Postby GreatScott » Mon Apr 30, 2018 2:11 pm
Really sorry to hear you are suffering from PND. I battled with it for months and months and didn't tell a soul. I think the previous posters are right; that it depends on your work colleagues and your boss and the nature of your work, but I found that returning to work actually helped me to get better. Having things to occupy me that didn't involve small people and nappies and cleaning up vomit meant I could actually begin to view things with perspective and become part of the 'normal' world again, if only for a few hours a week. Going to the loo without having to make provision for the safety of a crawling baby (or taking it with me) was one of the first precious things I did - ON MY OWN! I felt like a grown-up again. It actually sometimes felt like I went back to work for a rest! (And I'm still here, 23 years and two, now grown-up, babies later) So, in answer to your question, I wouldn't say anything up front but wait until you've been back a few days/weeks and see how you feel. Other mothers at work are generally very supportive, and hearing their stories can also help you heal - you're not alone, even though you probably feel as though you are. You really aren't. Laughing over the printer about shared stories of projectile vomiting and Weetabix smeared all over the cat is the perfect antidote. It meant I actually enjoyed returning home in the evening - which was the last place on earth I wanted to be when I was depressed. And babies change all the time - no 'phase' stays the same for long, which you sometimes forget when you have PND - it all seems so relentless and as if it will go on, unchanged, forever. So good luck with the return to work - don't feel guilty (if you do), use it (work) to help you find your proper place in the world again and welcome the new 'normal'. I too am willing to chat, if you want to. I know how isolating PND feels. It's important to know you are not alone, and that you will get better. Because you aren't, and you will!