Grab a cuppa Ladybelles… it’s a long one today. đ
 đ My little Bitch, Anxietyđ
Being a Mammy is hard. Â Everything changes.
Your body. Your home. Your routine. Â Your relationship. Â Your friendships. Your mind.
Everything.
But itâs worth it. Â Itâs soooooo worth it.
Yes, youâll experience exhaustion like youâve never imagined.
Yes, your hormones will be a mess for a few months (Iâd argue forever more, but Iâm no expert!).
Yes, life will never be the same again, but the love and the joys generally outweigh the negatives.
And while you might feel like youâve lost âyouâ on your journey to bring another human into world, YOU WILL return, a better, stronger, more wonderful version of yourself.
Before I had my Mini-Me 5 years ago, I thought I was on top of things. Â Iâd never really struggled with my thoughts, with my mind. Â I could sleep when I was tired. Â When I went to bed at night, my brain generally allowed me to sleep. Â I lead a ridiculously busy life and I felt invincible.
We were over the moon to find out that she was on her little way, and began painting and shopping and all the rest.  Then, at 16 weeks, my heart decided it was going to misbehave and landed me in hospital.  It misbehaved for the duration of my pregnancy.  I was put off work for the remainder, I had to give up so many things that I loved: my exercise, the show I was choreographing and (gasp) caffeine.  I went from being Everyoneâs reliable somebody, to sitting on my ever expanding bum at homeâŠ
The world carried on around me…
For the first time in my life, I struggled.

How could others know, when I didn’t know?
Itâs only now, 5 years on and another baby later, that I can recognise that I was probably, definitely, possibly dealing with anxiety and I was probably, possibly, definitely, a little bit depressed.
Have I ever been diagnosed with anything? No.
Have I ever told my Doctor I was struggling? No. Â (I was afraid theyâd take the baby off me. Â Ridiculous eh?đ )
Can I say categorically that I have struggled with my mental health, both after and during pregnancy?
Yes.
For the first time ever, I can say it, or rather, I can write it. Â
In the same way that I now know, The Him knew. Â My Mum probably knew. Â My sister has no slows on her. đ My closest friends probably knew. Â But of course, because I pretended that I was fine, no one said anything out loud. Â I convinced everyone around me, and myself, that of course I was fine.
Iâve still never said it to a Doctor. Â I have however said it to my Husband. Â And the day that I told him that I was struggling and that I didnât know what exactly was wrong with me, things began to get better. Â I still have shit days. Â Who doesnât? And even though I know on certain days that I have NOTHING to be sad about, it doesnât stop me being sad. Â There are still days and weeks where, regardless of how wonderful my life is, (and it is mostly!), I canât see past the great big clouds that seem to be getting in the way of my sunshine a little bit.
Iâve come to realise that that is not just me.
That is life.
But Iâm learning how I need to deal with it, for me, as me.
Iâm feeling good now. Â I can honestly say that 18 months after Princess was born, Iâm only recently feeling like the old me again. Â Physically and emotionally.
But the anxiety is always there.
She lurks.
She fizzes through me, usually when Iâm not stressed, ironically enough. Â It seems that adrenalin and stress keeps her at bay, and then when things are sailing along nicely and Iâm physically relaxing, she bubbles from my tummy, right into the tips of my fingers and it stays there until sheâs done.
How do I deal with her?
Writing. My blog has been my therapy, even when I didnât understand that it was. Â Also, Rescue remedy, cutting out alcohol, upping the exercise… and telling My Him.

Getting outside helps…cliched but true.
Even saying the words âIâm anxious and I donât know whyâ makes it OK. Â Once I know that itâs not just me, in my head, itâs easier to batter that little bitch back into her box.
Sheâll never go away. Sheâll sit in the box and wait until she senses my weakness again, until life seems quiet and good and this Mammy thinks sheâs got her shit together again. Â And then sheâll pop up and say âAhahahahha! Â Oh no you donât Madamâ…
And if I think back over the years, sheâs always been there. Â Hindsight is 20:20 isnât it?
I just didnât recognise who she was. Â I thought she was low blood sugar, or exhaustion, or stress. Â She was actually panic attacks and I was just so ridiculously sure of my own mental health that I didnât recognise her.
Why do I say âsheâ and not âitâ?
Because how I feel is not an IT. Â My feelings are part of ME. Â But these particular feelings are not only ME, they are a different, unwelcome little PART of me, and so I will refer to her as She, because it makes me feel like Iâm in charge. Â Iâm not afraid of her. Â Iâm just sometimes influenced by her negativity. Â But I will not give her a name. Â Sheâs not THAT significant. Â And just like my two minions, Iâm in control of her…mostly!
Iâm not sure if this makes sense. Â Maybe it doesnât. Â And Iâm very aware that someone who has suffered and been diagnosed properly with such issues, might be tutting at my ramblings, but all I can do is say how I have felt and how I feel sometimes. Â Iâm not saying that I understand depression or anxiety. Â Iâm simply saying that just because a Doctor has never typed it in someoneâs notes, it doesnât mean they havenât dealt with it.
Was it becoming a Mum that brought it to light? Â Yeah, probably. Â And a few other things over the last few years made me re-evaluate important parts of, and people in, my life.
Mammies are afraid that admitting weakness makes us weak. Â One of my most empowering moments, as a Mammy, as a wife, and as a woman, was realising that admitting weakness gives me strength.
âThereâs strength in numbersâ. âA problem shared is a problem halved etcâ.  ClichĂ©s yes,  But thereâs truth in most clichĂ©s, isnât there?
And so there we go. Â The post I never thought I would write. Â Because S-Mum has NEVER suffered from mental health problems. Â Officially. Â On the record. Â Iâve never been diagnosed, but yes I have struggled.
Maybe there is nothing to diagnose now, but in the past, if I had only had the guts, or in my case, the cop on, to realise or admit that things werenât right, a doctor might have said the words out loud.
Who knows?
She might some day.
And so be it. Â Because itâs about time that we, mums especially, should be able to admit that sometimes, itâs not all simply a phase. Â Sometimes, itâs not just tiredness. Â Sometimes, itâs not just hormones.
Sometimes, itâs something more and sometimes, we need help.
Iâm not qualified to counsel, or diagnose, or treat. Â I am not a psychologist. Â I am not a Doctor. Â I am not a councillor. Â Iâm not going to suggest that just because Iâve come to realise that I have a little Bitch called Anxiety to batter every so often, that I am an expert. Â Of course I wonât. Â That would be ridiculous. Â Just because youâve sat in a Ferarri doesnât mean you can fix one does it?
NO, so just because someone has experienced something, that doesnât mean they know what YOU should do to fix YOU.
But if you feel that you can empathise with a little too much of what Iâve written, please ask for help. Â Tell someone youâre struggling. Â Be strong and admit that you feel weak. Â Say it out loud. Â It wonât sound as ridiculous as you think it will.
And youâre allowed to be weak. Â No one is strong all of the time.
And do you see that little Bitch Anxiety? Â Sheâs only as strong as we let her be. Â Sheâs like a bully. Â If one person stands up to her, she stands her ground, but when she sees that you have back up, sheâll soon retreat to her box.
So ask for back up.
And put that bitch in her box.
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