Announcing the 4th Annual Mother’s Day Rally for Moms’ Mental Health

postpartum depression mother's day rallyOne of the most exciting things I get to do all year here at Postpartum Progress is work on the Mother’s Day Rally for Moms’ Mental Health. If you don’t know what it is, the rally is our annual event on Mother’s Day that brings attention to postpartum depression. We highlight 24 women, most of whom have suffered PPD (and related illnesses), women who are authors and bloggers with wide influence who will share their stories and their wisdom for 24 hours straight, starting at 12:01am on Mother’s Day.

I’m very please to announce the list of participants in our 4th Annual Mother’s Day Rally for Moms’ Mental Health. I’m so proud and excited to have each of these women here with us on May 13th. Please mark your calendars and get ready to read some beautiful, inspiring, funny, heartbreaking, hopeful and honest things about new motherhood and postpartum depression.

4th Annual Mother’s Day Rally for Moms’ Mental Health Roster

1. Fadra Nally, All Things Fadra & Charitable Influence (among others), @allthingsfadra
2. Dawn Greene, Break of Dawn, @mississippiDawn
3. Ilina Ewen, Dirt & Noise, @ilinaewen
4. Alexandra Rosas, Good Day Regular People, @gdrpempress
5. Jennifer, Bipolar Mom Life
6. Kathleen Schmidt, KMSPR, @bookgirl96
7. Jenni Chiu, Mommy Nani Booboo, @mommynanibooboo
8. Jill Williams Krause, Baby Rabies, @babyrabies
9. Jenna Hatfield, Stop, Drop & Blog and BlogHer, @firemom
10. Erin Margolin, Erin Margolin, @erinmargolin
11. Stephanie Precourt, Adventures in Babywearing, @babysteph
12. Victoria Costello, Huffington Post, @vcpsych
13. Katie Sluiter, Sluiter Nation, @ksluiter
14. Joey Fortman, Real Mom Media, @joeyfortman
15. Jonna Rubin, Jonniker, @jonniker
16. Robin Farr, Farewell Stranger, @farewellstrangr
17. Lauren Hale, My Postpartum Voice, @unxpctdblessing
18. Miranda Wicker, Not Super Just Mom, @notsuperjustmom
19. Mary McCarthy, Pajamas and Coffee, @marymac
20. Jenna Farelyn, Made More Beautiful, @frelle
21. Katherine Stone, Postpartum Progress and Babble, @postpartumprogr
22. TBD
23. TBD
24. TBD
Did I miss anybody? Probably, because this is a monumental task to manage. But SO WORTH IT! Every year the Rally helps break down the stigma even further and help the public see that mothers with postpartum depression are, first and foremost, just mothers. Every day people.
See you on the 13th!

Get A Free Screening Today On National Depression Screening Day

Today is National Depression Screening Day!  Get a free mental health check-up at http://www.HelpYourselfHelpOthers.org. On the website, you will have an opportunity to find a local in-person screening event or take an anonymous screening online. The screening provides important insight into symptoms of depression and offers treatment and referral information, if necessary.

Everyone experiences stress, sadness and anxiety from time to time – it’s part of life.  But when changes in mood interfere your ability to work, sleep, eat, and enjoy once pleasurable activities, it could be a sign of depression. To see if you are at risk, you can take a free, anonymous screening or find a local site offering in-person screenings today, National Depression Screening Day. Visi thttp://www.HelpYourselfHelpOthers.org and take the first step to better health.

Strong Start Day: How You Can Ask For Support (A Letter)

postpartum depression awarenessHere’s the letter I will be sending out to multitudes of people tomorrow, including most likely you, for Strong Start Day.  I hope that you, too, will consider sending this letter to as many people as possible to urge them to donate to Postpartum Progress Inc. to support women’s health and mental health.  You can make it personal.  Make the letter your own. Talk about your own experience and how Postpartum Progress has helped you.  (Oh, and please let us know if you’re going to reach out!)  PLEASE join us and spread this far and wide this week:

[Read more...]

On Blogging, Popularity Contests & Why I QUIT!

Last night I received an email telling me I'm up for the Circle of Moms Top 25 Mental Wellness Blogs. You'd think that would make me happy, but it didn't really. In fact, I immediately felt sad once I understood what was involved.

I've been blogging for seven years now (Postpartum Progress' 7th anniversary is in July – wahoo!), and to be honest I'm completely over contests in which you get named the best in some area of social media because you were able to get the most people to vote for you. Websites create contests like these for one reason: to drive traffic. They tell you that you're up for some award, and that the way to win is to send everyone you know to their site — not yours — to vote for you. What's more, they want you to send people to their site to vote EVERY DAY. Not just once, but over and over and over. I guess this must increase their traffic enough that they become more attractive to advertisers.

I'm announcing publicly that I'm not going to do that. Just not going to. It's silly. No. More. I quit.

What good does it do for me to drive friends and family and people I hardly know up the wall so that some other website can get a lot of traffic? What are we doing?! Everyone I know who has to beg for votes is uncomfortable the entire time they are doing it. So why do we do it?

While I think the other Top Mental Wellness nominees are very deserving and I support them being recognized 100%, I really wish that organizations would just recognize them for their work PERIOD, without requiring them or me to hustle ourselves for votes. Why not just point out what great work people are doing and leave it at that? And I'm not calling out Circle of Moms for doing this, because they are just doing what EVERYONE else is doing.

While I'm at it, I also refuse to drive everyone crazy trying to get more "clout" at places like Klout. While I appreciate the fact that Klout recognizes I have some influence with my particular audience, I have ZERO plans to spend every day all day tweeting just so that I can increase my clout. That doesn't help me help women with PPD, which is my mission. To get more social media clout, I'd need to tweet nonstop, get as many people as possible to follow me on Twitter regardless of whether they care about postpartum depression or what I write about, get them to talk to me as much as possible, etc. That's not what Twitter is about to me. It's about being able to have authentic conversations and engage with people in a very easy way, and I love it. I want it to stay that way.

Sorry, but I'm not going to stay up all night blogging. I'm not going to take my phone to bed with me so that I can continue tweeting into the night. In fact, my smartphone has never entered my bedroom. Ever. That's where I sleep, not where I try to conquer the world by staying up past what is a healthy bedtime for me so that I can ratchet up higher numbers. Honestly, I cannot let myself be tricked into thinking that if I give up rest, or down time, or time when I'm not social media-ing myself to death I'll somehow become rich and famous. I just want to talk to you, the person reading this right now. I like you and want to know you and am so glad you are here. That's what matters to me.

I love blogging. I love bloggers. I love social media people. I love the internet. I love what we are able to do, that our words can stretch across thousands of miles to make someone else feel understood and supported. I love that we are able to use our voices, and that no one can take that away from us. That's amazing.

I also love when the work I do is recognized based on merit. I'd be lying if I said I didn't. It would be no fun to sit at your computer hour after hour, day after day, and never hear from a single soul that what you are doing is having some impact with at least somebody. I was so proud to become a WebMD Health Hero in 2008, and to be recognized as among the top ten depression sites by Psych Central, and to win the Bloganthropy Award last year, because those things were based on merit. It meant a group of people who knew my work, and knew intimately the arena in which I do that work, felt it was good enough to be recognized in some way. This makes me proud, often gives me an opportunity to talk to new people about the cause of women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, and makes me eager to strive towards becoming way way way better at what I do.

I rarely feel good when the work I do is recognized based on the number of votes I am able to gin up. I don't want to have to beg you to "Pick me! Pick me! Have you voted for me yet? Huh?! Have you?!" I don't want to have to outmaneuver fellow women bloggers I respect and care about.

So, I say thank you, truly, to Circle of Moms for recognizing that I am a decent Mental Wellness blogger. I say to my fellow 24 nominees that you are all wonderful, and different, and special in your own right and it doesn't matter whether you are #1 or #25 or #50 because you are helping people and being courageous. I honor you for it and I wish others would honor you for the work alone, and not for which of you has the best get out the vote campaign. You deserve better than that. And finally, I say this: don't vote for me.

You will no longer see me asking for votes for these various contests. I can't do it anymore. It tires me. It's soul sucking. I'm not going to do it. If someone recognizes what we do here for the impact it has on mothers and families, or for innovative ideas, or for the writing, or for positively affecting mental health or reducing stigma, I will share it with you FOR SURE, but as for the rest of it … I quit.

Daily Hope

Daily Hopeis a special service created specifically for those of you who are currently suffering from postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety, postpartum OCD, antenatal depression or related illnesses.

I know that many of you don’t have access to support groups or the best specialists. You may not have people around you that understand. Need some extra hope each day from people who DO get it? Someone to shine a light towards the end of the tunnel? That’s Daily Hope! Sign up at the link below and you will receive an email each day with some inspiration and encouragement for getting through perinatal mood & anxiety disorders (PMADs).

The messages will come from me, as well as leading authors and bloggers on perinatal mood and anxiety disorders and parenting.

So! To sign up for Postpartum Progress Daily Hope, click here.

Have a friend that you think could use this, or a patient? Be sure to let them know!! If you join, you can opt out (unsubscribe) at any time, and you are not required to give your last name.

Oh,and for you survivors and clinicians out there, if you’d like to join the people listed above and share your own favorite quote or other item of inspiration, send it to me at stonecallis [at] msn [dot] com, and your item may be included in a future Daily Hope email. Be sure to include a link to your blog or website in what you send to me, so that I’ll be able to link back to you if you’d like. (One caveat: Don’t send me a tidbit where you are trying to sell something, with the exception of course of your book. If you do, there’s no chance that it will be included in Daily Hope emails.)

I’m looking forward to providing some daily inspiration for everyone out there who is suffering at this very minute.

Daily Hope and Postpartum Progress the Blog are services of Postpartum Progress Inc. the Nonprofit, which is working to vastly improve the support and services available to women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, primarily through the use of technology.

If You Think the Arizona Shooting Was About Politics & Discourse, I Think You’re Wrong

I am nearly in tears. I am shaking. I've got to calm down. I know I do. I'm just not good at this breathing thing. Once I get riled up, I'm terrible at getting … well … riled down.

I have sat back these last few days and watched as the media has gone on and on about politics. So-and-so said this and that's why people were killed in Arizona. So-and-so used that language and that's why a young man committed violent acts in Tucson. I have watched people I respect in the blogosphere relentlessly pointing the finger at those with different political views than theirs, people they never liked in the first place, without stopping for one second to acknowledge that those on their own side of the aisle use the same kind of political rhetoric and imagery all the time.

It finally came to a head for me this morning as I decided to respond to a poll on BlogHer about the Arizona shooting. As I answered each question, I became more and more upset. The questions asked included one on which political parties/groups (Conservatives, Liberals, Democrats, Republicans, Tea Party) use the most violent discourse. Another was on whether last weekend's events will affect the political future of Sarah Palin.

Really? REALLY?!??!?

Yes, people died. They sure did. Horribly. It sickens me still. Why did they die? Perhaps a main reason is because people who knew that a young man was seriously disturbed either wouldn't help him or couldn't help him. Perhaps that's it. But our country will CONTINUE TO IGNORE (yes, I'm shouting) the sorry state of our mental health system so that we can focus instead on the juicy argument of who has used what kind of imagery on their website?

Really? REALLY?!?!?!?!?!?!?

Here was my comment on BlogHer about the poll:

I have to say this poll frustrates me. In fact, it makes me mad.

It completely plays into to the media frenzy over whether politicians' language caused the shooting in Arizona. There is ZERO evidence to that effect thus far. In fact, the only information we have is that Jared Loughner wasn't particularly aligned with any political party.

Why are there no questions in the poll about mental health, and whether Jared's lack of mental health care (and the country's lack of good mental health care as a whole) was a major factor in the shooting? Why are there no questions about whether BlogHer members will pay more attention in the future to people who show evidence of instability and push for them to receive the help they need? Why are there no questions about whether we need better legislation to ensure people can access mental health services, and whether people would vote for someone who supports that type of legislation?

Instead, the poll seems designed to produce results that one political group can use against another in future elections. While I do agree that we need more civility in politics on both sides of the aisle, is that topic directly connected to Jared Loughner and his heinous acts last weekend?

I love BlogHer. They have been 1,000% supportive of women with postpartum depression and related illnesses. They have always been very thoughtful about mental health, and they have always allowed me to use their amazing forum to provide information to their readers on PPD. I will be grateful to them and loyal to them forever. I appreciate that they were just floating a quick poll on the politics related to this event. And I appreciate Elisa Camahort Page's quick and thoughtful response to my comment. This really isn't about BlogHer in any way. My anger arises from how media and pundits have driven the discourse on the shooting, and turned it into political football when we could be having a needed and meaningful conversation about mental health. The poll just brought it to a head in my mind.

Here's what I want people to know:

1. Mental illness and violence are not directly correlated. Most people with mental illness are not violent.

2. It is not appropriate for leaders and members of the media to further stigma by using words like "nutcase" and "lunatic" and "wacko" over and over this week on the airwaves and in print.

3. Many people in America who have mental illness have limited or no access to good health care providers and services.

4. Because of our laws, it is difficult to obtain care for people of legal age who have severe mental illness.

5. Even if you do suggest help, and even if you can get someone access to it, it doesn't mean they'll accept it.

We need to stop talking about Sarah Palin, for God's sake, and start talking about this. We need to talk about funding better services. We need to discuss the fine line between being able to commit someone who may be a danger to himself or others and also respecting people's individual human rights and civil liberties. We need to discuss why mental health and physical health are still treated separately in our country, despite passage of the Mental Health Parity Act. We need to talk about stigma, and how it prevents people from seeking help for treatable illnesses.

Really. REALLY.

P.S. I hope you'll now hop over to read my article on the Arizona shooting over at ParentDish today. I connect to some really great opinion pieces that have been written by people this week who DO get the point, and some interesting data from the Huffington Post on mental health services (or the lack thereof) in Pima County, Arizona. Please go there and comment.

P.P.S. Update (Wed afternoon):

Oh, and to everyone who reads this/comments here, please let me say I respect you. That is very important to me. I don't think I communicated that enough in my post. In fact, I'm sure I didn't. I'm upset, because I worry so much that mental health is being obscured. But I'm not mad at you if you think I'm wrong, I'm not mad at you even if I think you're wrong, I don't hate you or anyone who disagrees with me. I don't feel that you shouldn't have an opinion or the freedom to share it. None of those things. I have just felt the conversation of this horrible event slipping to a discussion of a bunch of people (our politicians) who often behave poorly, and whose poor behavior may not have had anything whatsoever to do with this shooting. I hope that makes some sense. Thanks for your patience and understanding.

P.P.P.S. Update (Thursday morning):

After having such an amazing and engaging discussion with all of you, I've changed my mind. No one is wrong. We are all right. We each view what happened in different ways. We can have all of these conversations, if they make us better able to help and understand each other. Thanks y'all. I have the best readers on the planet.

2010 Mother's Day Rally Wrap-Up

Postpartum Progress is like my 3rd child. I carry it around with me every day. It's part of who I am. You can imagine then, that it can be tough to give it over to someone else. Or 23 someone-elses for that matter.

A few weeks before Mother's Day, letters from the participants start coming in. I sit and read them and am continually surprised by these women's stories and how each chooses to tell them. I see so many common themes.

On one side, there are healthcare professionals telling us that it's okay to be imperfect and that we have to give ourselves a break. That our kids are going to turn out alright in the end. They encourage us to reach out for professional help if we have any of the symptoms of postpartum depression or anxiety or OCD or PTSD or psychosis. They even share that sometimes, despite their best efforts, there are women that can't or won't accept the help they offer. I'm reminded that we could use so many more providers like them.

And then there are the mamas who, when they're sick, can't begin to give themselves a break no matter what anyone says. Some of whom summon up the courage to reach out to healthcare pros who then proceed to completely blow it. Others who, thankfully, had excellent doctors and supportive family members and who began to mend as quickly as humanly possible. I read the stories of the ones who are still suffering today and are only now half-convinced that they really will get better. (They will.) And then there are those who have made it to the other side and can look back with amazement and awe at the strength they never knew they had. The ones that shout from the rooftops so that others will be better prepared and won't suffer alone.

These women are a cross-section of the world out there … the internet-connected one at least. And they are the tip of the perinatal mood and anxiety disorder iceberg, a leviathan that stretches across race, education levels, cultures and paychecks.

If you are reading this and you are somewhere afloat on the iceberg, be heartened. These are just a few of the women who understand what you are going through. They are all around you and you just don't know it yet.

Links to the Amazing Participants of the 2010 Mother's Day Online Rally for Moms' Mental Health

12:01am My introduction (with video)

1am Amy Gagliardi, Lily's Kids Inc.

2am Sera, Laughing Through The Chaos

3am Meeka Centiman, LCSW, Postpartum Resource Center of Kansas

4am Julie Hersh, Struck by Living

5am Teresa Twomey, PSI Connecticut

6am Ann Douglas, author of "The Mother of All" series of parenting books

7am Adrienne Griffen, Postpartum Support Virginia

8am Victoria Mason, The Mummy Chronicles

9am Meagan Francis, The Happiest Mom

10am Alison Palmer, Elliot Hospital

11am Allison McDonald, No Time for Flash Cards

12pm SarahViz, In the Trenches of Mommyhood

1pm Mindy Roberts, The Mommy Blog & Momversation

2pm Ninotchka Beavers, NinotchkaBeavers.com

3pm Suzanne, Pretty Swell

4pm Marlene Freeman, MD, MGH Center for Women's Mental Health

5pm Alexis Lesa, depressionsandconfessions

6pm Tamra Hood, Surprisingly Sane

7pm Blair, Heir to Blair

8pm Jessica Zucker, PhD, PBS' This Emotional Life

9pm Casey Mullins, Moosh In Indy

10pm Amber Koter, Beyond Postpartum

11pm Katherine Stone, Postpartum Progress

Sera: On Healing from Postpartum Depression

Dear New Moms,

It's been nearly two years to the day since I experienced some of my darkest, most difficult, unexpectedly challenging and at times heartbreaking days.

I don't know where you're at in your postpartum journey, but from what I've found in talking with many of my own friends, as well as other women who've had children, so many of us struggle way more than we are willing to admit. I'm writing this in hopes that you will see you're not alone and that you don't suffer by yourself. No one talks about what could happen after you have a baby. It seems all we hear about are rainbows and butterflies and cute little stories of this and that. And if you're knee-deep in a postpartum mood disorder, hearing stories like that makes you want to hurl.

So, here's my little take on the reality that can, and often does, happen to women when they bring their babies home.

It was two years ago that I brought my beautiful and perfectly healthy baby girl, Kaylee, home from the hospital. What I anticipated to be some of the most wonderful and happy days of my life were, to be honest, nothing short of a huge disappointment and the beginning of a long downward spiral for myself and my little family.

Long before I had Kaylee, I made up my mind that we wouldn't have a hard time adjusting. Since being a mother was something I'd always wanted, I pretty much assumed it would all come naturally and I'd get the hang of it quickly.

I couldn't have been more wrong.

We dealt with struggles breastfeeding, Kaylee decided she was way too cool for naps and I had a pretty traumatic physical recovery from giving birth. Within her first four days of life, my pain spiraled out of control to the point where my husband literally had to carry me from my bed to the toilet to use the bathroom. My dignity was nowhere to be found. I couldn't even turn over in bed without being in serious pain. I could not sleep, no matter how bad I wanted to. I remember telling myself that I may never sleep again. I really believed that.

Four days postpartum I had the first panic attack of my life, and I seriously thought that I might be dying. It was terrifying. And utterly humiliating, as my family saw the whole thing.

I went three months before being diagnosed with postpartum depression. Antidepressants got me back on track, thankfully, and I'm someone who can say I made it through.

During my battle I remember feeling things like a loss of hope that I'd ever feel better. I was exhausted, cranky, mean and did not feel like myself. I was resentful that I had such limited involvement in my daughter's life for the first week because I was hardly able to function myself. I still have guilt about the way I treated my husband. The things I said to him … the way I treated him. It makes me shutter just thinking about it.

I remember feeling crazy because I was convinced my child was going to die in her sleep. I'd get up 20 times a night to make sure she was still breathing. I was constantly on edge, I had anxiety levels that shot through the roof, and my husband sat there wondering what in the hell happened to his wife, because I sure as heck wasn't the woman he married.

I didn't think I'd ever go back to feeling like myself. So many days I wished for the carefree feelings I had before I had Kaylee. It felt like I was constantly worrying about her. Worrying about her health. Worrying that she was okay. Worrying that I was doing everything right. Worrying that people were judging me. worrying that she may not like me.

I was a miserable human being and I tried to hide that from the world. I tried to act like everything was okay and I wanted to give the impression that I had my shit together, but I was nowhere near having it together.

I think many of my problems stemmed from having these expectations that never came to fruition. My ideal notion of motherhood had been shattered to pieces. And while I had a healthy little girl who was thriving, I felt like a complete failure and I was truly convinced the "old me" was gone.

I want you to hear this. Really hear this.

When you become a mother, you will never be the same woman you were before you had a child. You will change in so many ways. You will worry more. You might get angry more. You'll lose your patience. You'll have days when you want your old life back.

And that's okay. Because you'll also learn that your heart will hold more love than you every thought possible.

There are countless women who have been through what you are going through. You may be sad, angry, anxious, overwhelmed, crying all day long, unable to see joy in things you used to, or maybe you're having scary thoughts that terrify the crap out of you.

No matter what it is you're going through, please believe me when I say that you're not crazy. Please believe me when I tell you that you have nothing to be ashamed of. Your brain gets so whacked out hormonally during pregnancy and after birth, and there's not a damn thing you can do about that. I have no doubt that whatever you are going through right now, there are countless other women who have gone through something very similar.

Please believe me when I say that you do not have to suffer.

You deserve to be happy. You deserve to be well. And you will get there.

It may very well be that people around you won't understand you. One of the best things you can do it to educate yourself and friends and family about the symptoms of postpartum depression and anxiety, and don't be afraid to be your own advocate.

If you decide to go to therapy, I can't stress enough the importance of finding someone who is trained in and understands the complexity of postpartum mood disorders.

As someone who went through a complete nightmare and made it through to the other side, I'm here to tell you that you can make it too. Two years later I still remember what happened, but it doesn't seem so harsh. The memories aren't as vivid, and in fact, those really scary memories fade more and more each day

You'll never be able to erase what happened to you or your family, but you can heal. You can be well.

Being able to tell my story, to share my experience, to admit some things that I'm not proud of — all of that — has helped me to heal. In fact, the more I talk about it, the more I realize how many women have been suffering in silence, and it's stirred up such a passion within me to advocate for women, to fight for screening, education and treatment, and to do everything I possibly can to help eliminate stigmas attached to postpartum depression and other postpartum mood disorders.

I'm thankful I got help when I did because I think my daughter is none the wiser about what happened. We have an amazing bond and I love her to pieces. I am well. My baby is well. My family is well.

And I want nothing but the very same thing for you.

Sera is the author of Laughing Through the Chaos, a blog about finding the humor in the struggles of motherhood, among many other things. She is a social worker and an advocate for postpartum mood disorder awareness. She is also a very big fan of chocolate and happy pills.

2nd Annual Mother's Day Rally for Moms' Mental Health This Sunday!

Below is thenews release for the 2010 Mother's Day Rally for Moms' Mental Health, happening this Sunday and featuring all new letter writers this year.(Also, here's a link to last year's event, which featured such bloggers as Catherine Connors from Her Bad Mother, Rita Arens from BlogHer and Surrender, Dorothy and Therese Borchard from Beyond Blue.) Can't wait!!

To join in, just show up here on Sunday and read all the wonderful letters about the importance of maternal mental health. And, if you're new here,welcome to Postpartum Progress!!

2nd ANNUAL MOTHER’S DAY ONLINE RALLY FOR MOMS’ MENTAL HEALTH TO FEATURE

TOP MOMMY BLOGGERS & AUTHORS

May 4, 2010 – This Mother’s Day, the 2nd annual Mother’s Day Rally for Moms’ Mental Health will be held online, featuring 24 open letters to new mothers on the importance of maternal mental health. On May 9th, Postpartum Progress will post a different “Letter to New Moms” each hour on the hour for 24 hours straight, each letter offering personal stories, humor, experience or tips on the important of mental health during pregnancy and postpartum. All of the letters will be written by survivors of and experts on postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety and postpartum psychosis, as well as others who care about the emotional well-being of moms and moms-to-be. Postpartum Progress is the most widely-read blog in the United States on postpartum depression.

Participants in the 2010 Mother’s Day Rally for Moms’ Mental Health include:

· Melinda Roberts, author of the blog The Mommy Blog, named one of the Top 50 Mommy Blogs by Babble.com, a regular panelist at Momversation.com and author of the book “Mommy Confidential: Adventures from the Wonderbelly of Motherhood

· Ann Douglas, author of “The Mother of All Parenting Books” and “The Mother of All Baby Books: The Ultimate Guide to Your Baby’s First Year” among many others

· Allison McDonald, author of the blog No Time for Flashcards

· Casey Mullins, author of the blog Moosh in Indy

· Marlene Freeman, MD, psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital’s Center for Women’s Mental Health and vice-editor-in-chief of the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry

· “Blair”, author of the blog Heir to Blair

Postpartum Progress, founded in 2004, is the most comprehensive peer resource available for pregnant and new mothers suffering from perinatal mood and anxiety disorders. It has been ranked as one of the top 10 mental health blogs on the internet by PsychCentral.com and Blogs.com and has been featured on Mamapedia, BlogHer, PBS’ This Emotional Life and Health.com among others.

Full Participant List:

  1. Melinda Roberts, author of the blog The Mommy Blog, named one of the top 50 mommy blogs by Babble.com, a regular contributor to Momversation.com and author of the book “Mommy Confidential: Adventures from the Wonderbelly of Motherhood”
  2. Meagan Francis, author of the blog The Happiest Mom
  3. Casey Mullins, author of the blog Moosh in Indy
  4. Blair, author of the blog Heir to Blair, an editor’s pick at thebump.com
  5. Sarah Visbeek, author of the blog In the Trenches of Mommyhood
  6. Allison McDonald, author of the blog No Time for Flashcards and contributor to FamilyEducation.com
  7. Ann Douglas, author of “The Mother of All Parenting Books” and “The Mother of All Baby Books”
  8. Victoria Mason, author of the blog The Mummy Chronicles
  9. Suzanne, author of the blog Pretty Swell
  10. Sera, author of the blog Laughing Through the Chaos
  11. Tamra, author of the blog Surprisingly Sane
  12. Julie Hersh, author of the book Struck by Living: From Depression to Hope
  13. Jessica Zucker, PhD, psychologist and contributor to PBS’ This Emotional Life
  14. Marlene Freeman, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Women’s Mental Health
  15. Meeka Centimano, LCSW, social worker and founder of Postpartum Resource Center of Kansas
  16. Teresa Twomey, author of Understanding Postpartum Psychosis: A Temporary Madness
  17. Alison Palmer, RN, Elliot Hospital Postpartum Emotional Support Program (NH)
  18. Adrienne Griffin, founder of Postpartum Support of Virginia
  19. Alexis, author of the blog Depressions and Confessions
  20. Amber Koter, author of the blog Beyond Postpartum
  21. Ninotchka Beavers, author of the blog Cease Cows, Life is Short!
  22. Amy Gagliardi, MD
  23. Katherine Stone, author of the blog Postpartum Progress, guest editor on postpartum depression for BlogHer.com

Annual Mother's Day Rally

The Postpartum Progress Annual Mother’s Day Rally for Mom’s Mental Health was started in 2009. It is a 24-hour celebration of the importance of emotional health for new mothers. Each year on Mother’s Day I post one letter each hour for 24 hours straight. These letters to new mothers are written by survivors of and expertson perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, as well as by others who care about the mental health of moms. Many arenationally-recognized, award-winningfemale bloggers and parenting authors. This event is always an inspiration and source of encouragement and hope to current sufferers and survivors alike, and is another service of our nonprofit, Postpartum Progress Inc.

You can get some encouragement any day of the year by clicking the links below to read any of the Mother’s Day Rally letters!

2011 Rally Team:

My intro (video)

Kimberly, All Work & No Play Makes Mommy Go Something Something

Maria Lianos-Carbone, AMotherWorld

Jacqueline Green, Great Parenting Practices

Joey Fortman, Real Moms Media

Sonia Murdock, Postpartum Resource Center of New York

Emily Elling, DesignHerMomma

Molly Balint, Mommycoddle

Kate Kripke

Molly Shalz, A Day in Mollywood

Morra Aarons-Mele, Women and Work

Susan Petcher, Learned Happiness

Sharon DeVellis, The Yummy Mummy Club

Heather King, The Extraordinary Ordinary

Nish Weiseth, The Outdoor Wife & A Deeper Story

Rebecca Odes, The New Mom Blog & Babble

Grace Parson, Our Arms Wide Open

Becky Harks, Mommy Wants Vodka & Band Back Together

Katie Sluiter, Sluiter Nation

Kristen Howerton, Rage Against the Minivan

Katherine Stone, Postpartum Progress

Morgan Shanahan, The 818

Janice Croze, 5 Minutes for Mom

Arianne Segerman, To Think Is to Create

2010 Rally Team:

My introduction (with video)

Amy Gagliardi, Lily’s Kids Inc.

Sera, Laughing Through The Chaos

Meeka Centiman, LCSW, Postpartum Resource Center of Kansas

Julie Hersh, Struck by Living

Teresa Twomey, PSI Connecticut

Ann Douglas, author of “The Mother of All” series of parenting books

Adrienne Griffen, Postpartum Support Virginia

Victoria Mason, The Mummy Chronicles

Meagan Francis, The Happiest Mom

Alison Palmer, Elliot Hospital

Allison McDonald, No Time for Flash Cards

Sarah Visbeek, In the Trenches of Mommyhood

Mindy Roberts, The Mommy Blog & Momversation

Ninotchka Beavers, NinotchkaBeavers.com

Suzanne, Pretty Swell

Marlene Freeman, MD, MGH Center for Women’s Mental Health

Alexis Lesa, depressionsandconfessions

Tamra Hood, Surprisingly Sane

Blair, Heir to Blair

Jessica Zucker, PhD, PBS’ This Emotional Life

Casey Mullins, Moosh In Indy

Amber Koter, Beyond Postpartum

Katherine Stone, Postpartum Progress

2009 Rally Team

Sophie in the Moonlight

Sarah Pond – Mama2Mama

Julie Green – UpUp the Blog

Catherine Connors – Her Bad Mother

Diane Sanford

Adrienne Martini – martinimade

Therese Borchard – Beyond Blue

Deb Arora – Missives from Suburbia

Katherine Stone – Postpartum Progress

Vicki Glembocki – Blunt Force Mama

Ann Dunnewold

Rita Arens – Surrender, Dorothy

Lauren Hale – Sharing the Journey

Karen Kleiman- Postpartum Stress Center

Leslie – Mrs. Flinger

Tara Mock

Stefanie Wilder-Taylor – Baby on Bored

Dora Thorn – Spin Me I Pulsate

John McManamy – Knowledge is Necessity

Trisha Ashworth & Amy Nobile

Ivy Shih-Leung – Ivy’s PPD Blog

Sue McRoberts – Totally New Moms

Susan Stone – Perinatal Pro

Erika Krull – Psych Central

Rally Kickoff

If you have any questions or comments about the Mother’s Day Rally, or would like to join a future team, please email me at postpartumprogress@gmail.com.