
This post deals with postnatal depression and suicide and could be triggering for some readers.
"I felt like I was dying, and I was too scared to fall asleep because I thought I would die," Melinda McLennan told Mamamia.
The young mum from northern New South Wales had just given birth to her first baby four months earlier and was in the grip of postpartum psychosis.
While you're here, Mamamia and PANDA bring you everything you need to know about postnatal depression. Post continues after video.
She spent those early months on limited sleep, in and out of psychosis, which culminated in three days straight of not a wink of sleep.
"I always felt wired. I felt like I was high on drugs and couldn’t understand how time was passing," she said.
"I didn’t know when to eat or sleep."
Melinda described the birth of her daughter in February last year as "frightening" and "traumatic" after going over her due date, being induced and then needing an emergency caesarean – something that was definitely not in her birth plans.
While she says the hospital staff were kind and caring, they were overburdened, and within 48 hours of having her daughter, Melinda and her baby were sent home.
"I didn’t have a huge support network that lived close by, or a network that could be by my side within half an hour to provide support," the 31-year-old explained.
"The months that followed were dark and very isolating."
From the day she brought her baby home, Melinda believed something was not right and as each day passed, her grip on reality slipped further away.
Image: Supplied.
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