Anonymous wrote:Thank everyone, I will call my obgyn tomorrow.
My spouse is with me and I just told him how I am feeling and he also thinks I have PPD.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone is telling you it’s PPD and it’s brain chemistry. I understand why.
There’s also the chance that you’re simply very unhappy because of a terrible situation. A lot of women dislike having a baby but it’s not socially acceptable to share this. You destroyed your body, can’t go to work, aren’t sleeping well or at all, can’t go to social functions etc…of course you’re unhappy! It’s a major life change and isn’t necessarily a chemical imbalance.
Regardless get help. But not just for PPD. Try to find a sitter, night nurse, anyone who can give you a break, even if it’s short. Even just going for a manicure or a coffee will help your mood. Try to start exercising with the baby as that can help and is a break from holding the baby. Also babies cry and make sure putting the baby down in a safe place even if the baby cries.
Anonymous wrote:OP fwiw I think we basically ALL get PPD/PPA and it’s just a matter of how much and how much help we need/ask for. Yours needs the attention of your doctor, ASAP. But as far as is it “normal,” YES.
Anonymous wrote:Call your OB tomorrow. You have post partem depression.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts of hurting your baby puts you squarely in the post-partum depression category. Call your OB tomorrow and ask if you can have the newly approved medication. If not, if doesn't matter, it's a progesterone metabolite, ask for something that mimics it. I had to eat my placenta the second time around to avoid PPD - the placenta is chock-full of progesterone. I'm so glad new mothers have that new med now to help them!
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it's a thing. There are companies who will compound your placenta into pills for a fee, IIRC. I have no idea how you would assure yourself that what you are getting back is both placenta in the pills and your own one, but it is really a thing.
Yeah, but there’s no evidence that it helps with anything, it’s potentially dangerous, and it doesn’t help OP at all, since she no longer has access to her placenta…
https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/labor-and-delivery/expert-answers/eating-the-placenta/faq-20380880
Anonymous wrote:Sending you love OP! Glad you are reaching out for help.
A lot of us have been there and came out on the other side.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts of hurting your baby puts you squarely in the post-partum depression category. Call your OB tomorrow and ask if you can have the newly approved medication. If not, if doesn't matter, it's a progesterone metabolite, ask for something that mimics it. I had to eat my placenta the second time around to avoid PPD - the placenta is chock-full of progesterone. I'm so glad new mothers have that new med now to help them!
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it's a thing. There are companies who will compound your placenta into pills for a fee, IIRC. I have no idea how you would assure yourself that what you are getting back is both placenta in the pills and your own one, but it is really a thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts of hurting your baby puts you squarely in the post-partum depression category. Call your OB tomorrow and ask if you can have the newly approved medication. If not, if doesn't matter, it's a progesterone metabolite, ask for something that mimics it. I had to eat my placenta the second time around to avoid PPD - the placenta is chock-full of progesterone. I'm so glad new mothers have that new med now to help them!
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Anonymous wrote:Thoughts of hurting your baby puts you squarely in the post-partum depression category. Call your OB tomorrow and ask if you can have the newly approved medication. If not, if doesn't matter, it's a progesterone metabolite, ask for something that mimics it. I had to eat my placenta the second time around to avoid PPD - the placenta is chock-full of progesterone. I'm so glad new mothers have that new med now to help them!