by EMMA HEALEY
I recently celebrated my daughter’s third birthday, with a back yard birthday party, cake, balloons and an old fashioned pass the parcel.
I spent the day in awe of just how amazing she really is, what a great little person she was growing into.
I spent the evening crying, that this was in spite of me.
My daughter’s birthday also marked the anniversary of my battle with PND. A condition affecting as many as 1 in 6 Australian mothers. That is a lot of us.
My battle with PND is hard to recall, and harder to articulate.
If I had to try, I would say that I spent the best part of two years with my head in my hands. If I try to picture myself at the time, I can see myself with my head in my hands.
Have you ever seen a program or heard a story of a woman whom up and left her children, and perhaps shaken your head in disbelief at just how someone could do that?
I know exactly what it is like to want be that woman that left, and I would have given almost anything to be the person that would tut tut in disbelief again.
My time spent with my head in my hands is over, with support and medical treatment, PND is a battle I am very fortunate to say that I have won, but it doesn’t mean that I don’t occasionally stop and think of that battle, and weep at the fight, the destruction and the loss.
Sometimes it can swallow me whole.
Moments like my daughter’s birthday.
The third birthday meant the arrival of many “babies” (read: dolls) to our house – her favorite toy. My daughter mothers them so well, changing nappies, gently cooing and rocking, clumsily shoving dummies into small plastic mouths.