Episode 97SN: Her Birth & Postpartum inspired her to find a better way to Postpartum: Kaitlin’s Story, Part I

We–ALL of US (in the US)–are doing Postpartum wrong. Once we experience it with our first born, we learn this, and all make plans to do something different the second time, if there is a second time. Today’s guest wants to change Postpartum for all of us.

In today’s episode, my guest shares the birth and postpartum experience that propelled her out of her work as a special ed teacher in New York City and into the field of birth workers. Unfortunately, the overwhelming two that she experienced and talks about is likely to sound very familiar. I had my kids 10 years before she did and she could have been describing my postpartum in lots of ways. But what’s new is what she did with that experience, and what she’s doing for birthing people now.

Check out Kaitlin’s company, BeHerVillage

Audio Transcript

Kaitlin McGreyes  0:02  

I poured all my time and energy into the nursery, all the things for the baby. And I neglected to mine with any kind of support for myself. And I blamed myself for it. It didn’t, I thought, wow, I really failed here. You know, I didn’t I didn’t know how hard this was gonna be I obviously did something wrong. And then I became a doula soon after my second birth, and I started seeing that almost all of them had that experience that universal moment of being postpartum, whether it’s three hours postpartum, or it’s a day postpartum or it’s a week postpartum, they all find themselves alone.

Paulette  0:38  

Welcome towards stories from the womb. This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant, being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition. You find on all kinds of media to more realistic one. It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and release that new person from your body into the world. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and a mother of two girls. And boy that I struggle with this transition.

In today’s episode, my guest shares the birth and postpartum experience that propelled her out of her work as a special ed teacher in New York City and into the field of birth workers. Unfortunately, the overwhelming two that she experienced and talks about is likely to sound very familiar. I had my kids 10 years before she did and she could have been describing my postpartum in lots of ways. But what’s new is what she did with that experience, and what she’s doing for birthing people. Now. This is a really inspiring story. So let’s get to it. 

Today. We have something unusual, I almost never promote a business because I don’t want to sell anything but but today is different because I heard about this miraculous woman on podcast who wants us all to reimagine one of the fundamental, almost rites of passage for a pregnant woman in America. The baby shower. Basically, I heard about her company for women in postpartum. I thought this is genius. And we should all be doing this. And so I’m so excited to introduce Kaitlin McGreyes. I say your name right. Humans got

 

Kaitlin  2:21  

it so close. It’s McGreyes. Okay. My husband and I combined her last name. So it’s actually graph and Reyes but together.

 

Paulette  2:29  

I love it. Okay. So Caitlin, McGreyes. Thank you so much for coming on the show. I’m so excited to hear your personal story and the story of the company. I’m excited to hear it all. So will you tell us where you’re from?

 

Kaitlin  2:42  

And a little bit about yourself? Absolutely. Thank you so much, Paulette. That’s awesome. I am Kaitlin McGreyes. I have three children, seven, eight and 10. I’m from Long Island, New York. And I am a doula turned founder of beer village because essentially I was a special ed teacher. I went through the motherhood experience, the very typical American motherhood experience. And I felt like many of us, underwhelmed to traumatize spectrum depends on the day. And I realized that that was sort of like a universal experience. To enter motherhood, alone, unsupported. And I had this one moment where I sat in my nursery three days postpartum. And I was trying to figure out how to breastfeed trying to figure out which way was up trying to figure out how to take care of this post C section body. My husband was already back at work. Oh my god. I know he didn’t get any time off for that one. So I gave birth Saturday morning at 520. And he was back at work while I’m still in the hospital. And he worked for New York City. It just they didn’t have pay leave then we couldn’t afford unpaid leave. It was a whole thing. So I had a very bumpy entry into motherhood. And I just remember sort of looking around at my apartment and seeing all the beautiful gifts, my perfect nursery, it’s where I it’s where I poured all my time and energy into nursery all the things for the baby. And I neglected to line up any kind of support for myself, and I blamed myself for it. It didn’t I thought wow, I really failed here. You know, I didn’t I didn’t know how hard this was gonna be. I obviously did something wrong. And then I became a doula soon after my second birth, and I started supporting hundreds of women over the course of my Doula career, and I started seeing that almost all of them had that experience that universal moment of being postpartum whether it’s three hours postpartum, or it’s a day postpartum or it’s a week postpartum, they all find themselves alone, and without the care that they need, while they’re trying to care for their babies. And all of us are surrounded by stuff. We have the best strollers and the best baby bottles and bouncers and gadgets and devices and our communities. Our loved one spent 1000s of dollars on us at our baby shower to the tune of $12 billion a year on being crazy. And I thought, man, there’s got to be a better way. To do this. This just feel like we’re not doing this right we’ve got this we’ve have moms totally overloaded with stuff for their kids for their babies, and no support totally left alone. And then you have you know, all all this money getting spent on stuff when when there could be a way to spend that on supporting them and what what is the way that we solve this problem? How do we get these funds that are so generously being spent to be spent on hearing for the actual mother? I started thinking about how do we actually go buy a baby shower gift? You know, like how does that happen? We got a baby shower invite usually have some registry information you go you click a few things and and it’s done. It’s sort of just like a task that you do. And what if we shifted the baby shower registry? What if we created a place where instead of all the stuff for babies we could shower the mother with support? What if we could buy her a doula What if we could get her postpartum here but if we get our pelvic floor therapy or lactation visits or mom you need groups or you know meals and laundry and just the whole the things to sort of like envelop this new family in the care they need, which is so impactful. So I pray to be her village.

 

Paulette  6:20  

I was so excited to get into that. I want to hear your story first. And then we’re gonna save time at the end to walk people through what it looks like. What you’re doing now what you’ve learned from doing it, however long you’ve been doing it because it’s such a good idea and when I read that billions of dollars are spent on baby stuff. I thought a that’s crazy and B I totally understand it. Right. It’s that is what we’re geared toward in a way that completely overlooks the mother who’s entirely critical of the baby, right, or health or Well, being her mental state is so fundamentally important. And we’re like, Ah, here’s a rocker, you know, the mean, and the rocker is beautiful, but when you’re sitting alone, crying while you’re breastfeeding, you know, I’m not sure anything about the rocker.

 

Kaitlin  7:10  

That’s exactly I mean that that is my story. My story is that.

 

Paulette  7:14  

So let’s start off slow here. So do you have siblings in your family? Did you come from a big family?

 

Unknown Speaker  7:19  

I have one older brother.

 

Paulette  7:22  

So when you were younger, did you think I’m going to have a family or did that affect your idea about family?

 

Kaitlin  7:28  

I think I always knew I wanted children. It’s kind of funny. This is like a funny thing to say, Well, I I knew I wanted children and never necessarily wanted to be married. And maybe when I was a 90s kid with divorced parents, so the idea of being stuck in an unhappy marriage was my idea of hell, but I knew I wanted to help kids. I was always very maternal. I was always playing house. I always was loved to take care of my little cousins when they were babies. But I didn’t necessarily imagine that happening with a partner. I just knew I kind of assumed I would live on my own and then do IVF or something. And then I was a special ed teacher in New York City. And the Para, which is like a teacher’s assistant, in the classroom next door. He was really really cute. He was really, really cute. And I thought to myself, he’s so cute, and honestly, he was more than cute. He was hot. But I thought man, he can’t be nice. He’s probably kind of you know, his personality probably is terrible because he’s so good looking. And then I went up and I talked to him. And he told me that when he’s not working with the special needs kids in our school that he’s he works at a puppy daycare. Oh man. He’s everything you know. So I feel very, very, very hard for him. And I ended up marrying him and I just remember this overwhelming feeling of wow, I just want to make humans with you. It was the most was maybe the first step in the primal nature. of motherhood, you know, because on paper, having kids didn’t really make sense. It’s still quite, it doesn’t make that much sense to have kids on paper. It’s expensive, takes a lot of your energy the extra time it shifts your whole life. But there’s this space in my body. You know, this like gut space that just has this urge to have children and to have children with him. So So yeah, so that’s what we do. I’m very quickly went from a single living on my own in the city, going out all the time to living with my partner married and then got pregnant two months after we got married. Wow. So yeah, and then had three kids in less than four years. So when I do things, Paulette, I do them big.

 

Paulette  9:41  

For the sake of be her village, I’m excited to hear that. I’m glad. So it sounds like it was easy to get pregnant.

 

Kaitlin  9:48  

It was scarily easy for you know, it’s like it can go either way. Right. It can be like wow, this is really hard and heart wrenching. But it can also be like, Wow, we just think about getting pregnant. And we all three times it was incredibly, incredibly easy.

 

Paulette  10:01  

Yeah. Okay, so for the first one, did you walk into pregnancy with an idea of what it would be like?

 

Kaitlin  10:08  

No, I was the first person in my social circle. I was only 27 which in New York City is very young to start having kids. I feel like the people I know don’t start think about until they’re like 33 And they’re like, start considering it. So at 27 I was the first person I knew and was already in my circle to have a baby so I had almost no expectation and I don’t know I have this expectation that everything would be really easy. I also I also have this invincibility this like 27 year old invincibility like nothing can hurt me because I you know, tell I know how to tell people to go at themselves. You to like and that will save me which in many situations. Like it wasn’t enough. I remember watching the business of being born. And before I had my first baby and thinking, Oh, I can handle that. You know, I was horrified at what I saw. And I thought I can handle that.

 

Paulette  11:06  

Was it was it? Was it a vaginal deliveries they showed?

 

Kaitlin  11:10  

Well, what they showed on us as being born is a plant homebirth different C section because the baby was breech so she was like eight centimeters and they had to transfer pretty quickly but they they walk you through the cascade of interventions, you know, mostly in the epidural, the stall, the C section, that sort of thing. And, and I just sort of felt immune, I felt like I could handle all of that. So

 

Paulette  11:34  

how do we know today’s the day or you know, the baby’s gonna be born?

 

Kaitlin  11:38  

Because the midwife told me it’s time to go to the hospital and get the baby out.

 

Paulette  11:43  

So you do wake up with contractions and you know their contractions

 

Kaitlin  11:47  

know the midwives. Were working at a birth center in New York. There was only one so I won’t name it but you guys can figure it out. They were working at a birth center and sort of saying, Hey, this is midwifery care. But the rules at the time in New York State did not allow midwives to own birth center. So they were actually puppets for an OB run and owned facility. So I went for 41 weeks screaming Wow. And the midwife just said, Okay, it’s time there wasn’t a discussion. It wasn’t true midwifery care. And I’m always sort of careful to say that it was not true midwifery care. They were just a puppet for OB care. And it was a little bit of a bait and switch. And it’s it’s unfortunate because I tried, you know, like I tried to line up and out of hospital birth they tried lining up a midwifery led team, but it’s it made to him. I didn’t like, deep enough, but I think part of that experience was that I was a little idealistic. I was a little bit like my just gonna be my you know like I’m part of I think my deep skepticism the unfolding this as I’m saying it but like, what am I deep skepticism about the existing systems and and how they serve us is due to this like I did all the right things. I checked all the boxes, you know, I planted out of hospital birth I got a midwifery team. I took the childbirth class, I prepared as best as I could. And still, the system just took me in and systematically shut me down, took away choices took away my voice.

 

Paulette  13:25  

So before we get to the hospital, how did you come to the conclusion that you wanted an out of hospital birth? What What made you make that choice?

 

Kaitlin  13:33  

That’s a great question. I don’t really know my mom had a vaginal delivery with me and my brother, and my brother and I and my 10 year old would be correcting me and my grandma was my brother and I, I think I was just it was the beginning. Of when I start considering another human being like my son. I think it was just the beginning of this, like, what could be the best for him and what I was reading was the best is less intervention, the you know, the business would be important. It’s like how do we avoid this cycle? How do we avoid I was just sort of curious that I guess I got led down that path of looking for an alternative and I’m not somebody that has ever wanted to walk the mainstream path. Like part of my personality, so I think it makes perfect sense that I was that I was exploring my options. I’m also somebody that is very intellectual. I like to know as much information as I can it helps reduce my anxiety. So I think just in doing the, the research and looking and going and meeting people and finding out what is the best way to have this baby. That was what led me down this path and I got so close, like some key things that were sort of outside of my control. For you know, that’s that’s where everything sort of went sideways.

 

Paulette  14:52  

So you went to the midwives just for a regular checkup. Was that your intention?

 

Kaitlin  14:56  

I went to the sonogram place for a 41 week sonogram to check on, I guess, you know, just the like normal, non stress test and water levels and whatnot. And it was the hottest day of July, you know, and I was my water was a little low. And I didn’t know I didn’t have a doula. It’s a big part of it. I didn’t have a doula. I thought that a doula would make the experience less intimate. I thought a doula was unnecessary because I thought my midwives had my back. I didn’t understand like the power dynamic that the midwives were working for OBS and I didn’t understand that even if they aren’t working for OBS that they’re trying to exist and give care in a system where they are liable in a system where they need to be covered by insurance in a system where they have to maintain hospital privileges. I had no idea about the complexities of that. So I felt that my midwife would protect me rather than be one of the people that sort of a mouthpiece for the larger system. And so, so I was told my water was low. And I remember standing on the street in Brooklyn, and she called me and said, It’s time to get the baby out. Go to the hospital. Not a question, not an informative conversation just it has been deemed it has been decided. And I remember bursting into tears to figure out why the tears you know, in the moment it’s almost like my body knew how wrong this all felt, but I couldn’t you know, when you’re in that sort of panic stress, you can’t pinpoint it. Years later, and many, many hours of contemplation, but I think I just went into immediate trust mode and I don’t know that I could have figured out well, yeah, because maybe, maybe I wanted to have a voice in my care. Maybe I wanted to be a decision maker instead of a passive participant maybe being told what was going to happen. Didn’t feel good for me and maybe I needed trauma informed care you know, it’s such a subtle thing, but it’s a huge thing. If she had said, Hey, this is what’s going on. And these are our options. Yeah, take an hour, go to lunch, go connect, go get in a room with your husband. I was by myself. Go get in a room with your husband haven’t take you out to lunch and discuss the options you know, just something as simple as that there was nothing urgent about me. You know, my water was a little low. Okay, baby was fine. So something like that would have just completely shifted the experience and and I think that’s where when I eventually become a doula and do all of this work those moments stick with me. It’s not it’s not about how the baby comes out. It really isn’t. It’s not about what medical things happen. It’s about having the space and room to adjust. It’s about having people speak to you respectfully. It’s about having a team that maintains your power your autonomy, your centering in the entire experience. It’s just that birth from that phone call on I was I was just an annoyance to everybody. I was just the thing they had to deal with. And that’s how I felt I felt disempowered and voiceless and powerless. And it I mean, it continues to grow. At first that was the best part of the birth leader was that

 

Paulette  18:05  

this is this is something I hear often from women and the fundamental question is Were things done for you or to you? Oh, they were done to me. Right because you had no choice but that’s that seems to be what it turns on. You know how much control you have. So you’re crying in the street. What happens next you call your husband.

 

Kaitlin  18:25  

I call my husband and I call my mom and they meet me at the hospital or my mom like picks up my husband and I don’t remember exactly we all meet at the hospital. And, and the midwife needs to be in triage. And so the thing to know about this situation, too, is that this birthing center was always in flux. I don’t know the workings behind the scene, but I know as a patient and then as a doula when I would have patients there. They they’re just sort of constantly in flux. So at the time, they had privileges at mammography. So I went to my mother’s hospital in Brooklyn, which was incredibly far away from my home and my parents home. We were trying to have birth center birth and that this was plan B. But the other thing that had happened is that there was this like shifting of all the midwives on the staff, and only one or two of them had like five or six had privileges at the hospital. The sense I got from the midwife who’s now a home birth midwife in Brooklyn, was that she was exhausted. And didn’t want to be there. And I got the overwhelming sense she wasn’t happy in the position she was in which is fine but it definitely bled into my care you know, she dropped me off in triage. I got an IV in my hand. I remember hating the IV so much. And then now get this pull that you’re gonna die. I was set up for a Cytotec induction in the C section. recovery room. Yep. So I was lying there, eating a sandwich. Not allowed to get up. I didn’t know you know, this is like this is like another me not allowed to get up not allowed to move. Getting double doses of side attack because the first couple didn’t work. Surrounded by semi conscious moaning women. Oh my God, who had just come back from a C section or waking up from anesthesia. Whatever it was like it’s surgical recovery room on the OB floor. And the midwife who I’m sure is overworked. His that she’s the only one you know, that has hospital privileges. It just, she was in her own place. She’s like, okay, by all means Call me if you feel like you need an epidural. That’s not midwifery care. By the way. For anyone who’s listening. That’s not midwifery care I was getting. I was getting OB care through the mouth of a midwife. Call me feeling an epidural. Call me if you feel like you need an epidural. It’s actually what she said. Cool.

 

Paulette  20:56  

Thanks. So I got it from here. Thanks. Anyway.

 

Kaitlin  21:00  

Thank you so much, you You’re the worst. So I Yeah, so I the the Cytotec kicked in around 11pm

 

Paulette  21:08  

Is that Pitocin so it was it was like Is it attack is a cervical ripening

 

Kaitlin  21:13  

or it’s an off label use. So it there’s a lot of controversy oversight attack. It has its uses. I’m not this is not an anti Cytotec podcast. It’s just that was what I had, but incredibly effective. It’s also it’s the abortion drug, it causes intense uterine contraction. Oh, so it’s an off label use there’s something like it’s for ulcers. It’s an ulcer medication that the OB is used to induce and also to control bleeding and also to I believe it’s the abortion. I don’t know though.

 

Paulette  21:45  

Just a quick note, here, Caitlyn is right. According to medical websites, Cytotec aka visa protocol, not sure if I’m pronouncing that correctly, is also a drug that’s used off label by OBS for various things including inducing abortion. It’s one of the two medications used in the abortion pill. There are links in the show notes if you’re interested in details.

 

Kaitlin  22:07  

So I get that it’s incredibly effective. I started having essentially transition level contractions every three minutes deep, deep, deep contractions, and it is almost unbearable because the nurse Wendy is now in this surgical recovery room. She’s taking care of 20 women and me who’s laboring and she won’t let me quote unquote, let me because I didn’t know I didn’t. She wasn’t allowed to not let me write. Wouldn’t let me get up she kept saying well, I have superior commanders. She would make me live not even just lay but lay flat on my back. I had those the things that go on your legs. Like clap preventative thing. I had blood pressure cuff. I had the flippy thing on your hand, but I was essentially strapped down. Even though technically not shackles really felt like it. And I remember just she was forcing me to lay the waves were so intense and so fast. And I remember saying I need an epidural I started vomiting. I started shaking uncontrollably, which is all now like now I know it’s all part of like I was dilating I was now I know I’ve actually been incredibly fast labor my body. So the baby when it’s ready, so good to know, but my body took to the induction, I think a lot faster than anybody expected it to. And I remember asking her if I can get out to the bathroom and she said to me, Well, no, you really look like you’re in charge. I can’t let you get up and she made me use a bedpan How humiliating how dehumanizing. I was conscious. I was not an epidural. There was no reason I should not have been allowed to get up out of that bed. I shouldn’t walk to school. There’s a lot of shoulds in the story, but it’s part of why I’m so passionate about everybody getting to let says this is the foundation of my work right now. It is this. I was like a trapped animal and not in a good way. I was like an animal, my spiritual unmedicated me back to you, but like a wonderful, primal, beautiful goddess animal. This was like being in a cage and I remember I was I was throwing up I was shaking. She was trapping me and honestly, I don’t know how much time I gave birth to 5:20am Voc section. This started at 11 I don’t think that much time has really time doesn’t exist in labor. You know, it felt like 10 years to me. And I remember my husband and I had prepared with childbirth classes and it’s his role right to kind of support me and not wanting to throw. My mother and him weren’t allowed to touch me unless they had cold rags because I was so hot and I couldn’t take the touch. They were like deer in headlights. If there’s ever a reason to have a doula it was just the look of their faces. The eyes not knowing what to do with me. And I remember saying out loud, I want an epidural. And he looked at me and he was like, really, you know, and I feel for him because he does his job. Right. And we think it’s our job to talk people out of epidurals. It is not our job to help people. It really isn’t is our job to offer other alternatives. But epidural always has to be on the table. We need to listen to women and I’m so adamant about that because because he listened to me in that moment. And I needed him to listen to me because he was like, Are you sure? And I looked at him and I said, not like this. This is not it’s so far gone. You know, I talked about going down an epidural. I was talking about like, you know, with a flower crown and a birth center or anything. Like obviously, I just imagined it being so much more wholesome and holistic and centered and I was able, you can’t say no epidural and then take away every other tool they have to cope. Suffering. And so he understood that and the funniest thing happened. Well, it’s not really funny. I said to her swinging, I said to like an epidural. And she said the strangest thing. She goes, Are you sure you want an epidural? That means you’d have to go into a labor and delivery room. And I was like, What do you mean I could get my own? Okay, yeah, no, I want that. Like no, I want it more. What do you think is the weirdest weirdest thing so the residents run and check me because I spent so much time as a doula talking people through the conversation about getting examined and what what pads do go on and this and that, and we really slow down the labor around these points, the cervical exams being a big, big one. And I remember it was just like, checkmate, whatever. I’m just I mean, after all, I don’t care if you check me or not, but I was checked and in retrospect, I was four to five centimeters and that was like two hours or so after. Wow. Look, I was rocking and there was a reason why I was in so much discomfort. So they gave me the epidural or they hold on to the head. So they get me over to l&d. And the l&d nurse is worse than Monday. She was so just didn’t want me to be there. She didn’t like me. She hated her job. You can just tell when people hate them. And I think too, as a birthing person or a birthing moment you press especially sensitive to energy because you have to see who’s a danger to you. So I think I’m already pretty sensitive to people’s energy. But I was really quite sensitive that night. So I remember going into the bathroom and wiping and there was blood, mucus and blood like I was opening really beautifully. And I remember sitting on the toilet. This is right before I’m gonna get my epidural. I remember sitting on the toilet and thinking I could do this What am I doing? But it’s because I was sitting on the toilet I was right. I was able to sort of release it was a completely different experience to sit on the toilet and labor versus being strapped to the bed and labor go figure go figure that was different. So I didn’t know that at this point. You know, I mean, really, I just needed a way out of the school scenario. Everyone was so awful there and I’m getting a C section that I had that this ended it was not the worst part. The C section was the way out of being surrounded by I’m so vulnerable to people who were disrespectful and who couldn’t care less about me. So I get back in my my one fear actually, you know, you asked me that question before about why I went and will say and I just remember the answer, because my biggest fear about birth was not giving birth. It was about getting a needle in my spine. So I was trying to avoid an epidural. And and my fears were founded because this anesthesiologist was female anesthesiologist came in and she gave me the epidural and I remember feeling the needle go into my spine, and it was uncomfortable. It hurt. It was like getting a needle in your spine.

  

I remember being moved and I think I remember being like, oh and I moved and I screamed and she was so

 

Kaitlin    

I don’t know the word for it but but this day and she was like, is it pain or is it just couldn’t believe I was reacting like that and I was like it’s even in getting the relief. I couldn’t get relief from the from the game so awful and looking back at it wasn’t even one of those patients. You know, the one we all fear being the one that like to be honest, I wasn’t even that I was so docile, but I think the morale at that place was really rough. So I got there. And I finally got released and it did its trick, which is great because it doesn’t always work that way for people. So it did have that full relief. But then I was resting as close my eyes and every time I opened my eyes, everybody was still in the room and everybody had really big eyes and my mum looked terrified. And I realized that they were worried about the heartbeat of the baby, that they were watching midwife the midwife had returned. She helped me through the epidural. And you know, it was the worst part about that is that she was actually incredibly comforting. She was very good during the epidural and it would have been a different labor if she stayed if she had to work. I deserved a midwife and I said, So I realized that they were concerned about it and I, I opened my eyes and I looked at midwife and I said, what’s going on? And she said, well, so my baby was going to tack a cardiac instead of radical artic. So the biggest party wasn’t going along. It was actually going to really high up. Which after taking care of strangers, newborn resuscitation protocol, that’s just as dangerous. That’s just as bad of an indication. So there was a heart rate issue. And in retrospect, what happened is essentially his head was a little asymptotic. It was just like a little off. I think it would be opening so quickly, and then the epidural, I’m sure opening me. I think he just got jammed in and stuff. And he just struggled a little bit. So I remember looking at the midwife, and she said I still hate him. We would she said they were all clearly worried about it. They were describing something that was scary. And she said I’m gonna call them the OB and the OB will come in at about 45 minutes. Oh my god. And I want to just like preface this by I said this about me and I would never say this to a pregnant person. I said, Okay, I just want to help the baby. Just get me healthy baby. And I say that because it’s incredibly toxic to say at least the unhealthy baby enters a healthy now that’s not true. I matter. But at that moment, everything I had desired about this birth was so far out of the window, right? What I meant if I had the capacity to speak in a full thought, What I meant is you’ve ruined all of this right? This has already been destroyed. I need to help the baby at the end of this.

 

Paulette  7:30  

I’m going to end my conversation with Caitlin here for today. I so appreciate her sharing her experience of the postpartum period, which I think is regrettably common. Many of us leave the hospital or birthing center to return home are met by our new job that requires work around the clock or that we often do alone and work that we do when we’re exhausted at a time work.

 

Next Friday I will share the rest of this inspiring story.

Episode 94SN: Life Lessons Learned in Pregnancy & Birth: Molly’s Story, Part II

Conceiving, being pregnant, giving birth and then learning to be someone’s parent by immediately being responsible for the survival of a new being are all challenging experiences that contain within them, possibilities to grow.

Today I finish my conversation with Molly. In this episode, she compares her expectations at the birth with her experience and learns that the expectations she had about the first encounter with her baby after birth is built on a false narrative. She also shares her process for increasing milk production when she was breastfeeding and some useful tips for that process, and she shares the important lessons she learned from the 10 year runway that preceded the birth of her son.

To read more about Avoiding the Cry it Out Method in Sleep Training, see Valerie Groysman

MTHFR gene

https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/folicacid/mthfr-gene-and-folic-acid.html

https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/gene/mthfr/#synonyms

https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/folicacid/features/folic-acid-helps-prevent-some-birth-defects.html

Does stillbirth have a genetic component

https://www.marchofdimes.org/find-support/topics/miscarriage-loss-grief/stillbirth

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7604888/

https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1471-0528.17301

https://www.marchofdimes.org/find-support/topics/miscarriage-loss-grief/stillbirth

Audio Transcript:

Molly  0:02  

So they did the balloon to open my cervix, which was fine. It was like uncomfortable but it was it was fine. And that’s when what I wanted for my birth plan and what the hospital wanted for my birth plan decided to go two different directions.

Paulette  0:18  

Welcome to war stories from the womb. This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition that you can find on all kinds of media to more realistic one. It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and release that new person from your body into the world. Oftentimes, this transition requires some heroics, which is where this podcast gets its name. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and a mother of two girls, and boy did I struggle with this transition. Today I finish my conversation with Molly. In this episode, she compares her expectations at the birth with her experience and learns that the expectation she had about the first encounter with her baby after birth is built on a false narrative. She shares her process for increasing milk production when she was breastfeeding, and some useful tips for that process. And she shares the important lessons she learned from the 10 year runway that preceded the birth of her son. We’ll pick up where we left off last week. Molly is contemplating how to approach the birth of her son.

Molly  1:27  

because I researched when I panic. It was what is my birth plan going to be I had seen my my younger sister had already had two kids. And so I had been there for one of them and things did not go according to any of the plans. And so I was like what if that’s gonna happen to me? And you know, I’ve talked to my other sister in law and I don’t want to be medicated and i don’t want to have this thing and I don’t want to do that. And I had really wanted a midwife and they didn’t have any in the city that we were in. There’s not a midwife in an hour’s distance to us. There was no birthing center, they just had a you know, a thing and then all of a sudden, I realized about halfway through. Oh, yeah, I’m moving before I have this baby. I need to figure that shit out. Yeah. And so I finished working at about seven and a half months. I quit and we moved and we moved to Pennsylvania. And that’s after I had an ER visit because I could not breathe. The pain was so bad and my stomach I didn’t know which part evidently I had gas.

Paulette  2:36  

Maybe was fine. Good. Well, good. That’s the best answer.

Molly  2:39  

We had come up to visit in May, which was shortly after we had moved but we came up because it was a bigger holiday to see all the family and I thought I was in preterm labor because I was having contractions so bad. I wasn’t the minute we got there. They went away, of course, but having to reestablish care. Nobody really wants it mostly. Yeah. Ready to pop. Mom. And again, we had no midwives. Next to where we were going to be there was there was midwives at a hospital in Pittsburgh, but that was an hour away and I did not want to risk that while in labor if that were to be the case. And luckily I found a clinic and they were fine and not fine. They did a good job and they reassured me they’ve answered all my questions. And I did forget to mention in the beginning when I first got pregnant, they gave me progesterone suppositories. So for six weeks, they were like, Nope, we’re keeping this woman she was so they tried to help keep all of that getting all the healthy nutrients that it needs. Oh, and on top of all of this, I have MTHFR so I can’t that I can’t process folic acid. Like

Paulette  3:49  

Oh no. Yeah, shit. Yeah.

Molly  3:52  

So they were like, we’ll just take extra which isn’t necessarily how that works, but nobody really knows about it.

Paulette  4:00  

So it turns out that MTHFR gene includes instructions to make a protein it helps your body process fully or vitamin E nine. Most people recognize the term folic acid that’s what I heard of before. It’s in dark leafy vegetables. And if you’re going to get pregnant, everyone will tell you that you need folic acid to reduce the chances of a fetus will develop neural tube defects like spina bifida, which happened very early in pregnancy. Some of the variants of the MTHFR gene inhibit the body’s ability to process bully

Molly  4:30  

or people do know about it, but they think about a different part of it. And it’s a whole thing. And there was some concerns about preeclampsia at one point because I was just so puffy. When we

Paulette  4:39  

saw the folic acid problem. That’s an issue. We didn’t Oh my gosh.

Molly  4:45  

I mean, I took prenatals that nobody gave me anything to kind of help with that. Even though it was something I was very much like, Hi. I’m pretty sure I need something here and there was never any help with that. And then I mean, there was concerns about preeclampsia for a while just because I was so puffy there was worries about gestational diabetes because I was just getting grumpy as heck because I gained 70 pounds and that came back negative although I got horribly horribly ill from the test but I still was sick I still if I had meet the nose me in it it still be getting sick and throwing up and and by the time I got at six and a half, seven months pregnant people who had never met me before kept coming up to me and they’re like any day now and I’m like three months left.

Paulette  5:35  

Yes. Oh my God, that’s such a bad game. That’s such a terrible there’s just there’s not just say you look great. Right? Right. It’s terrible to say you look too small because then you’re like, Is the baby too small is terrible to say you’re too big. We’ll just just say look great. That’s that’s the only right answer. Yeah,

Molly  5:51  

I It’s. I would always get so frustrated because it’s like, not only do you think I’m fat, I still have to get fatter. Yeah.

Paulette  6:00  

This is our sounding like a walk in the park is pregnancy.

Molly  6:04  

No, it wasn’t because I was alone for a lot of it. My mom was around but I was still at home alone. Packing the house. Yeah, dealing with the dog going to work dealing with the stress of stupid people at work. Not that all the people I worked with the stupid we just had to deal with some stupid things while we were there. And it was just a lot and I’m still trying to figure out the game plan and figure out the food and I don’t want to look at food but I have the food because I have a baby in my belly. And so we finally figured out what was going to happen we went to our birthing classes once we got settled in Pennsylvania, and that helped so much. It was a breastfeeding friendly. That was what they encouraged for people who couldn’t handle and for all the different reasons, not that breastfeeding is the right solution for everybody, but you can’t you know, and so we took that we took the breastfeeding class, so I finally felt prepared. I’m gonna go in air. Yes, yes. And it wasn’t till three weeks before the baby came or was supposed to come that we even bought a stroller about a crib bought a mattress because I was in panic of I don’t want to nest this can because I didn’t mention this before. But this can I was panicking because it could still go sour because my mom had had a stillbirth eight and a half months. And so I

Paulette  7:22  

was oh my god, of course. Sure. So this is a useful question. Is there an element of stillbirth that’s genetic. I found some journal articles about this topic. They define stillbirth as death in utero at 20 weeks of gestation. And these kinds of deaths account for 60% of all perinatal deaths. Most of them go unexplained between 25 and 60% of cases. It looks like the most common causes are infection, problems with the placenta or umbilical cord, and medical problems with the mother like diabetes and preeclampsia and birth defects in the baby. I found one study that suggested that inherited genetic risk might exist, but data is pretty limited at this point. You can check out the show notes for the links that I’ve included on this topic.

Molly  8:09  

And we did do genetic counseling like at the anatomy scan, they did genetic counseling, they didn’t do genetic testing. They just did the counseling. And we were told at that point, there’s good odds that our kiddo would be autistic and just based off of our family genetics and how things would be going.

Paulette  8:26  

I thought we think autism is the gene times environment thing. Is that not true?

Molly  8:32  

So not not when nine out of 10 people in the family are autistic. There’s we have a very, very neurodivergent heavy scenario and my family.

Paulette  8:45  

Do we care about that? We don’t care about the news or we do care about it or

Molly  8:49  

you just need to be prepared. Okay, care, my husband’s autistic and I am probably my therapist tells me she’s like 90% sure that I am too. But so I wasn’t nervous. And I have so many people in my life that are autistic. I work with the neurodivergent community. Yeah, you know, it was not. So we finally started nesting and putting things together. My mother in law came out early because we were like just can you just arrive early because we knew we would need support. I knew I couldn’t do it alone. Yeah. My husband is on sleep medication at night so that no hope and help there because knocked out so she came out which was wonderful. And blame my kiddo did not want to leave the womb.

Paulette  9:40  

So that sounds like you made it to 40 weeks pretty, pretty solid. Already one. Yeah. And then and then do we get induced or how does that the day that that they’re born? What does that look like?

Molly  9:52  

So we were induced to scheduled induction I walked my ass off trying to not have a scheduled induction I did. The last thing I wanted was Pitocin. And so we showed up at five o’clock in the morning. And I had already said I didn’t want any I wanted it to be as drug intervent like, I don’t want them touching things. And so they did the balloon to initiate the first little bit which was fine. A little bit to open my cervix. Yeah. Which was fine. It was like uncomfortable but it was it was fine. And that’s when what I wanted for my birth plan and what the hospital wanted for my birth plan decided to go two different directions because I knew that you can have the balloon dilation and not have Pitocin because sometimes it can just kickstart the labor process and I was already having contractions I was already having things and I felt in control at that point. And that is when they were like so we’re gonna start Pitocin

Paulette  10:54  

are they offering that to you as an option or they’re telling you that’s what’s happening

Molly  10:57  

and telling me that that’s what’s happening? Because I had already said I don’t want it and they’re like, Okay, next thing you know, it’s in my IV and I went from having manageable, tolerable contractions to within 20 minutes, not being able to control my body in any way, shape or form because the contractions are so intense. And I just had a nurse that kept telling me you’re not having this baby today. You’re having this baby tomorrow. You still got a good 20 hours ahead of you. Oh, good lord. And I’m sorry, that’s what they were used to seeing. And I wish I had used my brain to be like she doesn’t know me. She doesn’t know how my body is going to react and based off how I feel right now this is going to be over in a couple hours. Because at that point, even though I did not want any pain medication, I didn’t want an epidural. I didn’t want anything. I wanted to just do it because I knew it would. I knew it would come it’s just temporary and it would go away and that it didn’t need to happen this way. And recovery can go really quick for a lot of people. But she kept telling me it was going to drag on forever. And I was running out of energy and we were an hour in. Yeah. And so I said I need the pain meds. Well I barely could talk actually. Yeah, barely. And I finally got them to give me some pain meds. It was the worst decision I could have made for me, because what they don’t tell you is that the pain meds don’t take the pain away. They just make you incapable of advocating for yourself because you can no longer communicate.

Paulette  12:28  

That’s totally interesting. So that’s the thing is like how that epidural works in your body is different for everyone. Right? It’s yeah,

Molly  12:34  

well this was just the pain meds like normal pain meds not even federal yet. Not an epidural yet. This is just IV pain meds. I got to sleep slightly but not really because every time a contraction came it would wake me up and I couldn’t communicate. I was talking so slow. Even I was like why can’t I get my body or my mouse to do the things that I need? And I kept telling them, please check me, please check me but nobody was listening because nobody could understand me and I was just delirious and at one point somebody came in and said You’re scaring people because you’re yelling so much. But I was trying so hard to advocate for myself. But nobody could understand me and people would pat my arm. Oh my God. They were trying to be helpful but I had planned on being in control. I had told them that I wanted to walk around and I wanted to work through these and I was stuck in this bed because I couldn’t control my body because they had given me a medication that I didn’t want, which resulted in me having another medication that I didn’t want that was supposed to help which made things worse. And so a couple more hours went by and I eventually said because she kept coming in and telling me we still got a good 10 hours because they wouldn’t check me. You still got a good 1015 hours before you’re gonna go. And I’m at this point exhausted knowing that I’m going to have to push a baby out of my fucking vagina. Yeah, and you’re telling me I’m going to take forever there’s no way I don’t there’s no rest. There’s no Yeah, so Okay, give me the freaking epidural. Well, they had to check me before they gave me the epidural. I was at nine centimeters within five hours.

Paulette  14:10  

Wow, that is really fast for the first time.

Molly  14:14  

Which is why I was in so much pain. Yes. Yeah. I honestly think that if I hadn’t had the Pitocin and if I hadn’t had the pain medication, it would have been longer. But it would have been something that I could have kept up with and maintained and

Paulette  14:29  

yeah, I was gonna say also if your body doesn’t naturally there’s a symphony of hormones that play out together to help you get through it right. So right, which are cut off if you inject Pitocin just to clarify what I was saying about hormones and Pitocin. Pitocin is the synthetic form of oxytocin that your body naturally produces when you go into labor spontaneously. When you go into labor spontaneously, there is an internal conversation going on between your brain and your body about which hormones to release and when but when your body is getting signals from an IV, the brain and body are no longer in direct communication. So that can affect the hormone next, the endorphins you get a response to the pain of a spontaneous labor, for example, don’t work in the same way when Pitocin is used. Even though you’re still in pain.

Molly  15:16  

Right? So it was just very frustrating. In that point, it took two hours to push the kiddo out. We arrived at five o’clock and Blaine was born at three.

Paulette  15:27  

Wow. Oh my god. That is the fast lane for sure.

Molly  15:31  

Right. And the nurse never was like Oh, I’m sorry to make you think that this is gonna be forever and it only took you five hours. You know,

Paulette  15:38  

this is such a tricky thing about managing expectations, right? I’m on both sides of it. I think don’t don’t say it unless you’re sure there’s no way to be sure. Don’t leave me in the dark and say nothing. Right. I don’t know. I don’t know what the best way to do it is

Molly  15:53  

I think if I had been in a hospital, this hospital still had delivery room and then a room that you go to post delivery. Yeah. And it so it was in that sense a little bit older. They didn’t have a bathtub or really a shower big enough that you could get in to be in there. There was no what we would consider now more common place or thing, accommodations or whatever won’t call them. They didn’t have any of that. And so I come in wanting those things because I know the benefits to them and how they can help the mom do better in these situations. Because again, I’ve had 10 years. Yeah, think about this. You know, I’ve seen lots of people have babies, lots of friends have babies and talk to them about their birth story. So I kind of collected the best knowledge I had from all of them to create what I wanted and I didn’t get any of it. And Blaine came out and and was fine 711 So not even a diet baby. No. So hello. Right but the I will say I did not tear because I did not listen to the doctors at all. At that point. I was kind of coming off them that the pain meds because I was due for another round. But they were like Oh no, you’re about to push we’re not doing that because they you’re not supposed to give them so close to the BBB for and I think and so I was finally in my head and they kept telling me push harder, push harder, push harder. And I was like no because I feel like I’m going to tear and I was just trusting my body. So when my body was like no, don’t wait. I knew well enough that my body would do what it needs to do. And so it did take longer than they wanted it to I will admit that but Blaine was fine didn’t have any adverse reactions to being in the birth canal that long. But I am proud of that because I did listen when I could. And I asked my body where I could where somebody else wasn’t influencing what I was doing. And I luckily didn’t have a doctor that tried to do an easy on me or anything like that, because I’m not about that life. Yeah,

Paulette  17:54  

no, no. I think one thing that’s tricky. It’s hard to embody the person you’ll be in labor before you’re actually there and we all think we’ll be able to advocate for ourselves and that’s just it is such an all encompassing over sensory experience that you there’s no way you’ll be able to be your own lawyer in this right now. Yeah. And I’m imagining that you have an emotional attachment is the idea of being able to have a kid but you didn’t necessarily have an idea that the birth has to go this way or it doesn’t count.

Molly  18:28  

No, I didn’t. Now it’s like, I have things that I know now if for whatever reason I were to ever get pregnant again. Like I have things that I would do differently and I would advocate, I am a much stronger individual now than I was then. Not that I was a weak individual than either, but I know more. I know more and so I think I would do things differently but I don’t have this want to let’s try it again and get it right. Like some people do get that. I was talking to somebody who had a kid as a teenager, and they’re now an adult. And they were like, I just want to know what it’s like to have a kid as an adult and raise the kid as an adult. And I was like, oh, okay, that I can I’ll give that one to you. But yeah, and I will say I really thought that everybody feels this immense Disney like love for their child when their child comes out. And what I have learned after talking to a lot of people, that’s actually not the case. It’s actually the minority of people that are married with lovey dovey eyeballs with their for their baby. Not that I didn’t love my kid when they came out, but it was different. It was still like, that’s a new weird human that I need to get to know. Yeah, who is that thing? So I am now bound to

Paulette  19:44  

I don’t know this with any scientific certainty but I wonder if you go the Pitocin route and your body is not allowed to go through all the cycles of hormones and stuff. Whether you get that feeling and how much of that is a chemical reaction like oxytocin is released once the baby is born and right is that kind of thing. And if you don’t have a birth that looks just like that, whether you’re gonna get that outcome.

Molly  20:08  

Yeah, that makes sense. Because, yeah, I just felt like okay, you’re touching my boob. Alright, you know, what have, you know, my little kiddo looked like a little turtle. So that was, you know, you’re like, what’s with the head and you’re just analyzing your baby so much, because you’re like, Okay, you were in there and I imagined you one way. And now you slightly look like you came from an alien movie. Yeah. And I’m trying to make sense to you look like dad and me, you know? So, yes, but once Blaine was out, things were good. The hospital actually had like many photoshoots that you got to do with the babies and stuff. And so that was nice because I did not have a photographer lined up and so we did end up getting baby pictures because of that. And I was only there for 24 hours. They offered me a second night and I was like, I can’t sleep. Every time the baby’s finally asleep from breastfeeding. You come in and you wake me up to check my temperature like yeah, no, this is not helpful. They did have a nursery and there’s a couple times I actually did send blame to the nursery because I needed some sleep. And if they were going to pay more attention to the baby who didn’t need food right now. I could sleep without being a dolphin. Yeah, I you know because dolphin sleep with one eye open. Yeah, yeah. And then then that’s gonna be helpful. But then once we came home, and I guess it didn’t, it didn’t actually go smoothly. Once we got home. We got home. And breastfeeding was going terribly because we found out six weeks later Blaine was tongue tied. And so it was like having a cat tongue instead of like, it’s supposed to be like a squishy, soft loveliness. Yeah. And it was not. It was like a cat was like in your nipple and that was awful. And so things are chapped and terrible, and I didn’t give up I went the doctor was like, well, you need to not breastfeed for three days. I was like, well then I’m pumping because breastfeeding was what? I don’t like touch so it wasn’t like I need this because it’s going to be connected thing it was, I don’t want to pay for formulas. I’m going to make breastfeeding work, which was an option for my brain. It might not be an option for everybody’s brain. And so I pumped for three days ate all the oatmeal that you could imagine. And I pumped enough for the next three months in this house. Oh my god, I I got milk overnight and it came because I was pumping a whole bunch of all the things that help you. You know, I was eating everything that they said eat to have more milk production

Paulette  22:58  

was fabulous.

Molly  23:00  

Oatmeal. I would eat drink like the tea. There was some other cookies that you can get in the breastfeeding aisles that you could buy there. I don’t even remember anyway was a long time ago. I just remember was a lot of oatmeal.

Paulette  23:14  

Okay, but you were you were doing some kind of special breastfeeding diet and it seems like it worked.

Molly  23:19  

Yeah, I mean, I was just Yeah, I just incorporated anything that could help with the production into into my intake for those three days. And then I pumped every two hours on the clock. So if the baby was feeding, I was pumping and I had a double breast pump. I had an Adela and I loved it and it was wonderful. Definitely had the broad and make it easier. But and I just kept pumping and we kept freezing and for a good couple days I thought I had to pour out all the stuff that was pink note to self as long as you don’t have any communicable diseases that come through blood. You can you can let your baby drink that red blood milk all you want.

Paulette  23:56  

Oh, that’s just find out. Yeah,

Molly  23:57  

I did not know that at the time and I would cry and pour it out because it was taking me like I was everything I was doing. But on day three through day five Blaine didn’t stop crying once. And that’s when I knew something was not right. And so I took them to the doctor and they tested planes poop and it was milk soy protein intolerance. So not only was I not allowed to eat meat while I was pregnant, I now could not have anything with milk. So I at all, just so everybody’s tracking with me. That’s everything at the grocery store.

Paulette  24:35  

I pizza. I love you. I say you

Unknown Speaker  24:39  

buy white bread.

Paulette  24:40  

Yeah, soy.

Molly  24:42  

Soy isn’t everything. Yeah. And even for blamed was so sensitive. I couldn’t have soybean oil, which they say it’s hyperalgesia not for that sense. I should say yeah, I could nothing was soy lecithin, anything like that. And so we went on a very strict diet and laying stuff.

Paulette  25:01  

What could you eat? What did that leave?

Molly  25:03  

So I would just use vegetable. I would specify that things are not have no soy like if it said vegetable oil. I would make sure it said like things that weren’t soy as gradients. So like sunflower oil was usually the thing. A lot of things I just started shopping at like Whole Foods, because it’s much easier to find those indicators at stores like that or Trader Joe’s we just ate meat and vegetable. Yeah. And we kind of kept it at that. I did try signing up for like CompTIA for things like that and get the noise No soy no dairy options for things, which helped for a little bit but then we would get bored eating like literally a steak and a potato. But yeah, so we figured it out. Chipotle was another place I can eat and that was good. But then they also found out that Lane had three little holes in their heart. And so luckily they weren’t large enough that they need to operate but they were that we needed to go in pretty frequently to have it monitored.

Paulette  26:04  

Do they close themselves?

Molly  26:06  

They just did this year. Oh wow. It’s been five years. One closed up within about six months and then three little ones had clustered together. And so this year is the first year that clean does not show any signs of heart defects. So that’s all exciting. And then at six weeks, we had Blaine’s tongue clip because we finally figured out that’s why breastfeeding was so painful and I cried because I didn’t realize that that was how much different it was supposed to feel like it was a night and day difference. And I had mastitis four times in the first three months, sometimes I

Paulette  26:50  

get more likely because they’re not like sucking the right way.

Molly  26:53  

Ironically, I got it after that. And I don’t know why but I really it usually happened because we have missed a feeding and I just was really prone to it I guess because I would get in gorged like crazy. And it took me a while to realize I needed to release the milk no matter what. Yeah. And that was the part that I think was really hard because I’d never been around anybody who

Paulette  27:27  

guys

Molly  27:34  

was sleepless nights a lot because the soy protein intolerance if I ever had it, that would cause things and just there’s a lot of crazy crazy things that people say about baby sleep, but just that sleep deprived state that you’re in is so mind overfitting because like

Paulette  27:57  

I was gonna describe it as a different state of consciousness. Way to walk around in the world.

Molly  28:03  

Yes, and I I really wished I had not done the cried out thing or blame like it really. Now that I understand Blaine’s brain and I understand how blame thinks it’s a huge regret that I have, because it wasn’t necessary. And it’s we actually have backlash from it. So Blaine has huge nighttime separation anxiety and thinks that we won’t respond. If there’s an emergency and it’s all kind of linked together because of how their brain processes rejection. They think that from that it used to be an issue from it’s terrible.

Paulette  28:40  

All I would say the wily as a parent of older kids. Parenting is way fucking harder than it looks. At and then a marketing suggests, yes, you you’re going to make 1000 mistakes because that’s every at every stage, you’re learning something new. And the only thing that matters, I think or what you may have control over is the repair is to recognize that a mistake was made and say this is how we’re going to do it from here on I’m sorry, I did that. I’m learning but there’s no way to avoid the mistakes. I don’t think.

Molly  29:11  

No. And that’s the one thing that we’ve incorporated is apologizing. Yeah, as soon as we figure out that we’ve done something that has caused harm in some way is being like oh we didn’t know that. That happened. Yeah, we’re so sorry. That happened. And I find that Blaine really appreciates knowing that we make mistakes, and then we’re able to talk to him. I do my five year old is like going on 50 But

Paulette  29:39  

that’s probably even more important, right? If they’re an old soul, they appreciate that but I think it does make kids feel seen to have that conversation and they are forgiving and it’s you know, people will make mistakes and you’re showing them that it’s okay to make mistakes and this is what you This is how you recover.

Molly  29:54  

Yes, and blame is just some magical little kid.

Paulette  29:58  

That’s awesome. For the record I to regret daily.

Episode 94: Life Lessons Learned in Pregnancy & Birth: Molly’s Story, Part II

Conceiving, being pregnant, giving birth and then learning to be someone’s parent by immediately being responsible for the survival of a new being are all challenging experiences that contain within them, possibilities to grow.

Today I finish my conversation with Molly. In this episode, she compares her expectations at the birth with her experience and learns that the expectations she had about the first encounter with her baby after birth is built on a false narrative. She also shares her process for increasing milk production when she was breastfeeding and some useful tips for that process, and she shares the important lessons she learned from the 10 year runway that preceded the birth of her son.

Episode 92SN: When Postpartum happens in a Pandemic: Julia’s Story, Part II

Scientists often study extreme cases to learn about the mechanics of a phenomenon. Many women found themselves running this kind of experiment in their own homes. How would the postpartum period–a time marked by isolation–feel when the whole world was isolating?

In today’s episode, author of the Upstairs House Julia Fine, reflects on her experience having her second child in the heart of the pandemic, and how the difference between a pre pandemic postpartum and a pandemic postpartum taught her something important about the period.  She shares some advice she wishes she’d received before she had kids and talks about how having language around some of the dramatic challenges we face as caregivers in those early months can change our experience of them. I also include insights from Dr. Patel, a former OB who now focuses on helping women in the postpartum period, on how to combat cultural expectations around motherhood in this period.

Click here to find Julia’s work, including The Upstairs House

To connect with Dr. Patel for postpartum coaching, click here

Audio Transcript

Paulette kamenecka  0:03  

Hi, welcome to War Stories from the womb. This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant, being pregnant and giving birth. To help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition, you can find on all kinds of media to a more realistic one. It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create a better person and release that new person from your body into the world. I’m your host, Paulette kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and the mother of two girls and boy did I struggle with this transition. 

In today’s episode, Julia reflects on her experience having a second child and the heart of the pandemic and how, the difference between postpartum pandemic postpartum or something important about the period. She shares some advice she wishes she’d received. Before she gave kids. And how, having language around some of the dramatic challenges we face as caregivers in those early months can change our experience. I also include insights from Dr. Patel on how to combat cultural expectations around motherhood, the postpartum period. We left off last week with Julia talking about being home with her firstborn just after birth.

Julia  1:15  

Then when my husband went back to work, it was really really hard. You know, I had gone from having my own life and my own creative work and teaching to like, you know, the baby was my full time job and it wasn’t sleeping. And my son still doesn’t have a six and it’s still awful. And that has been like from day one, which is a terrible sleeper. We didn’t even get those good. The first few newborn nights that people get with that fool you into thinking that oh, it’s not that bad. We didn’t even get those. It was just it was just exhausting.

Paulette  1:50  

Yeah, but that’s super hard. And did you have did you have breastfeeding ambition?

Julia  1:54  

I yeah, I breastfed. He latched very easily, but I was not prepared for how much it would hurt to start, just like how painful it would be to have that adjustment. So I remember saying, I’m only going to do this for another week or so. And I said that a year I said, I’m only going to do it for another week. And ultimately, because it was so much less expensive to nurse him if he could nurse we want a full year.

Paulette 2:18  

Yeah, yeah, well, good. Well, God worked out, but it sounds like you were not emotionally attached to them.

Julia  2:23  

Not really. I don’t know if I would have felt differently had it been hard to nurse but we had a fairly easy time. I did really resent it for a while. Especially I remember it was my first so he was born April 29. And so my first Mother’s Day would have been a week and a half later, maybe everyone should come over. We were gonna go to the farmers market because walking distance, but he just wanted to nurse and so I was just sitting on the couch breastfeeding. And finally it was like I guess all of you our place was pretty small. And it was my husband’s whole family was there so it’s like I guess you guys just go and I remember just sitting there feeling so resentful of the fact that they were there and I was doing this and I don’t know why. You know, it’s I I wouldn’t have wanted them to stay. But you know, there wasn’t there wasn’t a better solution, but I it was very frustrating and I think I felt very frustrated. For a lot of my early motherhood experience.

Paulette   3:23  

I took this issue to Dr. Patel. Julia talks about feeling frustrated and resentful in those early days because of you know, the demands put on her exclusively and the pain of breastfeeding and no sleeping and I think there are these strong cultural expectations around motherhood that it’s about selflessness. And so you know, we talk about taking care of mom, but we don’t really want mom to take care of mom is many people’s perception of it. That’s like a false suggestion. So what advice would you give to new moms? How do you navigate that?

Dr. Patel  3:55  

It’s a wonderful question and a very tough one because this is actually a lot of what I try to work with because it’s about mindset. And here’s the thing: 

4:07  

women are made guilty or ashamed of themselves especially in the learning period. to do is to think about where feeling coming from, is it because you are trying to do something that is expected of you but doesn’t feel right to you? Is it expectations you have for yourself? What are those expectations based on? And what exactly are your priorities and what do you really want? So by thinking about what are your internal priorities like whether it say okay, it’s really important to me that I breastfeed my baby. It’s not as important to me when I think about it deep down that my house be perfect for guests or that I look perfect. If that were the case, I would ask mom to really think about the other things that she is being made to feel guilty or selfish for and to just let it go and accept that your priorities are your priorities. And you are doing what you feel is right and that is perfectly fine.

Paulette 5:17  

Yeah, I feel like there is no analog to how dependent a baby is so you don’t have any experience of being that necessary and required for someone else.

Julia  5:27  

Yeah, and nobody else can do it, especially if you’re breastfeeding because it’s not like like eventually we started I pumped a little bit and my husband would take one shifts. And that felt a little bit better but then you still have to pump. I don’t know it’s a lot.

Paulette 5:44  

It is. It is unbelievable. I mean, this is why you live with extended family. Right? This is yeah, it turns out that was a genius idea, which we did not

Julia  5:52  

know now. My youngest is now two and a half and we’re only just it’s like they’re only just coming up for air in terms of not  being stressed about raising kids. Constantly. Now, we’re only stressed about raising kids like 80% of the time.

Paulette  6:09  

Yeah, I want you to the time is required, of course. So it sounds like your husband also didn’t didn’t flag maybe you have depression.

Julia  6:19  

He? Yeah, I think we just didn’t know. I mean, he definitely he also was working long hours immediately come back to work and when he was around, he’s a great he’s a very good co parent and especially at this point sort of post pandemic in work from home. Life. He is absolutely it just was night and day with my daughter of how involved he could be in those early days. And that’s something that I think about COVID in the pandemic we wouldn’t have gotten but with my son it was. I was just by myself a lot because he had to work and he was the sole breadwinner at that point because I had left my job because it didn’t make sense to adjunct and pay for childcare and try to work on this novel that I was working on. So it was it was really rough actually. So this is funny too. So when we had the baby, we were living in a two bedroom but it was a lofted two bedroom so the second bedroom only had half of a wall and that wall was shared with the kitchen and I just remember it was fine when the baby was in with us. But we set up that second room we set it all up as a nursery and we were like finally we can put him in his own room and have our time and our space and like get back to our relationship. And then we realized nobody nobody warned us again. This is where I’d maybe if I had had friends with kids that could have been like you can’t put a baby there with that shared wall with the lights gonna get it in the sounds gonna get in and that’s not how it works. So the first time we put them in there and we were like Did we just like hide on our tiny balcony do a pull up in our bedroom. We’re in such a small space. So we ended up breaking our lease and moving because it was just untenable. But yeah, so that’s something we’ve everyone’s like, what advice do you have for your kids? Well, if you’re in an apartment, make sure you have four full walls for the kids room.

Paulette 8:06  

Totally, totally. That is totally true. And I asked about your husband in part because in your book, Megan’s husband is pretty quick to accept her suggestion that it’s nothing because yeah, I mean we all want it to be nothing right? That’s that’s like a completely human reaction. But when I was reading it, I found myself yelling at him. I was like Ben, no, dont’ believe him!

Julia  8:31  

he’s not great. He’s the he’s not that is not modeled at all. After my experience. I had so much more support the family I had to live my mom read the book too. And she’s like, this is it and as a Tory, these are not my parents. These are not my in laws. This is all fiction. But yeah, I sort of I in order to tell the story I want to tell I needed him to be a little more out of the picture. And I needed him to believe her and it also a lot of the book too is sort of about inauthenticity and relationships almost are about sort of how you know an ideal idealized view of what a relationship should be can sort of ruin what your relationship actually is. So I think in that particular relationship between Megan like she has never especially been herself and open with him and so it’s like, why would she start now, Bear?

Paulette   9:21  

On this topic of the difference between what you feel in this process and what you think you should feel? I’m going to read an excerpt from the upstairs house. In this scene. Meghan the main character has just given birth and is in the hospital. Julia writing in the voice of her main character says there’s nothing like the bond you will feel upon first meeting said Mrs. What to expect the Rush of  love will be overwhelming. I looked at Clara puffy little larva mouthful sang and I waited for the bond. I waited for the rush of love. There were needles still stuck in my arm. Maybe they were interfering and one more excerpt a few pages later, Megan is still in the hospital and feeling off. And she says to the nurse. Wait, I said I think there’s something the matter. The nurse pressed down on my abdomen. It all feels fine. Totally normal. No, I mean, Ben was coming into the room rolling the bassinet in front of them. It looks so happy so perfectly content. Nevermind I said. I must just be tired. The nurse smiled again parted the curtains and walked out the door. Do you want to hold her for a minute before the family gets here? finessed passing Claire over before I could respond. I wanted to want to hold her. So I nodded even while realizing that I didn’t want to hold her. There she was in my arms. 

Paulette: There were a lot of things that you wrote that I thought this is a perfect description of what it is of what it is as opposed to what what we’re imagining it should be or you’ve been told what we’ve been told to expect. So so it sounds like your older son is two when you get pregnant again, because they’re three years. 

Julia: Yeah, he was two and change.

Paulette  10:53  

And is it easy to get pregnant again? Super easy. Okay, good.

Julia  10:57  

We were so lucky. Yeah, we I think it was two months and then I was pregnant and it was difficult. Again, I had I think I had a normal level of national probably about the same as it was but because I also was caring for a toddler. It was harder, but then I was five months pregnant in March of 2020. And that was very, very, very hard, just emotionally and access to my OB. And I mean, it was hard. Sort of the question of like, are you higher risk, what would happen and I was so hormonal, and I think everybody was breaking down and crying. So in that in that respect, it wasn’t that different. But it was, you know, my idea of, oh my gosh, I’ve done this before I’ve got it. It’s going to be so easy this time around and it just, you know, went out the window.

Paulette  11:52  

My kids are older so I didn’t face the fears you described as a pregnant woman in COVID. But when COVID hit I thought immediately of pregnant woman I thought oh my god, it’s such a vulnerable place to be as a pregnant woman. It’s so it just makes COVID 1000 times harder, especially with a toddler because 

Julia  12:09  

It was very hard. You know, the one nice thing like I said, is that my husband was sent home and so at least he was there, you know, physically present even if he was working. I wasn’t alone alone, but it was. Yeah, I feel like I I have a few very strong memories of that time and then the rest I feel like I’m just like, blacked it out.

Paulette kamenecka  12:34  

So how imagining you’re going to the doctor by yourself?

Julia  12:36  

Yeah. It was I had I think it was about 20 weeks. So I had my 20 week. No, because he wasn’t there it had I think that people were there were like whispers at my 20 week scan. And he personally I think there was some kids meeting or something. So I’d been there by myself. But then after that meeting, I had to go by myself. It was like you went through. You waited in your car. For them to say that it was time to go into the building and take the elevator up and it was like you went through sort of the hazmat and everybody and it was yeah, it was very weird. And then there were a few appointments to that. I think they were like we’ll just do this virtually because if you say you’re feeling fine, then we believe you because nobody knew. 

I remember the first time that I went to the OB sort of once we knew what was happening post lockdown and it was just terrifying to be like, am I going to get COVID and kill my child by going to try to get help for my child in utero. It just was a mind trip and I hadn’t left the house in four weeks to it was very weird but yeah, what really was amazing was the fact that the nurses the OB is and the staff at the hospital were going in and coming in there and made it feel like it was weird, but it was i don’t know i They were really just such superheroes. It was really amazing.

Paulette   14:03  

It is what healthcare workers did for the pandemic is completely amazing. And, you know, whatever anxiety you might have come with has now been turned up to 11 because

Julia  14:15  

the worst part so my daughter was actually four weeks premature. She was right on the cusp of being an official preemie baby. If he had waited a few days, she would not even have technically been a preemie. But she was like four weeks, three days or something. And my inlaws at that point, it was June and my inlaws had started venturing out of the house and we still were just like, we went nowhere. We started nobody. We were just very, very careful. And so my in laws were like going to start quarantining so that if the baby came early, come and be our child care for my older child. And the day they were going to start quarantining. I just started bleeding and they said, come in and they’re like, up, you’re having the baby now and so there was a period there where we weren’t sure the baby, her heart rate was accelerated. And there were some weird complications of like, we don’t know if it’s going to be a C section or what’s going to happen when they weren’t sure because my husband was with my son. We weren’t sure if we were gonna get childcare and he would even be there for the labor and I was waiting on the COVID test. So I didn’t know if I was going to be in the COVID Waiting, in which case my husband couldn’t come regardless, there was all of those things all at the same time, and like this 25 minute period, which is probably the most stressed I’ve ever been in my entire life, and they all ended up falling in our favor. I didn’t need the C section. My dad at 1am picked up his phone and volunteered to stay for a night with my son, and I didn’t have COVID but it was just it was a vastly different experience because I wasn’t having contractions because it was just an early like random  bleed, but emotionally it was really wild.

Paulette kamenecka  15:57  

Yeah, that sounds super stressful. So was the bleeding and indication that the labor was on?

Julia  16:02  

Yeah, so retrospectively my doctors maybe your water started to break or maybe something they don’t really know what it was. But yeah, I had called thinking they’d be like, come in, and then they’d send me right home and so they’re like going over and bidding you if you’re gonna have the baby. That was my that was a shock because especially if we had woken up, my dad just turned green and we can walk him up and put him in the car. It was 830 or something and he had been asleep for like 45 minutes and we woke him up, put them in the car, took them downtown, and he’s like, what is happening? And then we thought I would, I thought I was going to come home. So they just drove around down in downtown Chicago, like they drove around in circles until I called them was like I am staying here. I guess you better take him back and figure out what to do with him because I couldn’t have any visitors. I could just have my one sort of support person, which is my husband. So in previous times, maybe we would have had him come into the hospital with us until someone could pick him up. But it was. Yeah, it was it was weird though, too because the hospital seems so empty compared to the first time around and all the times I have been there before. And then after. I was there for a few days because she was a preemie so I had I think an extra day because I had tests to run and no visitors really quiet very it was actually sort of a soothing and it felt almost like after being at home for such a long time. It was kind of nice to be somewhere else where was waiting on me. But it was very, very surreal.

Paulette  17:31  

And did she spend time in the NICU? 

Julia  17:34  

No, she didn’t. I claim she was fine. They’ll give her some steroids and she was tiny. She was only five pounds but healthy. So she’s just very little. She’s finally caught up. She’s a normal size now but it took a year and a half. 

Paulette: So they don’t know what kicked off the birth?

Julia:. No, they don’t know what kicked it off. So it it was a lot harder. And I this is I think you know I had already at this point written upstairs house and it was already off the publication but it sort of confirmed everything that I had read about birthing people needing someone to advocate for them like I find myself during sort of the period where I was by myself in triage and then they admitted me and I was by myself for a while and I remember looking over at one point interesting blood on the floor and I couldn’t it’s so hard when you’re in that state to know what’s going on and to make decisions for yourself or ask the right questions. So yeah, they ended up inducing me because they didn’t know what was going on. But my doctor came in and was like, Well, we know the baby’s gonna be born soon right? Let’s just let the baby like, you know, let her come out. And so it was such a relief when my regular doctor finally got there. But yeah, it’s um, I think I just went into early labor for whatever reason.

Paulette  18:47  

And that birth I’m assuming was shorter than your son.

Julia  18:50  

Oh, it was so, so quick. She Yeah, they so I was not having contractions or anything until they put me on Pitocin and again, I got the epidural right away, which I’m glad I did. And then I fell asleep and then I woke up to that being like time to push and I pushed four times and then she was here. So she’s so because she was so little, so it’s just like she came and then afterwards that was a little bit scarier because with my son, there was no reason to think that everything wouldn’t be totally normal, but with her it was like okay, well why was she early is her heart rate. Okay, did she pass all of these various, you know, premie tests, and again, she was just so so small. It was really wild. I don’t know if that had been my first kid. I think it would have been just very, very hard to not think I was gonna break her every day. 

Paulette   19:40  

Yeah, yeah.

I mean, five pounds is a second sugar. Yeah, she was tiny. She was tiny. And so what’s it like when you get home the second time?

Julia  19:48  

Oh, man. So in a way it was. It was definitely hard because so my mom who lives on the East Coast didn’t even get to meet my daughter until she was six months old. So that whereas she had flown out when my son was born, and she didn’t say long, she just came to meet him and then left but we had family there and there were people and people bringing by it was just the four of us, but it was nice. There was something really really special about my son meeting his sister for the first time and I think because of he had not been around other kids for a long time. So I think it in a way, made that transition almost easier because he was like, thank God. It’s not just mom and dad in the house. Again, it’s something new, but I also felt like I have learned from my son, we used a pack and play bassinet because I was like, oh, we’ll save money. And I’ll just use the bassinet part of the pack and play and that really didn’t work really well for us. And with my daughter, I had the my sister in law’s nice swivel bassinet. And I knew sort of, I knew what to expect in terms of how much sleep I would be getting and I knew to have a protein bar for the middle of the night and I knew to you know, budget time for this. So in that regard, it was a lot easier even though we didn’t have help. I think that for my husband who was on Oh, and the other part too is my husband who same company you had 10 days of maternity leave the first time and then they changed policy and he now had two months.

Paulette: Oh wow. 

Julia: So he was with that three year old and I was with the baby I mean basically did it like that. And then by the time he had to go back to work, back to work just you know work for him still. I sort of had the heart, the heart we were through sort of some of the more difficult parts and I was getting a little bit more sleep than

Paulette   21:44  

I was gonna say I hope your daughter is a better sleeper

Julia  21:46  

that she is. Yeah, she is. Yeah, and she was right away too. Yeah, it was so it was a very it was very weird because on paper, everything should have been so much harder. But the second kid just the circumstances were so much more difficult. But I think because I was already a parent, it was easier for me than that transition from sort of belonging only to myself to being somebody’s mother.

Paulette  22:15  

Yeah, I mean, I’m sure that you’re hoping this too, but I’m hoping that books like yours, the upstairs house will broaden the way we talk about postpartum so people know to expect you know challenge.

Julia  22:27  

Yeah, and I think because I think what’s even harder and it so much of what we see is this, you know my perfect nesting cocoon experience. And so you think, Oh, I’m having these particular feelings. And so then not only is it hard to have the feelings but you also feel sort of like guilt or shame about having the feelings and the more we can normalize it. You still might be having the feelings but at least you know, like this is normal. It doesn’t make you a bad parent. It doesn’t mean that you’re not going to have a great relationship with your kid. It doesn’t mean that things are not going to be as good as they are for anybody else. But because we talk about it in such an infantilizing way with term baby blues. just kills me. Would you say that to anybody else about any other illness or disease or diagnosis? It just is so for me personally, I felt very well. Why can’t I just shake it up? It’s just baby blues and then it’s no that’s not how it works.

Paulette  23:21  

Julia talks about how what we perceive as quote a perfect cocoon normal and postpartum is based on what we see around us. And if you look on Instagram, you may see pictures of quote, a perfect food. And it really does bring people a disservice because it makes them question their own experience and makes it seem as if this transition is easy, but it’s not for a lot of people.

Dr. Patel 23:40  

Exactly. And as soon as babies out of mom mom’s kind of left to herself and all the focus is on baby with at least the rest of the family right and yourself. And she’s dealing with all the physical whatever she went through for childbirth, the mental the hormonal changes and plus the loss of control the loss of her own identity. She’s now just known as mom, you know, she’s not necessarily who she was before and it’s it’s very difficult. And so the one thing that I always say to to new moms is if you feel weepy or upset or irritable, allow yourself to feel what you’re feeling. Right? Just because it’s baby blues doesn’t make it not real or silly or because it’s going to go away in a couple of weeks doesn’t mean you’re not feeling it right now. Talk about it, let it out. Let your feelings show share your feelings with others and get the help and support that you need. And then take care of yourself get the fresh air get the exercise, change the scenery. Try to get as much sleep as you can try to get healthy food and let go of the need for control because nobody’s perfect and nothing is gonna go exactly according to plan and it’s all okay. It’s okay to feel what you’re feeling. I feel like so many women fight that just makes it worse

Paulette  25:03  

That’s totally true and a critical thing to highlight accepting that as a lifelong project, right. Your kids will teach you that in 1000 ways in the next 18 years, but the initial indoctrination is so extreme. 

Dr. Patel  25:18  

It is it’s extreme and it’s sudden, in a way and no one tells you right? So if you’re blindsided

Julia  25:24  

and I think if I had had different language for it, I might have just been gentler on myself and less, you know, get over it. You’re fine.

Paulette  25:34  

For sure I there’s a lot of language around pregnancy and maternity that really needs to be revoked and renewed, really to the geriatric pregnancies 

Julia: oh my gosh, 

Paulette: 

So there are a lot of terms that need to be both more accurate and more useful, because those terms don’t help. They’re things like the incompetent cervix. How is that helpful, or accurate or useful or you know, there are no very to other things where you use that kind of adjective with a body part in a way that makes you feel like a failure. 

Julia  26:13  

I know there’s there’s enough to feel bad about that. You shouldn’t have to feel bad about these things that are just biological phenomenon.

Paulette   26:21  

Yes, yeah, totally. Agree. Am I leaving something out from your book or your experience that you’d like to highlight?

Julia  26:30  

I don’t think so… I think we have touched on all of it. I mean, it really, I think most most importantly is it left me and it feels like you were left with this to after your experiences. I just my own personal experience left me very frustrated with the way that in the US especially we provide or don’t provide for new parents and just ready to do whatever I could to try to change that until I’m writing the book. You know, I hopefully it was like, Look at look at how little support we aren’t giving people how can we change that? And I don’t know that I’ve have had the answer to how can we change it but I hope it shines the light on the experience that something people have.

Paulette  27:11  

Yeah, I think calling it the fourth trimester suggesting that you should be done. With that difficulty in three months is insane. And there’s so many other like you mentioned biological processes that take so much longer to recover than three months is just for your uterus to shrink. So that can’t be the whole story. So it is important to enlarge this conversation to include lots of other things. 

Julia: Absolutely. 

Paulette: Before you go into our talk a little bit about your Yeah, sure.

Julia  27:39  

So my my third novel is coming out June 13. From flat iron books and it is it’s funny because it is vastly different superficially, but at heart it’s about a lot of the same things, which are sort of gender roles and the patriarchy and you know, women and girls specifically sort of not being believed or having an opportunity, but what it’s about is it’s a book about so the composer Antonio Vivaldi who wrote The Four Seasons taught and wrote music for this sort of all girls orphan orchestra in Venice in the 1700s. And so the book takes place in 1717 and it is about two girls, one a violinist and violist who are sort of competing to be in this top tier women’s orchestra and they make a deal with this unknown creature in the canals of Venice and sort of has dangerous repercussions. So it’s very much if the if upstairs house was like me writing from a lot of my personal experience, this was what do I wish I was doing instead of being stuck in home with two kids in the pandemic But yeah, comes that it’s called Madalena and the dark.

Paulette 28:53  

Thank you so much for coming on and sharing your story.

Julia  28:56  

I’m so glad you’re doing this is really wonderful. Thank you for the opportunity.

Paulette kamenecka  28:59  

Absolutely. And the book again, upstairs house. I thought it was really good.

Julia 29:04  

Thank you.

Paulette   29:06  

Thanks again to Julia for sharing her experiences and how they influenced her to take up the often intense challenges of postpartum period as a subject worthy of exploration and a novel. If you think of the weight of the dramatic changes that happen instantaneously after you come home from the hospital or birthing center, it’s astounding. You’re immediately required to mother a newborn and figure out what the job entails how to do it and heal in real time. And oh, by the way, a life depends on it. It makes sense that we all feel like it’s a lot but doesn’t make sense is that we don’t talk about it more. If you’re interested in other stories of how people manage postpartum depression, you can check out episode 60 and 61, where I talk with a psychiatric nurse who experienced postpartum depression. And in Episode 58, I include the insights of a researcher who worked on the trials of the first FDA approved drug needs specifically to address postpartum depression, which was both shockingly because it’s so recent, and not shockingly because Women’s Health rarely gets top billing 2019 in the show notes, you can find links to Julie’s work and to Dr. Patel. Thanks for listening. If you like the show, please share it with friends. We’ll be back next week with another inspiring story.