Showing posts with label depression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label depression. Show all posts

Friday, January 19, 2018

What does hide behind the anger?

In yesterday's post I wrote how my psychiatrist's words made me cry. Yesterday I met my therapist and we talked about it. Now I understand why my reaction was so severe and why I was so angry at my psychiatrist.

The psychiatrist simply touched the topics I had doubts about myself. When she asked if I can be more patient and do not take any medicine and suffer for my baby she touched a very sensitive topic. I guess I am not in peace with my decision to take medicine while I am pregnant and while I will be breastfeeding at all... Deep down I still have doubts and I still feel like I am poisoning my baby. The words implying that I will not be a good mother made my own fears come to daylight. 

I often feel like I do not love my baby enough and that I do not care enough. I often feel like I am not a good mother. So hearing words implying that my fears could be true from another person touched me deeply.

I also felt my psychiatrist accused me of being weak and selfish. It is very hard for me to believe that my depression is a disease. Every time depression comes I accuse myself of just being lazy, selfish and weak. So the psychiatrist's words made me feel like that again. It just was too much. It is very scary to understand that not only I have doubts about my capabilities of being a good mother, but that others might have doubts in me too.

Monday, January 8, 2018

10 things pregnant and depressed women don't want to hear

During my pregnancy, which was very difficult physically and emotionally, I heard many words of encouragement, but not all of them were helpful. Some words just pushed me down. I want to share with you what pregnant depressed women probably does not need to hear.
  1. People survived through an exile, so you have to survive pregnancy. These were the words of one of the psychiatrists I have seen during my depression. These words were not helpful at all. They just made me feel spoiled and weak. Why can't I deal heroicly with my difficult pregnancy when others can survive an exile, serious illnesses or tortures?
  2. All women have to go through this. It's not true! Every pregnancy is different. Not every pregnant woman suffers. If you have children, that does not mean you know what I am going through. Your experience could be very different.
  3. It's a miracle what is happening to you! Some people tried to remind me that it's a miracle that I am creating a new life. But my feeling was not miraculous at all! Words about miracles just made me feel guilty I was not happy with my pregnancy.
  4. You have to love your baby. It is very difficult to love someone who is torturing me. I am allowed to feel whatever I feel. I am allowed to be angry at my baby. I will love him in my own time. Love comes when it comes, I cannot force myself to love someone.
  5. You are so happy, you will have a baby! People mostly think happiness is a given feeling during pregnancy. It's not for me! Don't say how I should feel. Absolute happiness is mainly a propaganda of mass media. In reality pregnant women most often feel fear and anxiety but not happiness.
  6. Pregnancy is temporary. When I tell people that my pregnancy is difficult they remind me it's a temporary thing. Believe me, when you have to live with pregnancy for nine months it may feel like an eternity. Nine months is a lot! 
  7. I envy you! Most of my friends who do not have children say that they envy me. But their jealousy just makes me feel like they don't understand how difficult being pregnant is for me. I try to explain how difficult my pregnancy is, but they don't listen. They just think that grass is greener on the other side of the fence. Believe me, it's not! Maybe it will be after the baby will be born, but now it's really not!
  8. Be more optimistic, you gonna be a mother soon! Like I could change who I am! Just let me  be myself!
  9. Try to go out more and relax. I mostly fell so bad and so tired, this was nearly impossible. If I  forced myself to go for a walk or meet with friend, I came home feeling absolutely exhausted physically and emotionally.
  10. Try to go to work and you will not have time for misery. It is the worst thing to say to someone suffering from depression. I am not lazy. And depression will not pass if I try to be occupied. I just have no mental strength to work when I am seriously depressed. So don't encourage me to torture myself even more. Brushing my teeth is a big enough work for me.

Friday, December 29, 2017

Scary thoughts come at night

Last night was rough. I rolled over again and again a hundred times. I just couldn't sleep. I had a thousand thoughts in my head spinning around. And I just could't keep my legs still. I felt the need to move or shake my legs. It calmed me a little. 

What were those scary thoughts that made my night sleepless about? They were about the future. I am so afraid that I will fall apart when I will have a baby. I am scared I will not love him and I will not want to hold him or I will not want to be with him. I am scared I will not feel I am a mother. Sometimes I even think I could leave my baby and run away. I could just leave my baby for my boyfriend and my parents and go somewhere abroad to start a new life. Of course, these are just fantasies. I understand I cannot run from myself. Wherever I go, whatever I do I still have to live with demons in my head. 

I am afraid that taking care of my baby will be too much for me. I can feed him or change diapers, but in my head such a big responsibility can be just too much for me. 


Where do those fears come from? I think I have just never believed I could have a baby. Healthy beautiful babies do happen to people. It happens to someone, but not me... I have always felt like I was not normal, I do not deserve such happiness like having a healthy beautiful child. So now when a baby is happening to me I just feel I am not myself. Like I am living someone else's life, but not my own. 

Sometimes I lay at night and stare at my boyfriend sleeping. Why does the idea of being a father is so natural to him? Why does he want to marry me? Why would anyone want to have a family with such a confused person like me? 

I dream those questions could just go away. I want my nights to be calm. But the reality is I have to be with my scary thoughts. Night after night. My only hope is that everything will change after I will give birth.

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Generalized anxiety disorder

During my pregnancy I received a new diagnosis from my psychiatrist. Apart from having a depression episode (I am bipolar), I also have a generalized anxiety disorder. The later is new to me. I hope it is not for life. I hope my anxiety is just a part of my high sensitivity during pregnancy. It is so tiresome to feel anxious all the time. I cannot stop thinking scary thoughts. I worry about everything. I think about giving birth, about the health of my baby, about how difficult is to be pregnant, about words someone said to me that were not nice, about money, about being a good mother etc. But the most scaring thoughts are about my mental health after I will give birth. I am so afraid of falling into severe depression again! What if I will not be able take care of my baby? What if giving birth will be so mentally traumatic to me that I will not recover? What if I will not love my baby?

Those thoughts are so tiring! I just dream of feeling calm. I just crave for spiritual peace of mind. What if it will never come? What if I am condemned to feel anxious for the rest of my life?

If you can at least vaguely understand my confusion and my hard feelings, you probably can understand why sometimes I want the pregnancy to disappear. I just desperately want to feel myself again. I just want to relax. I am so tired...

Monday, December 18, 2017

How does my family deal with my depression during pregnancy?

My depression during pregnancy is a serious challenge for my family. I live with my fiance and my parents. They have seen me at my worst. For them it is very difficult to understand how I can be depressed when I am pregnant with a baby who is wanted by all the family. 

The truth is I tried to pretend that my depression did not exist just to make them happy. It would have been easier for me if I would have been honest with my family from the beginning. But I was afraid they could judge or condemn me. 

How did my family react when I finally admitted what was going on? It was hard for them to understand. They tried to convince me to try harder and to pull myself up. It is sad for me to admit that my family did not see how much I was suffering and how much I needed professional help. I have to admit that they saw my depression as my weakness, not a disease. It is sad. They are not insensitive or unconcerned, they do what they think is the best for me. They try. As my therapist explained sometimes for them might be too difficult to admit that someone they love and care about could be suffering so much. And they are not psychiatrists so they are not able to recognize depression.

So dealing with my depression I was mainly on my own. My family helped me a lot by taking care of all the housework, taking me to the doctors or taking care of me eating at least something. But emotionally I was mainly on my own. I can not blame them. They are who they are and they do what they think is the best for me.

Monday, December 11, 2017

Disturbing feelings during pregnancy

The main thing I have learned in psychotherapy is that wrong or forbidden feelings do not exist. You are allowed to feel whatever you feel. Even when you are pregnant. You can feel so angry at someone that sometimes you want to hurt or to kill him or her and you can even have fantasies about doing it. It is completely normal if you do not do it in reality. It is completely normal to have such feeling for... your baby. It may sound very harsh, but it is the reality. The world is not just black or white. It is mainly grey. We can love and be angry at someone at the same time. I can be very angry at my baby when I feel nauseous all the time for days. At the same time I can love my baby to the moon and back. I know that some women can condemn me for my words. But I am not a bad person. I just have the courage to talk about difficult things. Most pregnant women do not allow themselves to have ambivalent feelings or they block them unconciously. Sometimes such moral filters we have can result in depression or can cause various psychosomatic symptoms. For example, for me vomiting during pregnancy stopped as soon as I stopped trying to be happy about my pregnancy and said loudly that sometimes I was so exhausted I wanted the pregnancy to disappear. 

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Did I make a mistake?

Yesterday I had a thought that hit me hard. Did I make a mistake? Was my decision to have a baby a mistake? Is it a mistake to get married? These questions are very frightening because when I think about them I feel the foundations of my life shaking. 

Even though my pregnancy have been very difficult emotionally and physically, I have always calmed myself repeating to myself that having a baby will be the best thing that has ever happened to me. But what if it won't? What if it is a mistake? My calm, simple and plain life is over. Everything has changed. What if my suffering during pregnancy is just a beginning of life long struggles? How should I believe that having a baby will bring not only struggles but joy as well? I know that probably all these scaring and negative thoughts are just a part of my depression. But today knowing the facts does not help me feeling better emotionally. Today I'm terrified of what's coming.

I am engaged. I also sometimes think if I should get married. Having a life long commitment seems overwhelming. Don't get me wrong. I love my fiance very much and I cannot imagine my life without him. I just don't feel safe in the relationship. I am afraid he will not be able to take care of me and the baby or he will leave us. He proved me wrong a thousand times but I still don't feel safe. Deep down I know it is not about him or about his behavior. It is about my general feeling of insecurity. And it is very difficult to live with this loneliness. I have a very supporting family but I still feel so alone with my pregnancy.

As i read what I have just wrote I can see my depression speaking. I want to believe depression will be over one day and I will be happy, I will get married and I will love my baby extremely. But for now I just need to survive this difficult period and not to make any big decisions in my life. I am very grateful to my fiance he agreed to wait with the wedding. I want to feel happy and not overwhelmed or confused on my wedding day. And for now I just need to get through another day. 

Sunday, December 3, 2017

How morning sickness is related to depression?

Morning sickness is a common pregnancy sign. But sometimes it is more than just hormones and body's reaction to pregnancy. Sometimes you can be sick and vomit because of ... emotions! It did happen to me.

I started experiencing morning sickness when I was just 5 weeks pregnant. In a few days my morning sickness became severe vomiting which continued all day long. I believe at first it was just a common pregnancy sickness, but after I had to be hospitalized because of dehydration when I was 13 weeks pregnant, I started questioning myself. Why was I still vomiting at the time pregnancy sickness usually starts fading? And my pregnancy sickness was really extreme. The strangest thing was that I was throwing up mainly after drinking fluids, but rarely after eating solid food. Usually during pregnancy morning sickness women do not throw up after drinking water, but they do after eating something body rejects. So doctors became suspicious if I am really experiencing usual morning sickness or if I have psychosomatic symptoms.

For me the turning point was the moment when I started throwing up in a hospital when my roommate went to labor. She was only 34 weeks pregnant and it was frightening for me to watch her starting giving birth so early.

Then I finally understood I was not experiencing morning sickness, but I was vomiting out my emotions. My psychotherapist explained to me how it happens. If we unconsciously stop ourselves from experiencing some negative emotions, our body might start acting out. In my case, I was depressed and stressed and I had mixed feelings about my pregnancy. But I was trying to suppress all the negative emotions and not to feel fear, sadness and anger. I was trying to be a super pregnant woman we see in mass media every day. In our society it is believed that pregnant woman should be anything but happy and glowing, when in fact a person could experience a wide range of emotions.  

I remember the day vomiting stopped. It took me one hour with a good therapist for extreme morning sickness to pass. For the first time I told anyone that I was so tired of feeling constantly sick, of crying and of suffering, that most of the time I just wanted not to be pregnant. I admitted that I dreamed of turning back the time and of never becoming pregnant. I even confessed to my therapist that pregnancy is so hard for me that sometimes I secretly think of termination of pregnancy. It was a very intense session. I cried. I shouted. And surprisingly the sickness I was feeling for weeks started fading away. 

Of course one session of therapy did not solve all my problems. I still felt sick for some time but I stopped throwing up every day. As I continued psychotherapy, vomiting finally stopped. 

I never thought that our emotions can affect our bodies so much before it happened to me. I believe I am not the only pregnant woman with such an extreme body reactions to suppressed feelings. If you have experienced any psychosomatic symptoms during pregnancy, please, share with me by commenting this blog entry. I believe it is very important in our situation to find understanding and support.

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Taking medicine during pregnancy

I have bipolar disorder for ten years now. Most of the time I was taking medicine and I did not have any manic episodes. But I had a few depressive phases. Before I decided to have a baby I had a very good period of three years  in my life without any signs of depression. I got a job which I liked and I was good at, so I made a career. I even decided to study at the university again and got a master's degree. I had a boyfriend I loved and I felt he was the one for me. So the next logical step seemed to have a baby. 

When we started trying to make a baby I stopped taking the medicine. I was taking Depakine Chrono (Acidum valproicum et natrium valproatum) and Cipralex (Escitalopramum) at the time. My doctor  approved my decision. It was especially important for me to stop taking Depakine Chrono because it is a drug which can cause serious birth defects in a baby.

I got pregnant very soon. I was hopeful I would not have to take any drugs during pregnancy. Unfortunately as soon as I got pregnant depression hit me hard. I was having panic attacks. I felt very scared and anxious. I could not sleep. Most of the time I was afraid I will die or I will go crazy. But I was very strong and patient and I managed to survive first trimester without taking any medicine regularly. Only occasionally when I could  not take being in a constant nightmare anymore I took half of a pill of Lexotanil (Bromazepamum) or a few drops of  Haloperidol (Haloperidolum). My doctors encouraged me to be patient. They emphasized that the first trimester of pregnancy is the most important for the development of the baby and that as soon as it would be over I could start taking medicine regularly.

So at the beginning of the second trimester of pregnancy I started taking Cipralex (Escitalopramum) again. Unfortunately my condition at the time was very bad and this medicine alone did not help me enough. I started having episodes of a severe fear and sometimes could not stop crying all day long. My doctor decided that my suffering is more harmful to my baby than medicine and prescribed me Olanzapine (Olanzapinum).

Now I am at the third trimester of pregnancy and feeling much better. It is still difficult to live but at least I am not suffering all the time. I sometimes have moments of anxiety but they pass by. I take Cipralex (Escitalopramum) and Olanzapine (Olanzapinum) now. I can feel medicine helps me a lot. I also have intense psychotherapy wich helps me a lot too. I will tell about it more in my upcoming posts. 

My baby seems to be developing just fine. I hope and I pray he (it's a boy!) will be healthy and strong.