Perinatal Mental Health
Perinatal mental health includes the emotional, psychological, and mental health experiences that can occur during pregnancy, postpartum, and the transition into parenthood.
While motherhood can bring joy and connection, it can also bring overwhelm, anxiety, identity shifts, emotional exhaustion, and feelings many moms never expected.
You are not alone — and support is available.
What Does “Perinatal” Mean?
The perinatal period refers to pregnancy through the first year postpartum, though emotional challenges can continue well beyond that timeline.
Perinatal mental health focuses on supporting mothers and parents through:
pregnancy
postpartum adjustment
identity changes
nervous system overwhelm
emotional regulation
transitions in motherhood
Postpartum Anxiety
Persistent worry, racing thoughts, hypervigilance, difficulty relaxing, intrusive thoughts, or feeling constantly “on edge.”
Postpartum Depression
Feelings of sadness, numbness, hopelessness, disconnection, irritability, or loss of interest in things once enjoyed.
Maternal Burnout
Emotional exhaustion, overstimulation, resentment, mental load overwhelm, and feeling depleted by the constant demands of motherhood.
Identity Shifts
Grieving old versions of yourself, struggling to recognize yourself, or feeling lost in the transition into motherhood.
Rage & Irritability
Heightened frustration, emotional overwhelm, sensory overload, or anger that feels difficult to control.
Why Perinatal Mental Health Matters
Many moms minimize their struggles because they believe:
“this is just motherhood”
“I should be grateful”
“everyone else seems to handle this better”
But struggling does not mean you are failing.
Perinatal mental health support can help you:
feel less alone
better understand your nervous system
process emotional experiences
build coping tools
reconnect with yourself
move through motherhood with more support and self-compassion