On 13th March 2013, a 44-year-old New York woman named Cynthia Wachenheim took her own life and attempted to take the life of her 10-month-old son.
Fortunately, baby Keston survived.
Before Wachenheim ended her life, she wrote a long letter to her family. In the letter, she said she was scared that her son was autistic and blamed herself for two falls Keston had recently taken.
She thought those falls may have led to seizures and she thought that would affect her son for the rest of his life. “I love you. I’m making you suffer,” she wrote in the 13-page letter.
Wachenheim’s friends and family were shocked by the lawyer’s death. They described her as a “highly educated, socially conscious woman who had been active in a women’s group in her synagogue” who was on leave from her $120,000-a-year job as an attorney.
So what was it that made Cynthia change so suddenly? What would make the first-time mother want to take her own life and that of her son?
Investigators now believe Cynthia was suffering from a mental health condition called postpartum psychosis (also known as puerperal psychosis). Postpartum psychosis is an incredibly rare illness that occurs in one in every 1000 women who give birth. Usually those who suffer lose touch with reality and start believing things that are not true.