PPD – Kelly

March 19, 2013

I have been exploring Postpartum Depression for a long time. I believe my mother had it when I was a baby. I believe I had it after my first and third babies were born.

So, I am sharing a few stories. They may come in quick succession or they may come over a few weeks or months.This first one is likely the most dramatic. I have been sitting on this story for some time. I decided it was time to share. In some of the stories I have changed some identifying details but the stories are real.

Kelly

I met Kelly in the late 1990’s at the Murray Hill Players on East 36th Street in Manhattan. Tuesday evenings, actors gathered to read new plays while the playwrights listened to their words spoken out loud. Kelly was a bit younger than I. She lived with her boyfriend. I was married with a toddler.  We both lived near the theatre so we would walk home together and we would talk.

I am a nurturer. I was a second mom to my little sister. I started babysitting in the neighborhood when I was eleven years old. When I went off to college I started really ogling pregnant women enviously.  I earned the reputation as Earth Mother in my twenties.  I cared better for some of my cousins than their own mothers did. When I finally had my own children I drank each of them in. I studied them. I nursed them. I fell in love everyday.  For my second career I chose to become a lactation consultant, a career that allowed me to guide other mothers to follow their instincts and build relationships with their babies. That I can guide some of these mothers to nurse their babies into toddlerhood is a great gift. But it doesn’t always go that way.

Kelly and Joel got married and I had another baby. Kelly’s office was on Wall Street.  On September 11 she was there. She stood outside of her office building.  She watched as papers blew about like confetti. She brought dust-covered people into her lobby for water and comfort, for safety. This triggered in her the desire to be a parent.   She was hesitant as she told me she and Joel were planning to have a baby.

She told me, “ I may not be able to breastfeed.”

“Why not? Of course you can,” I assured her.

“I have been on Prozac for six years,” was her reply.

“I will look into it,” I promised.

Summer 2002 was the time I would sit the exam to become a Lactation Consultant. I still had so much to learn. Soon Kelly was pregnant and still on Prozac.  I contacted my colleague whose husband was a physician with a special interest in suicide prevention. At that time there was not much research on breastfeeding and Prozac.  Margot assured me it was more important for a mother to be alive than to be breastfeeding. Her words were a foreshadow that I could not even imagine.

When Kelly was about seven months pregnant she asked me to be at her birth. I was so excited and honored. On July 30 Kelly called to say she was in labor and that I should meet her at New York University Hospital.  A bit past midnight on July 1 a rush of excitement pulsed through me as her baby crowned.  I watched as her dark, hairy little head seemed to soften and move with a gentle force as Kelly opened up like a tulip. The bolt of energy that rushed through me as I witnessed a life come into the world kept me flying for weeks. This was the first time I had been present at a birth other than my own.

The next day I bought a pink outfit and brought my girls to see the new baby. While I was there a young intern stopped in to go over her medical record.

“Are you on medication?” he asked her.

“Yes, Prozac,” she answered as she gazed into Katie’s new eyes.

“Are you breast-feeding?”

“Yes.”

“OK, then, no Prozac, “ he said as he turned and exited the room. I remember the sound of his feet echoing down the hall on the white tiles.

I didn’t know then what the impact of stopping Prozac could be. I didn’t understand the postpartum physiology. As it turns out Prozac is considered safe with breastfeeding.

When Kelly called a few days later and asked if Chloe and I could stay with her and Katie because “my doctor says I am racy and she wants to admit me into the hospital but I told her I did not want to go and that I would make sure I am not alone and that I will have a schedule full of people hanging out with Katie and me,” I did not understand that she really could not be alone. Not for a moment. I did not understand.

When Kelly talked faster than usual and laughed louder than usual and started finding coincidences in all the numbers in her life I did not understand.

Three weeks later, Kelly, Joel and Katie moved out of their Manhattan one-bedroom walk-up apartment into a newly purchased house in the suburbs of New Jersey. Kelly said it was good that Joel was getting his MBA. Even though it meant he worked all day and went to school three nights a week. I didn’t know that Kelly had a fear of driving. I didn’t know that all of her friends with babies were in Manhattan.

I worried that most every time we spoke on the phone she cried.  She told me, “I have told Katie I am so proud of her and I love her more than my own mom told me in my whole life.” I felt helpless being so far away.

I didn’t know that Kelly had started taking Prozac again at Thanksgiving. I didn’t know how long it takes for Prozac to move through the body and begin its balancing act.

I did know that when I received a phone call on December 11 telling me that someone named Kelly had stepped in front of a commuter train in New Jersey I knew that was my Kelly.

9 Responses to “PPD – Kelly”


  1. Awwwww… Leigh Anne… I can only imagine what it’s been like for you to bear that burden all these years. My heart goes out to Kelly and what could have been, to Katie who lost her mother, Joel who lost his wife, to all of Kelly’s family and friends, and to you, who’s nurturing heart has been so pained. Pained, and yet motivated. I’m heartened to know that you have not let Kelly die in vain, but have attempted to piece together the bits information and make sense of them, so that you can help others. Thank you for sharing this.

  2. Sharon Says:

    How sad and avoidable. We know so much more now than we used to. Thanks for sharing this.

  3. Stacy Says:

    I am so sorry Leigh Anne….that is heartbreaking and I can imagine how that has weighed on your heart all these years. Thanks for sharing.

  4. karen p Says:

    wow… sad. i’m sorry that happened to your friend. i’m glad you’re a lactation consultant though; you help so many people, even though you sometimes have to endure these awful situations. RIP kelly.

  5. pauliegirl Says:

    You know so much now. So much. I dearly hope that you do not suffer from any guilt. I imagine this pivotal event informs your interactions with all the mothers you work with. I have no doubt you have helped so many.

  6. Norma Says:

    None of this tragedy is your fault, Leigh Anne. How sad! But I am dumfounded.This was so avoidable. Why didn’t the doctors follow her closely? so many questions! As a women with depression, Kelly was at risk of having an episode after her baby was born. Needless to say, she probably suffered from posttraumatic stress syndrome, too, after 911.
    We’ve learned a lot since then, but not enough…

  7. Katy Says:

    I was not prepared for that ending. I’m so sorry Leigh Anne. I can’t imagine what that was like.

  8. Alison Kalfus Says:

    leigh ann, I remember when this happened. you wrote about it beautifully.
    love,
    Alison

  9. Joy Rose Says:

    Thank you Leigh Ann – We should do some reposts… Let’s talk. JR


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