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Perinatal Mental Health

Support for pregnancy, postpartum, and the nervous system transitions of becoming a parent.

Perinatal Mental Health and the Nervous System

​Perinatal mental health is not only a psychological experience. It's a full-body, nervous system experience. From preconception through pregnancy, birth, and the postpartum year, the nervous system is continuously adapting to profound biological, emotional, relational, and environmental changes. Understanding how the nervous system functions during this time is essential for supporting mental health in a way that is compassionate, effective, and trauma-informed.

This pillar explores how perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, birth-related stress, trauma, and adjustment challenges are rooted in nervous system physiology, not personal failure or lack of resilience. When we shift the focus from “What’s wrong with me?” to “What is my nervous system responding to?”, healing becomes more accessible and less stigmatizing.

Your body is part of the healing.

Support for perinatal mental health on this site is woven across several areas rather than contained in a single category. In addition to the resources shared here, you’ll find pregnancy- and postpartum-specific support within
BirthTouch, as well as mind–body and somatic practices that support nervous system regulation through the Mind-Body & Somatic Therapies approach. Together, these resources reflect an integrative, trauma-informed model of care that meets parents where they are during pregnancy, postpartum, and early parenting.

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Why the Nervous System Matters in the Perinatal Period

The nervous system is the body’s safety and survival system. It constantly scans for cues of safety, danger, and connection, shaping emotional states, thoughts, behaviors, and physical sensations. During the perinatal period, this system is under exceptional demand.
Hormonal shifts, sleep deprivation, identity changes, medical interventions, relational stress, and past trauma can all influence nervous system regulation. When the system becomes overwhelmed or dysregulated, symptoms such as anxiety, depression, panic, rage, dissociation, numbness, or intrusive thoughts can emerge.


These symptoms are not signs of weakness. They are adaptive responses to stress, uncertainty, and perceived threat.

Common Perinatal Mental Health Experiences Through a Nervous System Lens​​

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Trauma and the Childbearing Year

For some individuals, pregnancy, birth, or the postpartum period can activate emotional or body-based responses related to earlier life trauma. Trauma-informed perinatal mental health care recognizes the impact of prior experiences and emphasizes safety, choice, and compassionate support. Emotional reactions during this time are not a personal failure — they are understandable responses that deserve care.​​

Regulation vs. Coping: A Nervous System Shift

​Regulation-based care supports the nervous system first, allowing the mind to follow. Rather than focusing on staying calm or thinking differently, nervous system–informed approaches build flexibility, safety, and capacity for recovery.

Somatic and Nervous System–Informed Support

Trauma-informed perinatal mental health care often includes gentle, body-based practices that support nervous system regulation and a sense of safety.

A Compassionate Reframe

If you are struggling during pregnancy or postpartum, your nervous system is responding to something real. Your symptoms make sense in context. Healing does not require fixing yourself. It requires understanding, support, and regulation.

Perinatal mental health is not about returning to who you were before. It is about supporting your nervous system as it adapts to who you are becoming.

Pregnant woman looking down at her belly in golden light

Smoothies & Herbal Teas for Pregnancy and the Fourth Trimester

This gentle guide includes nourishing smoothies, herbal teas, and simple reflections designed to support mothers during pregnancy and early postpartum.

Download the guide for easy ways to nourish your body during this time of change.

Perinatal Mental Health Topics

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Perinatal Mental Health Literature

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Matrescence

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Infant Sleep

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Perinatal Mental Health Articles

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Mindfulness for New Mothers

Latest Insights + Articles

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The Power of an Internal Locus of Control and How to Develop It

An internal locus of control does not mean believing you can control everything. That’s unrealistic. Instead, it means directing your energy toward what is within your influence.

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LifeLine: An Expressive Art Practice for Integrating Life Experiences

There are many ways to manage emotions and navigate life.

When we organize our experiences visually, the nervous system often settles as our story begins to feel more coherent.

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Childhood Sexual Abuse and the Identity Shifts of Matrescence

Matrescence is a developmental passage — one that can reopen earlier chapters while inviting integration. Childhood sexual abuse and a woman’s reproductive life may be separated by years or decades. And yet traumatic memories can resurface, because they are often held in the body and mind in a non-linear way. When traumatic memories resurface, in those moments, the nervous system may respond as if the past is happening again, leading to sensations of threat, loss of control, or shutdown that...

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Infant Sleep Safety (Infant Sleep in Context - Part 1)

You're a new parent. Your baby does not seem to have the same sleep needs as you do. You were accustomed to a life that responded to effort. You worked hard. You stayed up late when needed. You nurtured a career, and when you took certain steps, the path expanded accordingly. Then a baby arrives. And suddenly the world no longer responds to planning and productivity. Your infant doesn't organize around your schedule. Sleep comes in fragments. Emotions feel amplified. You may find yourself...

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Myths About Infant Bonding and Attachment

Healthy attachment grows from repeated moments of presence, responsiveness, and repair — not from perfection. The infant nervous system learns safety over time, through consistency and attunement.

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How Emotions Are Processed In the Brain

The nervous system detects safety and threat before thought. How Emotions Are Processed in the Brain Trauma affects not only how memories are stored, but also how emotions are experienced and interpreted . For individuals with PTSD, emotional and physical symptoms often arise automatically, shaped by underlying neurobiological changes that occurred under conditions of threat. Understanding how emotions are processed in the brain can help explain why trauma reactions feel immediate, bodily,...

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Ready for Support in This Season?

You don’t have to navigate pregnancy or postpartum alone. Steady, compassionate care can help you feel more regulated, supported, and connected.

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