J.
S.,
Maybe your therapist is right, but not necessarily. I'll never forget when I was pregnant with my first and I mentioned to one of my friends how I was crying all the time, but "that's normal, right?" She gave me this odd look and slowly shook her head, saying, that no, she actually didn't have the kind of crying spells I was talking about. I would cry over nothing- I don't mean over something trivial like a Hallmark commercial, I mean I would start crying without any kind of trigger, and it would turn into sobbing that I couldn't stop. I remember almost throwing up after 45 minutes of weeping,and feeling too paralyzed to even go to my husband who was just downstairs.
Anyway, I talked with my midwife, who happens to also be a psychologist,and she took my depression very seriously, and told me that it was not normal, and could indeed be a precursor to PPD. Here are the steps I took; they were successful, I did not end up with post partum depression at all. I had no depression with my second pregnancy, by the way.
1. Be open about it with your close friends and family. They can't help you if they don't know to look for it's signs.
2. Talk with those close friends/family about how they can specifically support you.
3. Eat a handful of walnuts every day- there's something or other in there that helps. Wish I could remember what it was!
4. Try to eat salmon (high in Omega-3, I think) or take fish oil once or twice a week. There was a study done to look at the effects of eating fish on some other aspect of health and they accidentally discovered that it greatly reduced depression.
5. Get OUTSIDE for some exercise, regularly. I'm terrible at remembering details, but I think it has to do with seratonins you get from the sun plus whatever your body produces when you exercise. So go for a brisk walk, not a stroll.
6. Process with intent anything that may be causing you anxiety. Getting it out in the open and then addressing it is important.
7. Have a plan for post partum. Not something sort of vague, but specific. Who will be with you when you go home? How long are they available? What can they do to help?
8. I want to reiterate number one and number 2. My midwife had a very serious conversation with my husband, while I was present, that it was HIS job to monitor how I was doing. She explained that when someone is depressed, they may not know it, may not want to talk about it, or may try to minimize it.
I did all of the above religiously, in hopes that I would not need to medicate. It worked!
Good luck. I hope what you're having turns out not to be full blown depression, but just the normal anxiety that comes and goes with expecting a child. I'm sure you'll get responses from moms who say they cried at the drop of a hat because their hormones were out of whack, but that is different from having deep sadness.
Good luck to you. You can get through this.
J.