String&stick
WKR
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2018
- Messages
- 1,034
Praying for you both!
I agree with a few things above
1. Show her love in her primary and secondary love languages no matter what she is doing.
2. Do couples counseling along with individual counseling (you should get some too even if you don't think you need it)
3. Read up on postpartum depression. Regardless of issues prior to baby, everything could have been thrown even more for a loop with the hormone imbalance.
My biggest regret as a husband is knowing nothing about postpartum with our first child and letting my wife slide into depression and unhealthy, irrational fear. She was a completely different person until her hormones stabilized.
4. If she needs meds help her with that. My wife, my brother, and one of my pastors all take a low dose anti depressant. All for different reasons, but without it they are different people. My brother quickly realized he needed it and accepted it. My wife told my for years she would never take one as she had seen it alter who her mother was as a person. Now if she misses a few days she knows she is sliding backwards.
I had to walk through it with her and explain that it was normal and ok!
I haven't "been there" so to speak but had a good friend walk through it a year ago, and several relatives. When you think you can't stand it anymore, give it another year. If she is trying at all, keep giving it your all. Take some time for yourself, but the best think you can do for your daughter and yourself is to keep fighting. If you do that and it still doesn't work out in the end, you can respect yourself and know you did all you could.
I agree with a few things above
1. Show her love in her primary and secondary love languages no matter what she is doing.
2. Do couples counseling along with individual counseling (you should get some too even if you don't think you need it)
3. Read up on postpartum depression. Regardless of issues prior to baby, everything could have been thrown even more for a loop with the hormone imbalance.
My biggest regret as a husband is knowing nothing about postpartum with our first child and letting my wife slide into depression and unhealthy, irrational fear. She was a completely different person until her hormones stabilized.
4. If she needs meds help her with that. My wife, my brother, and one of my pastors all take a low dose anti depressant. All for different reasons, but without it they are different people. My brother quickly realized he needed it and accepted it. My wife told my for years she would never take one as she had seen it alter who her mother was as a person. Now if she misses a few days she knows she is sliding backwards.
I had to walk through it with her and explain that it was normal and ok!
I haven't "been there" so to speak but had a good friend walk through it a year ago, and several relatives. When you think you can't stand it anymore, give it another year. If she is trying at all, keep giving it your all. Take some time for yourself, but the best think you can do for your daughter and yourself is to keep fighting. If you do that and it still doesn't work out in the end, you can respect yourself and know you did all you could.