Imagine Hope Counseling Group Blog
Inspiring Hope for Life & Relationships
To help the treatment from your provider work better, there are several things that you can do on your own:
Stay healthy and fit:
Do somthing active every day. Try to take walks or when cleared by your health care provider, go back to the gym or get back into your regular exercise regimin.
Eat healthy food and snacks. Try to make food choices that include balanced foods, instead of junk foods, sweets and salty foods.
Get as much rest as you can. Try to sleep when your baby sleeps.
Do not consume alcohol. This includes beer, wine coolers, hard liquor, or other types of alcohol. Alcohol is a depressant, which slows down your body and makes you feel more depressed in the long run. Alcohol will also interfere with any medications you might be taking for Postpartum depression.
Lower your stress:
Make sure to do recreational activities that you enjoyed before pregnancy and birth. Take a class, listen to your favorite music, meet friends out, or read a good book. Even when your time is very limited, it’s important to incorporate old hobbies and activities back into your life when you can.
Do not make any major life changes right after having a baby. These include job changes, re-locations or changing homes, etc. These kinds of changes can add more stress that is unnecessary. Having a baby is a big life change in itself, and it’s better to allow your life to resume with some sense of normalcy before introducing further changes.
Talk to your boss about going back to work. Discuss the possibility of working from home or working part-time when you first go back, which can lower stress and help you cope better with the postpartum depression.
Ask for and ACCEPT help:
Let others help around the house. This might include laundry, cleaning bathrooms, cooking meals, grocery shopping, running errands, or asking friends and family to help with the baby. Don’t feel like you need to do everything on your own to be a “good parent”. Don’t be afraid to tell people what you are needing.
Keep in touch with the people who are important to you in life and try not to isolate. Tell your partner, friends and family how you are feeling.
Take time for yourself. Along with old hobbies and recreational things, it’s important to have alone time whenever possible. This could be used for self-care (manicure, pedicure, haircut and style, reading or journaling, exercise, yoga, etc.) or for fun. Becoming a parent means constant demands for time and attention, and self-care is vital to having enough energy and motivation in your “tank” to be able to provide for a little one when needed.
Have you recognized any tips for postpartum depression that might apply to you or be helpful in your recovery process?
Joleen Watson, MS, NCC, is a therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. She enjoys doing marriage counseling, relationship counseling, couples counseling, and individual counseling. Imagine Hope also specializes in family, child and adolescent counseling and serves Indianapolis area including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Noblesville, Zionsville, Westfield, and Fishers.
Posted in Healthy Living, Imagine Hope Counseling Group, Individual Therapy, Marriage, marriage counseling, Parenting, Postpartum Depression | No Comments »
After the baby comes, women are often overwhelmed with many feelings. A mother may feel tired, happy, anxious, frustrated, in love, and blue. Sometimes all at once! A breast feeding specialist once told me, when the milk comes in, so to the tears. So many feelings!
However, PPD steps these feelings up a notch. Signs that you may be experiencing PPD are:
- Feeling depressed most of the day every day
- Feeling shame, guilt, or like a failure
- Feeling anxious or scared all the time
- Severe mood swings
Changes in daily habits are to be expected with a newborn. However, signs that you may have PPD are:
- Having little or no interest in things you normally like to do
- Feeling tired all the time
- Changes in eating habits
- Gaining or losing weight (not justified by the fact that you just had a baby)
- Having trouble sleeping or sleeping too much (not justified by the fact that you are up at strange hours tending to your baby)
- Having trouble concentrating or making decisions (not justified by the fact that you just had a baby and have little sleep)
An important sign that you need to pay attention to is how you feel about yourself or your baby.
- Are you having trouble bonding with your baby?
- Do you think of hurting yourself or your baby?
- Do you think about killing yourself?
Can having PPD affect your baby? Yes! If you are suffering from untreated PPD your baby may:
- Have trouble bonding with you
- Cry a lot
- Be delayed in development
- Show behavior problems
If you feel you may have PPD, call your health care provider right away. There are medical interventions and therapies that can help. If you are feeling suicidal or like you will harm your baby, please call 911 immediately.
Please come back tomorrow as Natalie discussed treatment options for PPD. As always, thanks for stopping by!
*Source: March of Dimes “Postpartum Feelings” from www.marchofdimes.com
Written by Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT
Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT is a licensed therapist and Registered Play Therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Alexa enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling. Alexa also does play therapy, family counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Zionsville, and Westfield
Tags: postpartum depression Posted in Emotional needs, Parenting, Womens issues | No Comments »
In honor of Mother’s Day, Imagine Hope is blogging about several different characteristics of a healthy Mom.
5. She is involved in her child’s life– but not too involved.
Sound confusing? I think for most moms and parents, it definitely is! After all, kids don’t come with a manual!
Being involved in your child’s life is so important– attending their activities, spending quality one-on-one time, learning about what is happening in your child’s life, and truly meeting your child on their level and entering their internal world through play, etc.
When does this become too much? When your involvement is inappropriate for their developmental level, when the child is expected to meet the parent’s needs and when you begin to foster dependency needs rather than allowing your child to grow up. For example, expecting your teenager to spend more time with you than their peer group and shaming them for wanting to gain independence. Or wanting your young child to play the role of comforter to you, and to provide for your need to be needed and feel loved, when they need to begin gaining autonomy (e.g., having your child sleep with you in the marital bed, when they need to learn self-soothing).
It’s such a fine line between the two, but so important in raising healthy, well-adjusted children. Mom’s have such a special role in a child’s life. For that, we truly applaud all of the Mother’s out there! Happy Mother’s Day and thank you for reading!
Joleen Watson, MS, NCC, is a therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. She enjoys doing marriage counseling, relationship counseling, couples counseling, and individual counseling. Imagine Hope also specializes in family, child and adolescent counseling and serves Indianapolis area including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Noblesville, Zionsville, Westfield, and Fishers.
Tags: characterisics of a healthy mother, mothers, Parenting, the role of a mother Posted in Family Issues, Imagine Hope Counseling Group, Individual Therapy, Love, Parenting, Relationships | No Comments »
This week before Mother’s Day we are examining what characteristics make a healthy mother. Most moms want to do their best to raise happy well- adjusted children. We are often blamed for the troubles of our children by the media, psychological theories (thanks Freud) and most of all, other mothers. The best way to inoculate our families from the harmful effects of the universe is attunement. No I am not talking about barber shop style acapella singing groups (thank goodness), but really connecting with, or being in tune with your child. Attunement is being aware of, and responding to your child. This is not an easy task. Mothers are famous for being pulled in a myriad of different directions, so staying attuned with your child takes planning and effort.
Keep your eye on the prize: Attunement
Understand that you will be distracted immediately. During pregnancy, mothers are immediately attacked by other mothers with “well meaning” questions like, “you eat gluten while gestating?”, or or “ breast or bottle?” or “stay at home or return to work?” or “will you deliver naturally, silently, in the woods and plant the placenta as fertilizer, or in a cold hard hospital bed with an epidural that will make your baby thinks it’s a rhinoceros for the first five years of its life?” It seems that you have to choose a side or all will be lost. It seems impossible that you can trust yourself and your child to become attuned to be able to decide these big decisions for yourself! Some of the star performers in the judgey child rearing world make Texas cheerleading tryouts look welcoming. These mothers have a sort of gravitational pull, like a black hole, and they will suck your intelligent confident self into the abyss never to be seen or heard from again. They will try to make you question your every move from choice of prenatal vitamins to your relationship with your grandchildren. The mommy wars are fought long and hard, but they are not winnable wars. A healthy mom knows her prize is not the admiration of other moms, but a happy well-adjusted child. Avoiding the mommy war is the only way to win it.
When you are attuned with your child, you will not need other mothers to tell you what is right for your child. You will know by communicating with your child through eye contact, conversation, gentle touch, quality time and simply being engaged. This is where you recognize facial expressions and gestures and respond to the needs of the child. That is, as long, as you put down the other distractions. Yes, that means your smart phone, portable e reader, lap top or other form of cocaine for the mind that we drift toward when we have five seconds of free time. You child knows when she is talking to you and your reply is “uh huh, uh huh, mmmmmm, just one second…” that you are not really attuned with them. They know because they perfected the move. Park the gadgets for dinner time, or car time, or time when you could actually have a discussion with your child instead of trolling their Facebook page to see what is going on.
When your child is young and has limited vocabulary, getting down on the floor and playing with your child creates wonderful attunement. Play along with your child (not sit by the child and read while he plays, that does not count). Ask your child about the play, ask how they want you to play, reflect what you see them doing while they play. This kind of activity allows children to know you are engaged in what they are doing and you find them interesting. Sometime children will appear to be disinterested in attunement. This is a developmentally appropriate response in tween to teenage years. It is also a ruse designed to throw you off course. The thing about tweens and teens is that they still crave your interest and attention. Now, they may not crawl up in your lap and want to cuddle anymore, but they still want to be heard, seen, and valued. Do not let these kids push you away. Stay attuned. It may be uncomfortable for you, but you are a mother. And as mothers, it is not our job to be comfortable.
Please stay tuned this week as Natalie and Christy continue to share characteristics of a healthy mother. As always, thanks for stopping by.
Written by Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT
Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT is a licensed therapist and Registered Play Therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Alexa enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling. Alexa also does play therapy, family counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Zionsville, and Westfield
Tags: attunement, motherhood Posted in communication, Family Issues, Parenting, Parenting Teens, Womens issues | No Comments »
I think as a society in general, we tend to focus on what we are doing “wrong” as parents. I love what we are doing this week as we focus on what a healthy Mom looks like vs. what we are all doing wrong. Today we are going to focus on discipline.
Discipline is about Teaching, not just Punishment
When we think of discipline we often think of punishment. But the actual word “disciple” comes from the word “discipline” because it is about teaching.
One of the best ways to teach your child is thru positive reinforcement. It is easy to focus on what a child is doing “wrong” when they are having negative behaviors. But if you start focusing on the positive things too (even if you have to dig a little), it will go a long way in helping them to start focusing on doing what’s positive, too. Rewarding positive behavior will guide them into thinking about positive things they can do vs. the negative.
However, let’s talk about negative behaviors. We can’t focus on the positive all the time. A healthy Mom thinks of consequences that are logical and that fit the crime. Natural consequences are the best- if you don’t do your homework, you will get a bad grade. If you don’t eat your breakfast, you’ll be hungry by 9:00 (they will live!). But if natural ones don’t exist, logical are the best. If you don’t come home by curfew, you won’t go out tomorrow night because you are not showing you are responsible enough to go out. If you slug your neighbor instead of using your words, you won’t play with your neighbors for a week to give you some time to think of another way to handle the situation. Remember, logical and natural are the best.
The most important thing to remember with discipline is being consistent and following thru. Say what you mean and mean what you say. If you tell them there will be a consequence and you don’t follow thru, they will quit believing you and won’t care about the consequence. Now there are times where you need to be flexible and open, but for the majority of the time, stick to your guns!
And lastly, don’t forget to teach. Talk to your kids about the consequences of their actions. Share with them an appropriate story from your childhood that may help them understand how your mistakes made a difference in you. Or how your good choices helped you in the end.
Remember, it’s not all about punishment, it’s about teaching (remember disciple).
My hat goes off to every Mom reading this. Our job is among the most challenging! Every day our heart walks out the door and we pray for it’s return. Hopefully, some positive discipline will make your job (and their lives) a lot better.
Thank you for reading and Happy Mother’s Day!!!
Adapted from “Positive Parenting” by Natalie Chandler. To read the entire article go to http://www.imaginehopecounseling.com/nkcblog/?p=450
Written by Natalie Chandler
Natalie Chandler, MA, LMHC is a therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Natalie enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, and couples counseling. We also specialize in family counseling, child, and adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Westfield, and Zionsville
Tags: mothers day Posted in Parenting, Parenting Teens | No Comments »
I love the scene from the movie, The Help, that Teri discussed yesterday. It’s so important to use kind/encouraging words with children. Here is another characteristic of a healthy mother:
Characteristic #2 A Healthy Mother Doesn’t Pick Favorites & Knows They Need to Love Their Children Differently
Mother’s know each of their children are separate individuals, each with their own separate emotional needs, talents and abilities. While your 1st born may have been a very special and unique and separate experience from your 3rd or 4th born, a healthy mother does not show favoritism toward any of her children.
Each child has the same household rules and consequences to abide by and to receive. However, it’s a balancing act when it comes to loving them differently. Although you have the same rules for each child, and punish/give out consequences equally between them, the way you show love will be dependent upon each child individually.
A healthy mom knows each of her children’s strengths, and understands they each need love in different ways. She knows one of her children is more contact/physical touch oriented, so she knows to play outdoors with them, versus making them stay inside with her. She knows her other child prefers to use their imagination, so she’ll build things, watch movies, and have figurine wars/tea parties with them. If she has an intellectual child, she’ll read with them, and actively listen to the things they find interesting. A healthy mother embraces their differences and doesn’t try to make her children act like each other.
If her children are complete opposites (as generally happens in a family), their differences are celebrated and the children are not compared to one another. To do so would create jealousy and inadequacy in the children.
I think this quote by Albert Einstein sums it all up: “Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
Thank you for reading! Please come back for more Characteristics of a Healthy Mother.
Written by: Tamara Wilhelm MA, LMHC, LCAC
*Tamara enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, & couples counseling at Imagine Hope. We also specialize in family counseling, child & adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Noblesville, Zionsville, Westfield & Fishers.
Tags: characteristics of a healthy mom, mothers day Posted in Family Issues, Healthy Living, Parenting | No Comments »
Mother’s Day is approaching on Sunday! I know this day can be exciting for some as they celebrate motherhood, while for others it can be painful due to loss of a mom, having a strained relationship with a mom, or having difficulty in trying to become a mom.
Regardless of your feelings on Mother’s Day, we thought it would be helpful to write about traits to help you understand what a healthy mom looks like. We know this can bring up mixed feelings of gratitude or heartache depending on your relationship with your own mother, and/ or how you have parented your own kids. We hope this will offer direction and hope in all of your relationships!
Characteristic #1: A Healthy Mother Uses Words Wisely
Words are powerful. They can cause you to feel amazing and loved, or they can cut you to the core. Being aware as a mom of how you use your words will have a huge impact on your kids.
When you use critical and shaming words and tones, kids will shrink under the impression that they are not good enough and that love is conditional. This can cause intense psychological wounds that will stay with a child for a life time.
A healthy mom will use words to encourage, teach, and praise a child. She is intentional to use loving words to redirect and discipline in a way that doesn’t cause a child harm. She focuses on a child’s behavior as being bad, instead of the child himself as bad.
A healthy mother is careful to not joke in a way that can end in pain for her child. She understands that even a joke can leave scars behind.
She speaks to her child the way she wants to be spoken to. After all, kids learn to communicate from what is modeled before them. They will learn by watching you.
We hope you understand the power of your words and choose them wisely. In the movie “The Help”, there is a classic moment where a maid repeats to a young girl over and over these words, “You is kind. You is smart. You is important.” (by Kathryn Stockett). This scene depicts the importance of connecting with your child through words. A healthy mother uses her words to show love.
Check in tomorrow for more traits of healthy moms!
Written by Teri Claassen MSW, LCSW, LCAC
Teri Claassen MSW, LCSW, LCAC is a licensed therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Teri enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling. Teri also does family counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Zionsville, and Westfield.
Posted in Family Issues, Parenting, Womens issues | No Comments »
Carry On Warrior by Glennon Doyle Melton
I do not follow many blogs, but there are some I follow regularly: Brene Brown’s Ordinarycourage.com; Jenny Lawson’s thebloggess.com; Andrea Owen’s Yourkickasslife.com and finally Glennon Melton’s Momastery.com. All of them have published wonderful useful entertaining books in the last year, so I was so excited two weeks ago when my copy of Carry On Warrior by Glennon Melton arrived in the magical brown Amazon box at my door! I immediately told my husband and sons to go do something manly because I was headed to the bathtub to read and did not want to be disturbed.
If you follow momastery.com, you are familiar with Glennon’s story. She is a mother of of three children who writes for her own popular blog site as well as Huffington Post. Even if you do not follow her, you have likely read some of her viral posts like “Don’t Carpe Deum” and “A Mountain I’m Willing to Die On”. If you have not read these posts, you should.
Glennon is someone most of us can relate to. Although she has a checkered past, she has learned from her addictions, eating disorders, recovery and redemption. She is candidly honest about her imperfect life, maternal experiences, and close relationship with God, painful marital struggles, and tender caring heart. Glennon believes that women should stop competing with being suspicious of, and stop hiding from our honest selves. Her blog is a place where we stop making parenting and marriage harder by pretending that it’s not hard. Glennon emphasizes three main thoughts through her work: She teaches us “We can do hard things” and “We belong to each other” and “Love Wins”.
I enjoyed learning more about Glennon’s story through her book. I especially enjoy hearing about parenting challenges since they make me feel more normal in my own parenting journey. Her writing is familiar and funny and feels like reading a letter from a long lost friend. The book made me laugh and cry throughout. Others are touting this book as self-help but I do not see it that way. I read it as more of a connection to another human’s amazing story.
If you are looking for a light beach read, and to regain some centeredness in the often competitive world of wifedom and motherhood, this is the book for you. And if you get a chance, read her post called For Maggie Who Lost Her Lobster. Awesome beautiful post on addiction and loss. Enjoy!
Written by Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT
Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT is a licensed therapist and Registered Play Therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Alexa enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling. Alexa also does play therapy, family counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling.
Tags: Carry On Warrior, Glennon Doyle Melton, Momastery.com Posted in addictions, Anxiety, Eating Disorders, Parenting, Relationships, Womens issues | No Comments »
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Imagine Hope BlogosphereBlogs by Imagine Hope Counselors
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Teri Claassen's Blog
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Natalie Chandler's Blog
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