Advertisement



babycenter.com

Celebrity Baby Blog Newsletter

Free Weekly Newsletter

Sign up to get cute photos, exclusive giveaways, special offers and more!


you said it

"My baby self weaned despite me trying to keep up the nursing! I find it so refreshing to hear Gwen talk about how hard she works to lose weight and keep herself in top shape. She looks great and has a beautiful family."

- essi, on Gwen Stefani Says Self-Weaning Zuma ‘Felt Like a Total Rejection’

they said it

“I sit there and play princesses with my daughter, and I never told her anything about a princess, ever. Whereas I go to my brother’s house, and he’s got two boys…I walk in the front door, and I instantly get punched in the nuts.”

- Matt Damon, on Matt Damon ‘Relearning’ the Differences Between Boys and Girls


Julia Haworth’s Postpartum Depression Fears Unfounded

Portraying a mom suffering from postpartum depression proved to be emotionally draining for Coronation Street star Julia Haworth. It also left the 29-year-old actress wondering whether she would have a similar experience after welcoming her daughter Sophia Elizabeth, 6 weeks. "No one’s immune," Julia points out in a new interview with The Mirror, "but I hoped I’d be OK…luckily I am." While labor was long and difficult Sophia arrived "safe and well and that’s the main thing," Julia says. "She was worth it…I’d go through every second again." That sunny outlook extends even to her pregnancy, a state of being that Julia says she "loved."

"When people said I was blooming and blossoming, I took it as a compliment…I didn’t mind my body changing. As I got bigger I really celebrated it because it meant the baby was growing and was healthy."

Adding that she wants to be "the best mum in the world," Julia says Sophia is "the center of my life now." She is the first child for Julia and her husband Jon Wormald.

Source: The Mirror

One Response to “Julia Haworth’s Postpartum Depression Fears Unfounded”

  1. JuliaS Says:

    Congratulations on the birth of her little girl!

    It bothers me however, how little society as a whole knows about Postpartum Depression.

    PPD can develop during or after pregnancy – it can occur starting within a **year** following delivery – some women won’t develop PPD until several months or more following delivery. Certainly the more time that goes by with no symptoms following delivery, it reduces the likelihood that it will occur.

    I have dealt with PPD following 4 of my 6 children. I didn’t have a history of depression prior to childbearing. Twice it started several months following delivery. The third time within weeks and the last time started up 3 months before delivery; over a year later I am still off and on anti-depressants trying to cope with the lingering anxiety.

    The first time I didn’t even realize what it was – PPD was not something I had ever heard of 15 years ago. It was not until my second son was born over 8 years ago and I went through it a second time, that my doctor gave it a name. This was 8 months following delivery – though the symptoms had been building for a few months at this point.

    I truly hope that she will find the next year (and many more to come) to be joyful and fulfilling.

    I just wanted to point out that getting several weeks past delivery doesn’t mean you won’t develop it later on. So many new moms are given little to no information on PPD. Information that in the cases where it does become an issue, could really help them in the diagnoses and treatment.

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until the site staff has approved them.

The following types of comments will not be posted:

  • namecalling.
  • any type of discrimination.
  • explicit sexual references.
  • advertising and spam.
  • off-topic and completely unrelated to the post.

We are cautious about discussions on volatile topics such as abortion, religion, politics and race.

If you have questions, concerns, or breaking news to share, please contact us at CBBTips@gmail.com rather than posting a comment.

Feel free to agree or disagree with each other as long as you do it respectfully, remembering that we all have our own experiences and perspectives. Keep in mind that there are people on the other end reading what you write.

Comments are moderated, and will not appear on this weblog until the author has approved them.


latest photos

Family Album: The Simpson-Wentzs

Family Album: The Simpson-Wentzes

See Photos

The Stefani-Rossdales

Family Album: The Stefani-Rossdales

See Photos

The Holmes-Cruises

Family Album: The Holmes-Cruises

See Photos

The Alves-McConaugheys

Family Album: The Alves-McConaugheys

See Photos

The Watts-Schreibers

Family Album: The Watts-Schreibers

See Photos


















category archive