Birth: The Effects of a Complicated Start in Life #AtoZChallenge

Hi everyone and welcome to my letter B post in the #AtoZChallenge. I’m doing this challenge on healing past hurts. Today, I want to go far into my past: I want to talk about the effects of a complicated birth.

As regular readers know, I was born prematurely and spent the first three months of my life in hospital. Of course, I have no conscious memories of this time, but that doesn’t mean my complicated start in life didn’t have an impact. There is evidence that many people who were born prematurely or otherwise had a difficult start to life, experience attachment problems into adulthood. Now of course I didn’t have the most positive childhood either and there is no way of knowing whether I would still have attachment issues had my parents been well-attuned to me. Of course, this is also a difficult question, since my parents experienced their own trauma having me prematurely.

The thing remains though, a child who was born prematurely, spends time in a clinical setting that they should’ve spent literally inside their mother’s body. There are attempts to lessen the burden this has on children (and parents). For example, kangarooing, in which a baby experiences skin-to-skin contact with their parents, is encouraged as soon as it is possible. However, for preemies and other NICU graduates who are now adults, this may not have been the case. Many older NICU graduates hardly saw or heard their parents for the first few weeks to months of their life. My parents, thankfully, lived in the same city I was in the neonatal unit in, so they were able to visit often.

One thing that haunts me though, and I’ve mentioned this several times, is the effect my being medically complex from birth on left on my parents’ attachment to me. Like I said, whether I would’ve experienced attachment issues had my parents not mistreated me as a child, is a difficult question because one of the reasons they treated me so poorly is their difficulty coping with my being disabled. My father quite literally asked the doctor whether it’d make sense to keep me alive after I’d had a brain bleed a few weeks after birth.

It’s telling, in my opinion, that when you look up “birth trauma” online, what comes up most frequently is not the effects a child’s own start in life could’ve had on them, but the effects of complicated childbirth on parents. And like I said, one goes hand-in-hand with the other.

6 thoughts on “Birth: The Effects of a Complicated Start in Life #AtoZChallenge

    1. Yes I know. I wonder how that might’ve made you (and me) more vulnerable to developing DID. I mean, I thankfully wasn’t subjected to the kind of abuse you endured, but I still experience many dissociative symptoms as you know.

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  1. I don’t understand why people tell kids stuff like what your father said! Why did you need to know? On a lesser note, my mother confessed she’d cried when discovering she was pregnant with me because she had just started a new job she really loved. Why did I need to know this? Sheesh!

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    1. Thanks for validating me. I’m so sorry your Mom told you this. In my own case, I would’ve probably known even if my father hadn’t literally told me, because my parents were always adamant that a child needs to prove they were worth raising by being successful as an adult.

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  2. I have never really considered how being preemie impacts the babies. But that’s mostly because I always heard about it via my mom, who worked in the NICU for a time. And now I know two other nurses who work in the NICU. Sorry about your parents.

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