Postpartum
The fourth trimester is the hardest — recovery, mental health, and how to be the partner she needs right now.
Baby Blues vs PPD — A Partner's Guide to Knowing the Difference
Baby blues peak around day 5 and resolve by week 2. If she's still struggling after 2 weeks — or getting worse — it may be PPD. Early intervention changes everything, and you may be the first to notice.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
A Partner's Guide to Postpartum Body Changes and Exercise
Her body changed to grow and deliver your baby. Some changes are temporary, some are permanent, and none of them are problems to fix. Diastasis recti affects 60% of women at 6 weeks postpartum and responds well to rehabilitation. Weight loss takes 6–12 months, and 'bouncing back' is a toxic myth. Your job is to support her recovery without commenting on her body, protect her from diet culture, and help create the conditions for her to move her body when she's ready.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-18
A Partner's Guide to Breastfeeding Challenges
Breastfeeding challenges hit most women at some point. Mastitis can feel like the flu and needs prompt attention. Clogged ducts are painful and need careful management. Pumping is a logistical burden that you can directly lighten. Combination feeding is valid and not a failure. Weaning is an emotional and hormonal transition that deserves your full support. You can't fix the breastfeeding — but you can fix everything around it.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-18
Breastfeeding — How Partners Can Actually Help
Breastfeeding is a full-time job that only she can do — but everything around it is where you come in. Managing the household, protecting her rest, supporting her decisions, and handling the emotional complexity of feeding a baby make you an essential part of her breastfeeding success.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
A Partner's Guide to Pelvic Floor Recovery After Birth
Her pelvic floor stretched to 3 times its resting length during vaginal delivery and was strained by pregnancy even with a cesarean. Up to 50% of women have some pelvic floor dysfunction after birth — including incontinence, prolapse, and pain. Pelvic floor PT is the gold standard treatment. Your role: normalize it, support treatment, handle logistics, and never make her feel embarrassed about symptoms she can't control.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-18
When Does Her Period Come Back After Birth? What Partners Need to Know
Her period may return in 6 weeks or 18+ months depending on breastfeeding. The critical fact: she can ovulate BEFORE her first period returns, meaning pregnancy is possible even without a period.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
Physical Recovery After Birth — How Partners Can Help
Postpartum physical recovery involves healing from childbirth, hormonal upheaval, pelvic floor rehabilitation, and managing pain — all while caring for a newborn on no sleep. Your hands-on practical help isn't optional, it's essential to her healing.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
Postpartum Hair Loss — What Partners Should Know
Hair loss starting 2-4 months postpartum is normal and temporary. It's caused by the estrogen drop after birth. It can be emotionally devastating on top of everything else. Be gentle.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
ການສູນເสຍ PPD — ຄວາມຄິດທີ່ລົງລັບ, ຄວາມງຸດງິນ, ແລະອິດສະຖານທີ່ເປັນຜູ້Elບໍ່ທີ່ໃໝ່
ສະຖານທີ່ສິນທິສຸຂະພາບຈາກການເອົາໃຈສູນເສຍແມ່ນສະຖານທີ່ລວມຄວາມວິຈາລະນະ, OCD, ຄວາມຄິດທີ່ລົງລັບ, ຄວາມງຸດງິນ, PTSD, ແລະຄວາມຈິດຈິດສູນເສຍ — ບໍ່ແມ່ນແຕ່ຄວາມບົວບົວ. ການເຂົ້າໃຈສະຖານທີ່ສິນທິສຸຂະພາບຈາກການເອົາໃຈສູນເສຍແບ່ງສະຖານທີ່ສົມດຸນສົມດຸນສົມດຸນສົມດຸນສົມດຸນ.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
Postpartum Rage — How Partners Can Help (Without Making It Worse)
Postpartum rage — explosive anger, irritability, simmering fury — is often PPD or PPA wearing a different mask. She needs help, not an argument. De-escalate, don't defend.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
ສະໜັບສະໜູນການດູແລຕົວເອງຂອງເຘີ — ນອນ, ຜູ້ເຂອນແຂກ, ແລະການຫາຊ່ວຍ
ການດູແລຕົວເອງຂອງເຘີແມ່ນຄວາມບິດບັດຂອງເຈົ້າໃຫ້ປ້ອງກັນ. ການຈັດການເວລານອນ, ຂອບແຂກສຳລັບຜູ້ເຂອນແຂກ, ລະບຽບອາຫານ, ແລະການຂໍຊ່ວຍບໍ່ແມ່ນບໍ່ແມ່ນສິ່ງເພິ່ມເຕີມ — ແມ່ນສະຖານທີ່ທີ່ກຳນົດວ່າເຘີຈະຟື້ນຟູຫຼືລົບລົງ.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
A Partner's Guide to Sex and Intimacy After Baby
Most providers recommend waiting at least 6 weeks for intercourse, but many women aren't ready then — and that's normal. Low libido is driven by hormones, exhaustion, pain, body image, and the massive psychological shift of new parenthood. Pain during sex is common and treatable. There is no timeline for when she 'should' want sex. Your job is patience, zero pressure, emotional connection, and letting her lead.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-18
Postpartum Recovery Timeline — What Partners Should Expect
The 6-week checkup is not the finish line. Full postpartum recovery takes 6–12 months minimum, and some changes are permanent. Understanding the realistic timeline helps you calibrate your expectations and your support to what she actually needs.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16
The 6-Week Checkup — How Partners Can Advocate for Better Care
The 6-week checkup is often inadequate — 15 minutes to evaluate physical recovery, mental health, breastfeeding, pelvic floor, and contraception. Help her prepare and advocate for thorough care.
5 questions covered · Updated 2026-02-16