“My first panic attack happened around the second trimester. When my daughter was born via emergency C-section, the panic attacks became recurring. By the time she was 3 months old, I was having multiple attacks per day and hadn't sleep more than two or three hours per night, every night. I didn't understand what was wrong with me. I loved my baby, didn't want to hurt her, so I couldn't identify with the images I saw on the internet about postpartum depression. Those of the women* looking away from their babies. I was the opposite. I was so wired on adrenaline, I couldn't look away from her, I couldn't shut down.
In Germany, I was diagnosed with Wochenbettdepression. The term didn't speak to me. I felt anxious, panicked, but not depressed. When I made my first appointment with a psychiatrist, she suggested I take medication or else I would end up in a clinic. This wasn't anything like I had heard of back home, and so I immediately panicked, became afraid they would take my baby away, walked away and pretended I was fine again.
At one point I began to fantasize about being run over by a car. I wanted to be injured enough to need an operation, so I could finally get some sleep. I needed an escape. I thought it would be this way forever.
The journey to heal was long, with many ups and downs. I was broken into a million pieces, and though it sounds cliché, I did put myself together again and became stronger than before. Throughout it all, I knew I didn't want other moms* to feel as lonely and hopeless as I did back then. 3 years later, l founded Afloat to offer international moms* in Germany a space to talk about this, to get support, and to connect with mental health resources. I'm also a volunteer with Postpartum Support International, an organization that helped me while I was in the worst of it: To understand that it's common, and that my symptoms, though they felt unique to me, were cookie-cutter, and because of that, I would get better. And with the right help, I did.”