In one day my world changed
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By Sarah Hayes

My experience of Postpartum Psychosis

Although apprehensive about watching Eastenders over the coming weeks, it is a huge relief that Postpartum Psychosis will be brought out of the shadows.

I have a lot of admiration for Lacey Turner who plays Stacey in Eastenders for working with experts to portray this very misunderstood mental illness which can happen to any woman following childbirth.

In one day my world changed

Twenty one years ago I was awaiting the arrival of my son who was due on new years eve. I was a newly qualified nurse and everything in my life was exciting. I was happy, confident, always cheerful and took everything in my stride.

The Happiest Days

When my son was born I was over the moon. I had everything in my life I could possibly wish for. I looked at my beautiful baby and could not believe he was mine.

The first six days of my sons life were the happiest days of my life. I was so elated I could not sleep. I was very talkative and emotional which I put down to exhaustion following the birth.

After three nights of no sleep a midwife on the maternity ward said she would take my baby into the nursery so I could have some sleep. When I had the chance to sleep I couldn’t sleep. Instead of sleeping when I had the chance I was writing poems in the middle of the night! I also phoned my Gran to tell her how much I loved her at about 4am. I had got used to surviving on very little sleep during my pregnancy. When I qualified as a nurse I was thrown in at the deep end and used to drag myself to work after very little sleep. I was sick throughout my pregnancy and often worked for seven nights in a row, with very little sleep and being sick several times a day. I was very deprived of sleep.

The Early Signs

I somehow used to thrive on very little sleep. When I could not sleep following childbirth I was almost too well and didn’t know there was anything wrong. I wandered into the wrong rooms on the ward and the buttons on my pyjamas were all fastened wrong but I put this down to tiredness. I was discharged from hospital after five days and did not feel ready to go home. Breastfeeding was a struggle and was very sore. I also had difficulty passing water as I had a deep cut as my son was born with his hand on his head and cut me with his nails when he was born.

The first night at home was scary. Trying to do everything, there was no time to sleep. Even when I did have the chance to sleep I couldn’t switch off my mind to go to sleep. At 6am I was still awake and decided to go downstairs. I made a warm drink and tried to relax and hopefully sleep. When I sat up in bed I could see lights before my eyes and I thought my mind was packing up due to lack of sleep. I put the kettle on and then put the television on. I thought if I relaxed and watched a bit of television then I should be able to relax and hopefully sleep.

The early morning news was on the television and I saw myself and my family on the news as clear as anything. The news reader told the story of the girl who won the lottery and didn’t know she had won. There was a photo of me and my family with my son the day he was born. The headline was “the girl who won the lottery and did not know she had won”, the newsreader went on to say that someone put my numbers on for me when I went into labour and I won but did not know I had won.

I then shouted my Mum who was staying with us for one night. When she came downstairs I told her to sit down and take deep breaths as she was going to have a shock. I really believed I had won the lottery and I was pointing to the television saying look, we have won the lottery.

Entering the Unknown

My Mum looked at me and then looked at the television and was very confused. She then went upstairs to get my partner. When my Mum went upstairs I knew there was something very wrong as I was seeing lights and hearing things.

I dialled an ambulance as I knew something was very wrong. The paramedics arrived and asked me questions such as who is the Prime Minister to see if I was with it! They told my family to call the midwife out. A community midwife came out and she knew straight away what was wrong. I am very lucky that she knew what it was. She told my family I had Postpartum Psychosis. She explained to my Mum it is a severe postnatal mental illness and that I would recover.

None of us had ever heard of it even though my husband and I were both health professionals.

I remember going to the GP surgery, still thinking I had won the lottery. My GP was dressed very smartly. I thought she had dressed up for the cameras who were filming about me winning the lottery.

In the GP’s room I was so exhausted I asked if I could lie on the couch. I was living in Leicester at the time and there were no beds in the Mother and Baby Unit and I was admitted without my baby who was then six days old to a very scary looking old fashioned Psychiatric hospital where I had worked as a student nurse two years previously. It looked like a haunted house.

My Near Death Experience

I recognised some of the staff and patients on the ward. I knew where I was and knew I had just had a baby but didn’t know why I was there. Then I was given what I can only describe as mind numbing drugs as my thoughts were racing. When I walked into the lounge on the ward, a lady did a cartwheel and another patient threw herself on the floor.

I was given a bed at the bottom of a dormitory. I was separated from my six day old baby. It was so confusing, I was frightened and believed things were happening that weren’t really happening. I then saw my husband on the television being wheeled into an ambulance and I switched off the television that people were watching as I was very scared by what I was seeing.

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Sitting on a chair next to my bed at the end of the dormitory, I was crying so much that I was sick. I couldn’t work out what was happening. I called out to the nurses and a nurse stamped down the dormitory and said “Shut up Sarah, just shut up and go to sleep”. Terrified, I thought I had died. I could not work out if I was dead or alive. I just needed someone to tell me what was happening.

Then I had what I can only describe as a near death experience. I saw lights above me and was thrashing around as I felt my life slipping away from me. I was shouting out I can’t die, I’ve just had a baby and want to see him grow up.

Reproduced with permission, originally posted on sarahajanedearden.wixsite.com

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