I am now Pregnancy is a pretty traumatic event for a body to go through, even for the healthiest of women. It changes absolutely everything about your body from hormones to blood volume and the curl in your hair.
Pregnancy and Bipolar Disorder or Depression
And worse and much less common is Deoression psychosis. Postpartum psychosis takes depression to a whole new level where the woman completely loses touch with reality and may even harm her child. Oh, and those women with postpartum psychosis — most of them have bipolar disorder. And on top of that, whatever meds I might be taking now would likely have to be discontinued during pregnancy. Pretty much all psych meds are in a category that is recommended only in life-saving circumstances and some psych meds are known flat out to harm newborns, like cause birth defects.
And forget about medication if you want to breastfeed. Of course, an untreated mental illness harms a child as well. If you have a serious mental illness your offspring has a very good chance of also suffering a serious mental illness.
Should People with Bipolar Have Kids?
And if both parents are ill? Then you might as well just sign your kid up for a psychiatrist Ajd. In addition to my personal, mental illness, there is also the fact that mental illness runs in my family, including addiction which also has genetic ties. My family is rife with destruction thanks to mental illness. But because my moods will override that child sometimes. I know they would. They override everything. They destroy everything at times. There is no reasonable way to look at it such that a child would also not be hurt by that illness.
So between the trauma of pregnancy, the Relatinships of post-partum and medication, the unfairness of genetics and the reality of parenting, there is just no way to have a child. Not if I love that unborn child. Not if I want a better life for them then I have had. You can get through it.
But what I know is true for me is that having a child would be unbelievably selfish and I could never do that to an innocent life. So no matter how loud my biological clock ticks I have to do the right thing and not have Pafent child. Natasha Tracy is an award-winning writer, speaker, advocate and consultant from the Pacific Northwest. She has been Postpartum Depression And Parent Child Relationships with bipolar disorder for 22 Relationshkps and has written more than articles on the subject. I have had the same struggle you have. It is so heartbreaking and tears me apart. The closest thing I can think of to being a mother is to be a godmother or have a lot of pets. Honestly, I have grieved not having kids too and I think that is a healthy and natural thing. Or maybe another charity would suit you more?
And you could work with a charity that targets kids, if you like.]
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