Yep. :) Sort of both.
Anxiety, absolutely. Read below the line. The 'sort of' is...Not PPD, but antepardum depression (just like PPD except you get it WHILE you're pregnant, and then it gets better after birth).
1) antepardum depression
I honestly didn't know anything was wrong until the day he was born. I felt so much more like myself!!!! OMG...What a relief! I'm ME again! And then every day after that for a few weeks it was the same experience as my hormones leveled out. Each day was this monumental thing, though. I couldn't imagine feeling *more* like myself until the next day came, and I felt even more like myself!
I didn't catch it while pregnant because antepardum depression runs in my family. All the women of my family are USED to (and joke about) "the suicide hours". Usually in the evening, where you literally have to hold onto a chair, or rock back and forth with your fingernails cutting into your palms (yes, bleeding cutting), just sobbing uncontrollably, trying to keep yourself from killing yourself. In my family, there's something of a 'sundowning' effect. It's almost always in the evening, and lasts for 1-2 hours. I wanted to die, every night, for over 7 months.
Since women ALWAYS talk about mood swings while pregnant, and the suicide hours are something that are known to be a part of pregnancy in my family... it never occurred to me to mention it to anyone until after my son was born.
My OB and midwife were horrified.
The conversation went something like this:
I look up at clock in hospital and realize it's 9pm, and am so startled that I don't even notice the two nurses in the room.
"Oh my god! I don't feel like killing myself!"
"Beg pardon?"
"Oh. You know. The suicide hours. They just came and went and I didn't feel like dying! How amazing is that? God I love not being pregnant." whereupon I did some rather overgushy new mom cuddling of my son feeling simply radiant sooooo happy he was in the world and I was halfway sane again.
That statement had a whole flurry of professionals in my room over the next 12 hours.
Sooooo.... come to find "normal pregnancy" in my family is also known as severe antepardum depression with strong suicidal tendencies etc so forth.
Come to find (I'm the first in my generation to be pregnant) they now have meds for that! That are safe to take while pregnant. So my siblings and cousins all know that now. Huzzah.
_________________________________________________________
2) I'm ADHD -which is enough in and of itself, as anxiety which would be classified as a disorder unto itself if it were alone, is often a common side effect of adhd, like SPD, giftedness, and occasionally eidetic memory, but quasi-eidetic memory is more common- and picked up a perky little case of PTSD over a decade ago. (Sheesh, if I'm going to have so many letters after my name I'd prefer there to be a phd in there somewhere!)
Anxiety is a way of life.
Full on panic attacks are flat out normal for ADHD toddlers and either adolescents or teens (we usually start having to relearn how to deal with panic attacks between ages 9-11, but some don't have to until late puberty instead of early puberty. It's the hormones. We learned as toddlers, but have to relearn with the adult stew in our bloodstream. Also, again at menopause if you're female, because the hormones exit stage left. Anyhow, chaotic times.). They're one of the causes for our infamous meltdowns/tantrums during those ages. Full body flailing, tantrums that can last for an hour plus as toddlers, and up to several hours as preteens. My son (also ADHD) is going through that right now. Poor little guy. It's one of the reasons you parent ADHD kids differently from neurotypical kids. If you have anxiety as an ADULT, imagine being hit/spanked or yelled at during an attack! ((I'll bet even the idea makes your head spin, no?)). It takes a few years, but you learn the coping mechanisms to deal with them.
It's one of the bene's I had, already being used to panic attacks, when I picked up PTSD several years later. I'd already LEARNED that "everything is temporary" ((although someone I knew who'd been through the same thing a few months earlier is in my forever debt (thankyou sgt k!!!) for reminding me of that, early on in a laundry room at 3am in that particular journey! I'd already learned all the coping mechanisms, and what worked best for me... I just had to apply them a little differently.
The biggest difference, for me, was that the causality was different. I was well aware of what usually brought me to the edge and over in ADHD-land. Now it was a time to figure out new triggers and new work-arounds. (Like I slept with the lights on for about 6 years.)
Having my son added in a whole new set of triggers. LOL. My son has died every single grusome death imaginable - several time over - in my mind. He's also been raped, molested, tortured, joined a "penguin cult" (where he sewed all of his fingers together... I know, I know, but since I'm fine with most forms of rebellion I was trying to figure out something I wouldn't be fine with / what he could do to rebel... and that's one of the things my mind came up with.), been on bridges that have collapsed as we drove over them, pick a natural disaster, any natural disaster... became a child soldier, contracted every major illness out there (from aids to encephalitis), had major brain injury (from changing his personality all the way to becoming a vegetable), been forgotten by me in the: car, house, dresser, hotel, sitters... been kidnaped, been taken by CPS, hated me...
Of course, none of these things (touch wood) have ever happened. That's the thing about anxiety. The mind tumbles down rabbit holes.
People often comment / wonder about how I can be such a laid back / mellow parent.
Ha! That's because I've already been a weeping rocking mess in private! It took about 2 years, but my mind finally ran out of nuclear disasters and penguin cults. Now, some not so great things HAVE happened in my son's life (we were in the hospital off and on for 6mo last year, and by on, I mean extreme measures and inpatient for weeks, like 5 or 6, at a time)... but (touch wood) the options my mind had already chased down and beaten with a stick were worst case scenarios. Life isn't usually about worst case scenarios. So everything that HAS happened, has been sooooo much better than I imagined it to be. Ha. I got this.
For ME the biggest help was recognizing the taste of adrenaline. It's a metallic taste that happens in the back of your throat (like sucking on a penny, but it literally fills up the whole back of your throat, and not on your tongue like sucking on a penny for real). When all of a sudden I taste metal, I know I'm in for a wild ride.
That's sooooooo unbelievably helpful, because it's a WARNING system. The panic doesn't come on for a good 30 seconds, and my mind doesn't spin out... so I can brace myself. And if I can brace myself, I'm good, and the panic attack doesn't "win". I stay (mostly) in control. Granted, I can't SLEEP... but I'm not rocking and sobbing, or racing around, either. It's like the difference between catching a wave, and being bowled over by one.
Anyhow... just my stuff. :)