and their own mothers prepared them for that.
Kazzam
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Nutella
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Posted: 09 July 2010 at 11:02am |
Hmm, I think it is likely to be a coincidence.
We TTC for 18 months, I do like to be in control, had some very stressful events during pregnancy (some good, some bad), I had a very scary birth experience (placental abruption), live in a town with no family or friends around (we are in aussie), ended up having an operation when DS was 6 weeks old for breast abcess...... but have not had PND and have found mothering to be a joy so far!!!
But then in saying that, I didn't have high expectations for motherhood, I knew there was going to be tough times, AND I have gone with the flow for a lot of things and not placed high expectations on myself (weird considering I am normally a perfectionist, you should see the house some days now when it used to be always tidy lol) which is perhaps the mistake some mums make.
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Hopes
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Posted: 09 July 2010 at 12:13pm |
I would have almost thought the opposite - that if you've been TTC for a long time, you're planning on adjusting your life to having a baby, and are pleased to do so. Getting UTD as a surprise means life changes you didn't anticipate and might not want...
But from the comments here, it looks like people on both sides of the fence struggle - I wonder if anyone's ever done any research into that point. I'll have to go look.
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