
“I want you to help me, you’re family”: A relational approach to women's experience of distress and recovery in the perinatal period
Author(s) -
Abi Enlander,
Laura M. Simonds,
Paul Hanna
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
feminism and psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.056
H-Index - 53
eISSN - 1461-7161
pISSN - 0959-3535
DOI - 10.1177/09593535211047792
Subject(s) - feeling , distress , psychology , context (archaeology) , developmental psychology , mental health , interpersonal communication , period (music) , social psychology , clinical psychology , psychotherapist , paleontology , biology , physics , acoustics
Theoretical approaches have tended to understand perinatal distress through either individual or socio-cultural factors. In contrast, Natasha Mauthner proposed a relational model that understands perinatal distress in the context of interpersonal relationships. This study aims to build on Mauthner's work to explore how women speak about their relationships in connection to their stories of perinatal distress and recovery. Eight women were interviewed for the study. All women had at least one child under the age of three and self-identified as having experienced distress in the perinatal period. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and analyzed using Voice Centred Relational Analysis. Four broad themes were identified: (i) the role of practical support, (ii) the role of emotional support, (iii) relational dynamics, and (iv) the role of socio-cultural norms. Whilst some women experienced practical and emotional support in their relationships, those who did not linked a lack of support to their feelings of distress. Relationships were also found to reinforce unhelpful social norms around motherhood and mental health, as well as offering a space to resist norms and create wider discourses about what it means to be a mother. This study suggests that organizations supporting women in the perinatal period should focus on women's relational needs and consider the cultural discourses of motherhood that they perpetuate.