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Bipolar Motherhood: What it Means to be 'Mom Enough'

The Time Magazine article on attachment parenting really got under my skin. Being bipolar and suffering postpartum issues, I can't come close to that maternal ideal. So I ask myself, am I mom enough?

They come in threes.

  1. I spun out over Time Magazine’s controversial article Are You Mom Enough? extolling the virtues of attachment parenting, AKA, baby-centered parenting, which includes breastfeeding well into toddler years, co-sleeping and a strong distain for sleep training.
  2. I read about Aimee Ziegler’s death due to postpartum psychosis.
  3. I had a relapse right before my first Mother’s Day.

Why those three things having been eating at me:

  1. Attachment parenting is very popular where I live, so I’ve experienced perfect strangers asking me why I’m no longer breastfeeding 200 too many times. I’ve also been judged for sleep training and making my baby sleep in his crib because I have to get a full night’s sleep. Yes, I’m , but I’m not a big fan of discussing why I had to stop breastfeeding and why I have to get sleep to a group of strangers in line at Starbucks.
  2. Diagnosed with postpartum OCD and mania, I experienced most of the same symptoms of postpartum psychosis. I understand the pain and fear Aimee was in when she drove her car in front of an oncoming train, which terrifies me.
  3. I started questioning myself as a mother. My son is a little over 8 months old and I’ve been extremely sick for more than half of his life.

On low days, I feel insecure about the mom I am. I feel ashamed when I sleep all day and my husband has to pick up the slack. I feel bad that I can’t handle being a full-time mom and my husband has to fork over a lot of money for a nanny. I’m scared I’ll pass on my bipolar and alcoholism to my son. I fear I’ll never be stable again.

I fear I’m failing as a mother.

So when Time Magazine asks me if I’m mom enough, how exactly am I supposed to not take it to heart?

But I’ve made it this far by being positive. By looking on the bright side. And by living my life in gratitude, so…

On balanced days, I know I’m doing my best. I believe the only failure is not trying – and oh yes, am I ever trying. I give my baby boy tons of love and attention when we’re together. I’m awesome at bath time and make Academy Award-worthy airplane sounds to get him to eat his carrots.

And we laugh – a lot. Baby giggles may possibly be the happiest thing I’ve ever experienced and I feel like a genius when I figure out how to make him laugh.

I know that my postpartum hormones are still bonking around and that it’s going to take time to fully recover. I understand the difference between self-care and selfishness. I focus on the good days and weeks I’ve experienced since he started sleeping through the night at 5 months old and have faith that I will someday reach the stability I’ve known in the past and miss so very much.

Comparing myself to a maternal ideal is futile and hurtful, so I made a list of my own personal “Mom enough’s.”

  • I researched the many risks and possibilities before making the decision to get pregnant and talked them out with my therapist, OB/GYN, husband, psychiatrist and endocrinologist, AKA, the Team.
  • The Team was so involved in our family planning that they were practically waiting outside the bathroom door while I peed on a stick.
  • I continued taking Wellbutrin and Zoloft while pregnant because it was better for my unborn child to have antidepressants in his system than be inside a mother in full bipolar relapse.
  • I didn’t kill myself or get an abortion when I was suicidally depressed and all I wanted to do was kill myself or get an abortion. Instead, I called in sick to work, locked myself in my bedroom, closed the blinds and read funny blogs on my iPhone until the Zoloft increase kicked in.
  • I stopped taking Lithium during my pregnancy, which was terrifying.
  • I saw the Team frequently throughout my pregnancy and postpartum period.
  • I breastfed – although in hindsight I should’ve gone right back on Lithium the second I had my son and never attempted breastfeeding in the first place.
  • I my windows shut to protect my baby from me.
  • I recognized that I was in trouble when my breast pump started talking to me.
  • I stopped breastfeeding after three weeks and two days at the strong suggestion of my therapist and psychiatrist. And I cried. A lot.
  • I let others care for my child so I could get sleep to try to regain my sanity.
  • I sleep trained my baby because without sleeping regularly I would never stabilize again.
  • I admitted when I was not OK and asked for help. I still do this.
  • My husband and I made the decision not to have any more children as another pregnancy and postpartum would probably kill me. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done physically, mentally and spiritually. I’m glad I did it, but I know my limits.

Bipolar moms are miracles. We are brave. We are warriors. It takes incredible courage to walk into the darkness and unknowing of pregnancy, hormones, parenthood and lack of sleep with guaranteed mental instability.

These are only my “mom enough’s.” If you’re bipolar, please don’t use my list as a measuring stick. We all do what we can do and we are all amazing.

I’d like to turn the tables on Time Magazine and ask if they’re magazine enough to write about real motherhood, about moms suffering with mental illnesses, about Aimee and her three motherless sons. About the truth and the triumphs. About the sacrifices we all make.

I’d pay five bucks for that issue.

Related Resources & Info

Postpartum Progress is the most widely-read blog on postpartum depression and all other mental illnesses related to pregnancy and childbirth. http://postpartumprogress.com

NAMI on managing pregnancy and bipolar. http://www.nami.org/Content/ContentGroups/Research/Managing_Pregnancy_and_Bipolar_Disorder.htm

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