Instead of savouring the trials and tribulations that come with caring for a newborn, at 37-years-old Helen Genito was grappling with something that no new mother ever imagines.
“I’d just had a baby. She was five-weeks-old but I didn’t feel quite right, I didn’t feel like myself and my balance wasn’t 100 per cent. My husband had taken me to two emergency departments at the time and they had said ‘there’s nothing wrong with you all your vital signs are fine’,” Genito says.
After doctors suggested the symptoms might have indicated post-partum depression Genito attended a maternity hospital for monitoring.
“But I didn’t feel depressed I didn’t want to kill myself I didn’t want to kill my baby, we had done IVF to conceive her.”
“I was there for 24 hours and got all sorts of tests done and the next day my mouth had gone off to the side. I was drooling and I couldn’t close my mouth. I was thinking I’d had a stroke,” Genito says.
But they couldn’t give her an official diagnosis.