
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.


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

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.

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.
Latest Insights + Articles

DBT Check the Facts: Separating What Happened From What We Assume
The Check the Facts exercise forces you to slow down and consider other interpretations of a situation that is causing you distress. You take a step back before reacting, then review your own thougths and feelings about the situation, consider other interpretations about the situation, and then consider more useful and skillful thoughts and feelings about the situation.

The DBT House: A Practical Way to Understand and Use DBT Skills
The DBT House is a simple, body-based way to understand how DBT skills work together. By organizing skills as parts of a house—beginning with safety and regulation and building upward toward choice, perspective, and balance—this model offers a practical map for using DBT skills in everyday life.

DARVO and Smear Campaigns: "They're Burning All the Witches, Even if You Aren't One"
Sexual assault survivors face a second wave of trauma when they become targets of online smear campaigns and smear books. Smear campaigns and smear books aim to discredit survivors, distort the truth, and influence public perception. The smears shame and silence victims and protect perpetrators. In order to get the truth out, Chanel Miller and Christine Blasey Ford wrote their own books about the personal impact of sexual assault and also the devastating effects of the traumatic aftermath

DBT Interpersonal Effectiveness Skills: Communicating Needs While Maintaining Self-Respect
Learning to communicate needs clearly while maintaining self-respect in relationships. Relationships are one of the most common sources of emotional distress. Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Interpersonal Effectiveness skills help people communicate more clearly, set boundaries, and navigate conflict while emphasizing that you maintain your self-respect and attempt to maintain connection. These skills are especially helpful when emotions are strong and relationships feel strained. What Are...

Meet Your Future Self Through Expressive Arts: A Somatic Exercise for Healing and Self-Trust
Connecting with your future self can be accessed via your lived experience in your body. This expressive arts somatic exercise invites you to meet your future self through gentle movement, creative expression, and embodied awareness. By engaging sensation, imagination, and art-making together, this practice supports nervous system regulation, self-trust, and emotional integration in a way that feels grounded, accessible, and trauma-informed.

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.





