Women have strongly advocated for childbirth to be viewed as a normal part of life in order to birth in natural positions rather than those that are convenient for medical practitioners. It seems like these women are finally finding a stronger voice, and all of a sudden we have a new consequence of childbirth (a 20th century event) where women become psychotic due to childbirth.
I really have to question whether this concept is as bumbled as we have seen in the history of childbirth, with medical practitioners being ignorant of their responsibility for the high mortality rates in birthing women (for more than two centuries), or whether this is something real. If it is real, and childbirth results in psychosis, the I'm very curious when this relationship was first identified and why. Until I understand this new problem (new in the sense of contemporary), I am absolutely not prepared to believe that childbirth can result in psychosis. Out of curiousity, have pharmaceutical companies developed a cure for this psychosis?
Please don't misunderstand ... I am not discussing post-partum depression, I am strictly referring to the hypothesis that childbirth, with the exclusion of all other factors, can result in psychosis.
sbm for space
I am one of those advocates for natural birthing.
My first two kids I was young and had complications.
Even then, I wanted a natural birth and almost got it. :banghead:
With my next child hopefully next year, I fully intend on a natural, possibly water birth.
I've also been on the receiving end of a very close friend's phone call.
A friend who had a natural home birth, cloth diapers and breastfeeds.
There is nothing more chilling than hearing your friend say 3 weeks after giving birth:
"I am going to kill my baby. Please, help me."
The woman feels guilty killing a spider. She has no mental health issues.
She is one of a handful of people I would trust with my OWN baby. (That does not include any family members.)
When I got that phone call, there was no longer any doubt in my mind of the reality of PPD or PPP.
I took her 3 week old baby and she got help. If she hadn't called me? I won't go there.
She was fine up until that day. Much like Carbuff describes. She just suddenly had an urge to kill her child.
A child she tried for YEARS to conceive and wanted more than anything. "It was like a light switch."
I believe in many, many things... including advocating.
That includes advocating for mothers who don't dare admit they have PPP.
Recognizing that PPD/PPP can happen is not a step back from the battle for natural birth.
No, there is no medication to cure PPP.
Please, research it on your own if you'd like. Come to your own conclusions.
Just please, I ask you respectfully don't minimize it in the meantime.
As you can see from members here, it is very real... and to some very personal. :seeya: