After childbirth, many mothers feel very
emotional. They may feel sad, afraid, inadequate, or angry. This is
called postpartum blues or the baby blues and usually goes away within
a week. Postpartum depression lasts longer and is more severe.
The 10 to 20% who feel depressed for longer can experience the
inability to sleep or the desire to sleep much more; recurring thoughts
of either something bad happening to their baby or of doing something
to hurt the baby themselves; feeling no instinctive need to care for
the baby or feeling unable to care; and feeling guilty, mad, unhappy or
scared.
We know that massage is beneficial for mothers and for babies; in the
instance of postpartum depression, massage benefits both as well as the
relationship between the two, allowing them both to experience
positive, healing interaction. Mom gets a massage and also learns how
to share the experience with her baby.
During those first days after birth and the following first weeks, both
baby and Mom will not always sleep well and regularly. Nerves can be on
edge and it can seem like all you do as a mother is feed and diaper
your baby. A relaxing massage can soothe and calm the mother. If she is
also taught how to massage her baby, the shared experience can give
them the opportunity to bond. The baby can also find relief from
digestive problems and colic, teething, and inability to sleep.
The study ‘Massage and mother baby interaction with depressed mothers’,
carried out by Fetal and Neonatal Stress Research Group, considered
whether mothers suffering from postnatal depression would benefit from
attending baby massage classes.
One group went to five massage classes and another similar (control)
group went to a support group. At the end of the test period the
massage group had significantly less depression and better interaction
with their babies than the control group.
Soothing massage music helps us to relax. Research suggests that music
stimulates the body’s natural “feel good” chemicals (opiates and
endorphins). This stimulation results in improved blood flow, blood
pressure, pulse rate, breathing, and posture changes, many of the same
results that we see from massage. So both mother and baby can benefit
greatly from massage accompanied by massage music.
Listen to samples of massage music and learn more about how massage music can help induce deeper relaxation and therefore greater healing during a massage session. http://www.danielkobialka.com/featured-cds/massage-music/
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