I can’t write to the science of Postpartum Depression. I am not a scientist. I can’t write about the chemicals in your brain when you have it. I am not a chemist. I can’t tell you what a shrink would say. I am not a shrink. I can not tell you about anyone else’s PPD or how they should deal with it.
What I can tell you, is about me. My story. How postpartum depression changed my life. That I can tell you.
**************************
We named her the night we had the ultrasound. Saw her little butter bean self swimming along all cute and peanut looking. It’s a girl I said, we obviously don’t make boys. Yeah, but been there done that, was his response, we need a boy name and a girl name. Piper Isabelle. Tristan Gabriel. We came up with those names in an hour. It was simple. It was easy. No name decision, prior or since has been easy.
We’d just moved to Colorado. We’d been here literally a week. 12 week ultrasound. Three little peanut pictures to take home.
Few weeks later, I was hanging a picture. I was up on a ladder. I was being impatient. Logan had said he’d do it when he got home. I hadn’t felt that great in the morning. I did it anyway. I HATE walls with no pictures up on them. I was also afraid of the girls running into them and breaking glass and yeah. Anyway.
I woke up in the ER. I have no idea why. I have no idea why I didn’t have to feel it. But it may have been easier if I’d…I don’t even know. I woke up and it was already done. D&C. She was gone and they removed her parts I guess. Whatever else. I try not to think about it. I was in some form of shock and they don’t know why. They don’t know why I passed out. My blood pressure was through the roof. But still it was all a guess. All I knew, was I woke up and Logan was there and he had to tell me she was gone. (They did generic test her. Gotta love doctors. Trying to find an answer for everything. Guess they thought it would be easier on me, if something had been wrong with her. Sadly, there was no answer. Just that I was right. She’d been a girl.) I knew it though, that she was gone. I felt so empty. When I looked at him, I knew it. I know he told me then, but I don’t think I heard anything. She’s gone, I said. Yes, he answered. That was it. That’s all I remember. I couldn’t even tell you how much longer I was there.
Went home with a prescription for pain killers, a shattered heart and no hope in the world.
I couldn’t understand. I don’t know that I do now. No one I knew at the time had ever had a miscarriage…or that was what I thought then. People tend to come out of the wood works later with their own stories.
I couldn’t understand how the world could keep moving. I could barely breath, yet the world kept moving. Logan asked me on the way home if I wanted to stop and get dinner for the girls. I couldn’t even answer him. The world moved on. People kept breathing. My cell phone rang. My children had to eat. The dog wanted to go for a walk. None of it mattered. Nothing mattered. Nothing ever would again. She was gone. I was dead inside. That was all I knew.
One of my first regrets…I destroyed the ultrasound photos. I walked in the door and went to the fridge to get water to take more pills. I hurt. Physically I hurt. It’s painful, a D&C. Not as painful as having a miscarriage and having pieces pass, but still it hurts. Anyway, I went to the fridge and saw her photo and I remember screaming. I put it in the drain and hit the button on the disposal. I went to bed after that. I didn’t even say a word to the girls. I just walked away and went to bed.
I stayed in bed for three months. I tried to will myself to die. To stop breathing. To just die. I didn’t want anything except her. The first month my mom came to stay, she took care of me. She took care of the girls and Logan. She tried. Oh man did she try. At first she made the girls come in and try talking to me. After about a week she stopped, because I couldn’t handle it. Because they couldn’t handle it. I ignored my own daughters. All i did was cry. I cried for three weeks straight. Then I just stopped. The girls would come and go. If they got in bed with me, I’d cuddle with them. Couldn’t make myself talk though. Logan would come and go. I barely ate. I only showered maybe once a week and only then because my mom threatened me.
I shut down. I completely shut down. I basically stopped living. Ii was there but I wasn’t there.
At some point, my husband and mother made me see a doctor. I thought it was after two months, my mom says it was only about three weeks. The meds didn’t help. Not at first.
After a month, my MIL came to switch places with my mom. She babied me a bit more. Made me every sweet she could think of. Force fed me cake. I started eating again.
The third month my mom came back. At that point, she made me get on new meds. She told me if I didn’t, she’d have me committed. That she had the power to put me on a psych hold and don’t think she wouldn’t do it. tTruth is, a lot of it I don’t remember. I shut down. I folded into myself.
So I took the new meds. Not because I wanted too, or cared really, but because they forced me too. She made me get up. Made me at least do some of the day to day stuff with the kids. After a while I got used to it. A while after that, I started enjoy my girls again. I remember the day I found myself laughing again. I laughed until I cried. A bit more time passed and my mom went home.
I regret a lot of things about that time. So much so. It pains me to write this out. It physically exhausts me. I feel so broken. So damaged.
The things I thought are bad. I will be completely honest with you guys, I wanted to die. They suspected it. I wasn’t left alone for months. Logan took my meds with him to work every day. For months and months. Heck, there probably wasn’t anything stronger than baby Advil in my home for months.
Would I have done something. Nah. I don’t think so. I was too something for that. Numb maybe. I just didn’t think I could ever be happy again. I didn’t think I could ever breath again. I didn’t know that I wanted too.
I know how this sounds. Trust me I do. Is why I haven’t talked about it. I think it’s time though. Time to say it. Time to deal with it.
I abandoned my kids for nearly three months. Someone else made their meals, changed their clothes, bathed them, sang them to sleep. Someone else read to them, kissed their boo boos, bought them school clothes, took them to school, took them to the doctor for three months. I was there. But I wasn’t there.
This? Is my reality of PPD. This is what it did to me. To my family. To my babies.
When I am sad and Bailey makes jokes I know this is why. She remembers that only she could make me laugh for months. When I’m stressed and Morgan steps in and takes over small things with the little kids. I know this is why. I forced her to grow up too much without even wanting too. I can’t undo these things. I would if I could. They worry if I stay in bed or don’t shower. So unless I am sick I always shower. I always get out of bed. For them. But I hate that they remember it.
Truth? Harrison was not planned. It was too soon. I’d only lost Piper six months earlier, when I got pregnant.
I didn’t believe he’d make it. That I was being punished. That I’d loose him. Until I was seven months pregnant I tried to ignore the fact that I was pregnant. I talked to him. I took care of him. I even talked normally about him to everyone else. But I felt like I was carrying an alien. I felt none of the joy that I had with the girls. I wanted him more than anything but I didn’t believe in him. I’m sure that it did him harm. To not feel wanted in utero. I love him more than life itself but I can’t undo any damage I caused him.
I blamed me for the loss of Piper. If I just not done this, if I’d done this, if I’d been better, been more something. I blamed Logan. For moving us across the country. For telling me it would be okay. For stressing me out so much that I lost her. Do I know neither of us are to blame? Yes. Now. But I hated him. I hated him and he stopped loving me. I am to blame for that. I am the reason my marriage failed. That whole time I pushed Logan away. I didn’t let him near me. I didn’t let him sleep in our bed. I wouldn’t talk to him. I wouldn’t look at him. Afterwords when I got better a bit, I knew he didn’t trust me fully. He didn’t. Not for months. Maybe never. I don’t blame him for that. I can’t blame him for that. That is on me. That is on my disease. Not him.
I lost my friends. For awhile I lost my sanity. I lost my husband. I lost a piece of myself. My innocence. My heart maybe.
Some called it a nervous breakdown due to PPD. Due to stress. Due to PTSD of loosing the baby. Some say, I’m just crazy. There has been a lot of talk this week, that PPD isn’t really a chemical thing. That it’s not real. That it’s just new mom’s not liking their new role in life. That the act of creating a child, is just plain too much for some women. Mine came from losing a child. That doesn’t make it any less real. Postpartum Depression is real. I had it while pregnant with Harrison as well, and after. However I was under constant watch and on continuous meds. The words being tossed around this week, feel judgmental. But reality is no one can judge me as much as I judge myself.
Postpartum Depression wasn’t a figment of my imagination. I’d never had any depression issues prior to it. I’d already had two children. I didn’t ask for this. I didn’t want this. I also, had no control over it. It was real. My PPD was real.
***This post was written, because of an article on AOL. If you want more specifics on that, Her Bad Mother wrote a great post on PPD as well.



Honey, I’ll tell you the same thing I told you when you shared this with me.
You are not weak. You never were. You had a disease. A REAL disorder. You’re one of the lucky ones. Yeah, I know you may not feel that way, but a lot of women never recover. Or they do horrible things.
You? Are brave. And strong. And beautiful. And I am so, very very proud of you.
avasmommy recently posted..Expectations
You already know what I have to say about this…
SO, I will just tell you how EXTREMELY proud I am of you for sharing this.
You are so much stronger than you give yourself credit for.
THAT will be you hand tattoo, ‘strong’ b/c you are.
So proud of you for flexing your muscles.
Love you.
Lu recently posted..Going from a recovering to chronic pain patient
I am so proud of you. You are strong. You are brave. You are wonderful.
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I think it goes without saying how much I respect that you wrote about this and how important I think it is that you shared your story.
I do object to one thing, though. And I say this with every bit of love I have in me. YOU are not the sole reason Logan left. I know I’m not you. I know I wasn’t in that marriage. But no marriage ends because of ONE of the people in it. Yes, you suffered from PPD. Yes, you pushed Logan away. Yes, he endured things he shouldn’t have had to. But…so did you. And if he walked away, if he fell out of love, it’s because when you were pushing, he was pushing back. You might have let him down, but he did the same.
I don’t want to preach, but it breaks my heart to see you write the words that you caused the end of the marriage. I admire you for owning your part of it. But your part was only part.
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avasmommy Reply:
August 19th, 2010 at 12:31 pm
@Allyson,
I told her the same thing. I think she still has flip flop marks on her butt from my feet.

avasmommy recently posted..Expectations
I love you. I love your writing, I love your honestly. Hugs.
Sara recently posted..Anxious
Issa. I so know exactly what you are saying. I think I still personally suffer from a lot of depression and repression and resentment and grief myself and I don’t think it’s ever going to go away. But I thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for sharing this whole story. It makes me feel less alone. I am so sorry that we share this bit of history. Thank you.
this is so brave of you and i admire you for sharing this. love you
becky recently posted..Back to school
Thanks for sharing your story.
Amazing that you wrote this out and shared it with us. With the world.
I am so, so sorry for your losses. You’ve lost a lot. And I’m sorry that anyone, EVER, would try to make you feel LESS because of your experience with PPD.
Love you sweetheart.
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That must have been hard to share, but thank you for sharing. I agree that PPD takes many forms. Your story makes me so happy you got the help you need, that you had a good support system to catch you when you stumbled.
Fairly Odd Mother recently posted..I left my mojo in New York City
You are right. It is real. I remember the difference between between depressed that I had miscarried and the PPD that hit me a few weeks later. I remember sitting in my office at work having panic attacks every 10 minutes. The only thing I could do was lock myself in that office and play Free Cell over and over and over again. I remember telling my husband to call the depression hotline for me when I couldn’t stop fantasizing about the knives in the kitchen.
I’ve grieved before for deaths in the family. I’ve struggled with episodes of depression my whole life. This was different. This was a physical, hormonal thing. When it first started it felt like the floor fell out from under me. It took months to dissipate while I tried meds but in the end things just randomly aligned again when my hormones went back to some semblance of normal.
I’m glad you shared this. It’s amazing how many women do not share their stories. It’s sad how many of us feel alone when we go through PPD and/or a miscarriage. It’s heartbreaking that so many will read those stories about PPD not being real and question themselves even more.
Thank you, Issa.
Ohhh buddy. That AOL article made me roll my eyes, those so called experts and their opinions. We know what is real. I mean, any woman who has had a bad bout of PMS (let alone PPD!) where we feel like telling our kids to go play in traffic (or forcibly throwing them into it), knows intimately that the chemicals we carry in our bodies misfire. In big ways.
I know how easy it is to blame yourself. I do it all the time. My daughter is more knowing and tough-skinned than she should have to be at the age of six. But she’s okay, and I know she’s going to have coping tools she might not have otherwise had because of me. Her mother who adores her.
I can’t thank you enough for sharing this story with us. You are wonderful and strong, although my heart aches for your own heartache and loss.
Maybe I’ll be brave enough to share mine at some point.
mosey recently posted..putting on my shoes
You had no ppd. It is not a real illness. Cancer is a real illness. This is You just fucking crazy. This is bull. Your kids are better off without you.
Jo Reply:
August 19th, 2010 at 7:21 pm
Hey Calls it like I sees it?
You? Are a coward. Keep hiding behind a cute little anonymous name.
Jo
@Calls it like I sees it,
Zeeke75 Reply:
August 19th, 2010 at 7:31 pm
@Calls it like I sees it, who the hell do you think you are, Tom Cruise? Yeah, didn’t think so, ’cause even as idiotic as he sounded he did it on national TV and didn’t hide behind some chicken-shit name in a blog comment system.
Now, I don’t know who you, nor do I really care. People like you I don’t want to know. What I do care about is the fact that you are a troll. I hate trolls. They are a waste of DNA and the world would have been better off if their mother had swallowed instead.
Next time you decide you want to take a shot at someone, why don’t you hop on over to MY blog and make some stupid, ignorant comment that I can further chew your ass about.
PPD IS A REAL ILLNESS. Depression in general is a real illness. Cancer is a real illness. Just because you can’t make your brain conceptualize the idea doesn’t make it any less real or less painful. There are treatments for depression just as there are treatments for cancer. There is no cure for depression just as there is no cure for cancer. Buy why am I trying to explain this to you? You obviously do not care about the details of such a traumatic experience or any education in relation to it.
Perhaps you should just shut your mouth, keep your thoughts to yourself and press ALT+F4 the next time you want to leave a comment for someone.
Lu Reply:
August 19th, 2010 at 7:37 pm
@Calls it like I sees it,
You guys, this is obviously a very highly educated respectable person with a name like that. I mean in this day and age to even say that, you MUST be A) CRAZY B) Tom Cruise as someone said C)Just plain stupid.
I mean honestly? Wow. You know what Hurricane Katrina wasn’t real either, NOLA just wanted to start over.
The need to spew hatred on the Internet is something I don’t get. Go back in your hole.
Lu recently posted..Going from a recovering to chronic pain patient
avasmommy Reply:
August 19th, 2010 at 8:57 pm
@Calls it like I sees it,
If you are going to spew bullshit, at least have the fucking balls to do it under your REAL NAME, you walking diaper stain.
I suggest you remove your head from that deep dark crevice it is in (otherwise known as your ass).
You picked the wrong place to be funny, wise guy. I suggest you crawl back into the stone age. Your comments are not welcome here.
avasmommy recently posted..Expectations
I am so glad you shared your story. I know how sharing can lighten your load. Don’t blame yourself for what happened at that dark point in time. Focus on today, what you can do for your kids today. When they are older they will look back and realize how strong there mother was coming through all that.
I am so proud of you for sharing this. I can repeat how strong, brave and amazing you are for sharing. But I hope this helps you find peace. Life is hard. Being an adult is hard. Depression in any form is a dance of the impossible and with the help of those who love you, you survived. Hugs to you, Love.
dude, the troll? is just that with even more poor grammar than I. Someone just trolling the waves of heartache to feel better about themselves. BELIEVE ME WHEN I SAY THIS! I know what I am talking about. Depression, the loss and being truthful about your feelings lends it’s self to people to attack without a modicum of thought. All we know, it’s a tragedy bot!
You are brave! You came through it all and in the end the words are written. You honor your child and your experience and well…..
if you have gone through a true loss, you really don’t have shit to say about it. and if you do? come to me~ I’m quite thick-skinned and way more acerbic to handle it.
xoxoxoxoo
Thanks for your honesty.
Mary @ A Simple Twist of Faith recently posted..Wordless Wednesday- Let’s Go Fly A Kite
Oh Issa, I had no idea. And like almost everyone I am so proud and wowed that you came forward with such an honest account of your MC and subsequent struggle to get back to your life after wards. I understand from experience of how devastating MCs can be (had 3 myself before I finally had my little guy). Depression does crazy things to people – and I’m so glad that you were able to get treated. PPD IS REAL. Screw those who don’t get it.
Thank you.
Honey, you’re awesome!
I’m still suffering from PND and also been diagnosed with PMDD to boot. Still on meds…. One day at a time.
I can’t thank you enough for sharing this. It makes me feel a little less alone.
Xo
Long time reader, don’t believe I’ve ever posted (there’s my great memory!) Issa, you are a strong person to have shared your story with honesty and emotion – and I thank you for that. I have never walked in your shoes, and won’t pretend to have done so – but it hurts me (I know, someone who doesn’t even know you personally) to think you place such huge blame on yourself for having an illness. We mommies place enough blame on ourselves – to take on the burden solely for an illness seems unfair. I’m sure there are some moldy cheerios under the couch that are more our fault than what you have shouldered for so long. You are a great writer, and I will continue to read your blog each day. Great work Issa – on so many levels!
Love you dear.
Miss Grace recently posted..Story Time
I love you. Lots.
I am so sorry you’ve suffered. I too fought through PPD and was medicated for three years until I took myself off about 6 months ago.
People who don’t suffer don’t understand. They never will. Like those whom have never lost a child will ever understand what’s it’s like. I assume there’s no way one could fathom the pain that comes with that loss.
But Issa, you can’t blame yourself for everything’s that happened. The loss of your child was not your fault.
And, a marriage takes two. It’s work and it’s completely unrealistic to say that it was just you.
Please try and stop beating yourself up. You are such a wonderful and caring person. I love you so much.
My heart goes out to you.
sam {temptingmama} recently posted..A New York Minute
I adore you.
We battle every manner of psych illness over here. I know how real the pain is.
Really. Adore.
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Love you. Truly.
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Oh Issa, how I am so proud of your strength to be able to write and talk about all of this. I too feel your pain with PPD. I had it horribly with my first child. I wanted him so bad, I truly did, but at the end of the pregnancy th ehormones took over and I had no idea what was going on. Then, the first weeks he was here, oh my goodness the thoughts I was having,the emotions I was spewing at everyone, I emediately takled to my Dr. From the time my son was born until he was almost 1 1/2 I was on medication for Extreme PPD. I am not proud of the thoughts and feelings I had, if I could’ve taken them back, or never had them, I sware I wouldn’t, but it’s not something I could stop without helpd. (yes, I was pre-disposed for it because i have batteled depression all my life, losing a mother at 5, having an abusive step-mom, dad in the military and never home, etc)I have since had two more children, the youngest one being almost 3 months. I still tend to get emotional, I cry alot, but I have found ways to get through most of the feelings I have.
I just want you to know hwo much of an inspiration you are, and how much strength you have.
Many hugs and much love to you.
((hugs))
I get it. My own PPD wasn’t as bad, but I wasn’t diagnosed and had no help. It may not have lasted as long if I’d gotten some help. Thanks for sharing your story. I hope it helps just one someone to reach out.
Headless Mom recently posted..All There is to Say
However hard it was to share this, I have no doubt there is someone out there it will save. When we write, it’s never in vain.
You are brave and amazing. I am hugging you from here, Issa.
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What a great post. Thank you for sharing.
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Amazing. You are a strong woman and it sounds like you have a wonderful family. I am thankful that mine never got as bad and I am so sorry your had to be like that. Depression sucks and a lot of people don’t think it is real. I hate that they have an opinion on something they have no idea about. Thanks for the post. Amazing.
Thank you for sharing this. For being strong enough to show us your experience. I’m so sorry for your losses.
I’ve never been pregnant so I don’t know what PPD feels like. I’ve had a blessed life and never have suffered from either depression or PTSD. I can only tip my hat to you and braveness and hope it gets better every day for you and you never have to go through this again. Hugs.
I am so sorry to hear how badly you suffered Issa, and that you had to endure such a painful loss. You’re absolutely right, PPD is real.
About five years ago I watched helplessly as my close friend went through a very bad case of it which began during her pregnancy with her second child. I tried everything I could think of to help her, as did others, and none of us could break through the prison of PPD she seemed to be locked in. None of this had happened to her during her first pregnancy or after the birth of her first child. This time was entirely different. Talk therapy was useless for her, even with a psychologist who specialized in postpartum depression, and who had experienced it herself. There simply was nothing anyone could say or do that made a difference. My friend was prescribed various antidepressants and anti-anxiety agents, none helped even close to sufficiently. Finally, reluctantly, she agreed to see yet another doctor, this one a psychiatrist who took an aggressive approach using a combination of multiple medications, including ones which had not worked when used alone. Thankfully, dramatic relief followed quickly for her, and amazingly she was probably about 80% better after approximately two weeks. Her baby was five months old by this time. It took from about five months into her pregnancy until the baby was five months old for her to be safely on the road to recovery. Despite having no faith in the medications she was given by the time they were prescribed, the combination of medications worked for her. Over time the doctor weaned her off the medications, one by one, and eventually she was only taking one mild antidepressant, yet feeling 100% like her old self. What a relief for all of us who love her!
Anyone who thinks PPD is not real is coming from an ignorant place and needs to become more educated about the workings of the mind, hormones, etc. My friend had recently recovered when Tom Cruise went on his rant berating Brooke Shields, antidepressants, and the field of psychiatry. That he did this on national television, where undoubtedly his words reached the ears of vulnerable women who were suffering, made me want to throttle him.
Not all women who go through PPD need medication. Each woman is different. It has nothing to do with being strong or weak, however. In my friend’s case it was necessary and I’m grateful for her that it was available. (By the way, my friend is one kick-ass, strong-willed, smart woman, so believe me when I say PPD has nothing to do with being strong or weak.)
I know it wasn’t easy for you to share your story Issa. I wish I could give you a supportive hug. What I can do is to tell you that I think you are much stronger and braver than you realize, that you are a survivor, and perhaps most importantly that none of what occurred in the realm of PPD was your fault. I hope you will come to be believe that. Soon honey.
Ah, you poor thing. But how strong you are, and brave for sharing this story. I know PPD, too, and while I didn’t suffer the tragedy and loss you did, know that I understand and am proud of you. xo
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