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Post Info TOPIC: Brooke Shields response to Tom


Kate Spade

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Brooke Shields response to Tom
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I don't know if this was posted. Anyway, it's Brooke Shields responding to Tom's appearance on the Today show.  It appeared in the op-ed section of the NY Times.  I personally thought it was well written and very honest.


 


I WAS hoping it wouldn't come to this, but after Tom Cruise's interview with Matt Lauer on the NBC show "Today" last week, I feel compelled to speak not just for myself but also for the hundreds of thousands of women who have suffered from postpartum depression. While Mr. Cruise says that Mr. Lauer and I do not "understand the history of psychiatry," I'm going to take a wild guess and say that Mr. Cruise has never suffered from postpartum depression. 


Postpartum depression is caused by the hormonal shifts that occur after childbirth. During pregnancy, a woman's level of estrogen and progesterone greatly increases; then, in the first 24 hours after childbirth, the amount of these hormones rapidly drops to normal, nonpregnant levels. This change in hormone levels can lead to reactions that range from restlessness and irritability to feelings of sadness and hopelessness.


I never thought I would have postpartum depression. After two years of trying to conceive and several attempts at in vitro fertilization, I thought I would be overjoyed when my daughter, Rowan Francis, was born in the spring of 2003. But instead I felt completely overwhelmed. This baby was a stranger to me. I didn't know what to do with her. I didn't feel at all joyful. I attributed feelings of doom to simple fatigue and figured that they would eventually go away. But they didn't; in fact, they got worse.


I couldn't bear the sound of Rowan crying, and I dreaded the moments my husband would bring her to me. I wanted her to disappear. I wanted to disappear. At my lowest points, I thought of swallowing a bottle of pills or jumping out the window of my apartment.


I couldn't believe it when my doctor told me that I was suffering from postpartum depression and gave me a prescription for the antidepressant Paxil. I wasn't thrilled to be taking drugs. In fact, I prematurely stopped taking them and had a relapse that almost led me to drive my car into a wall with Rowan in the backseat. But the drugs, along with weekly therapy sessions, are what saved me - and my family.


Since writing about my experiences with the disease, I have been approached by many women who have told me their stories and thanked me for opening up about a topic that is often not discussed because of fear, shame or lack of support and information. Experts estimate that one in 10 women suffer, usually in silence, with this treatable disease. We are living in an era of so-called family values, yet because almost all of the postnatal focus is on the baby, mothers are overlooked and left behind to endure what can be very dark times.


And comments like those made by Tom Cruise are a disservice to mothers everywhere. To suggest that I was wrong to take drugs to deal with my depression, and that instead I should have taken vitamins and exercised shows an utter lack of understanding about postpartum depression and childbirth in general.


If any good can come of Mr. Cruise's ridiculous rant, let's hope that it gives much-needed attention to a serious disease. Perhaps now is the time to call on doctors, particularly obstetricians and pediatricians, to screen for postpartum depression. After all, during the first three months after childbirth, you see a pediatrician at least three times. While pediatricians are trained to take care of children, it would make sense for them to talk with new mothers, ask questions and inform them of the symptoms and treatment should they show signs of postpartum depression.


In a strange way, it was comforting to me when my obstetrician told me that my feelings of extreme despair and my suicidal thoughts were directly tied to a biochemical shift in my body. Once we admit that postpartum is a serious medical condition, then the treatment becomes more available and socially acceptable. With a doctor's care, I have since tapered off the medication, but without it, I wouldn't have become the loving parent I am today.


So, there you have it. It's not the history of psychiatry, but it is my history, personal and real.



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Dooney & Bourke

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WOW.  good for her!  it was so brave of her to come forward in the first place to talk about PPD.  i'm sure she has helped a lot of new mothers.  tom cruise can take his vitamins and go to hell!

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Gucci

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that's great. Its such a stark contrast between how eloquently she comes across, compared to Tom Cruise's raving lunacy.

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Gucci

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YOU GO BROOKE!!! 

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Coach

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Brooke's response was very honest and dealt with Tom's rude and uneducated remarks in a mature and well written way.  This is a disease that while I have never dealt with it, is obvious to me that it exists.  Nobody wants to have postpartum depression and nobody wants to have to take pills, but that is unfortunately what happens.  What if someone were to listen to Tom's stupid advice and take vitamins and exercise instead of treating this disease?  They would probably end up killing themself and/or the baby.  Hopefully, if that-god forbid-were to happen, the family could sue Tom Cruise.  This is an evil thing to say, but I would love to see what would happen in Tom were to get some sort of illness.  Would he take his own advice and take vitamins and exercise or would he immediately head to the doctor for his own prescriptions drugs?  What an asshole!

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Hermes

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Good for her - I saw her interview & thought it was so honest & brave. I don't have kids, but I know lots of my friends / sister, etc that have gone through hard times as a new mom & are afraid to talk about it for fear that everyone will think they are a bad mom. I am so glad / hope this opens dialogue about this - I have always love tom cruise - now not so much. What a clueless ass.

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Coach

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good for her for sticking up for herself.  she seems to have a lot of class and integrity, and deservedly is the one who comes up smelling like a rose in this whole thing.  another example of the high road usually being the best path. 

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Coach

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Wow, that was so brave of Brooke to stand up for herself like that. Now if all goes according to plan, Tom and Katie will get married, Katie will have a baby, and she'll discover she's suffering from PPD and Tom will tell her to exercise and take vitamins....ha!

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Coach

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Her response is really good.  She is admitting that while she too didn't like the idea of taking drugs, it was the quickest and BEST alternative for her to overcome the depression.


Tom Cruise's way to overcome it, giving him the overly generous assumption that his way works at all, would have taken more effort, emotional strength and time that a new mommy just doesn't have.  Sorry, while I agree that vitamins and exercise are crucial, by the time she was diagnosed, Shields was too far gone for that regimen to work fast enough to get her feeling better for her daughter's sake. 


Maybe his advice is better saved for someone just beginning to feel depressed that actually has leisure time and doesn't have a newborn who needs mommy asap!  Seriously, where Tom Cruise has gone wrong in all this media hype is basically by not admitting that taking Paxil IS the best alternative to the marathon that Shields would have had to endure if she had tried to overcome it without medical help.  Cruise probably would have gotten a much calmer response if he had simply left his advice as a suggestion or a more natural alternative to look into, not as the only way as he bombastically stated.  He needs a lesson on diplomacy for sure.



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Chanel

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Wow - very eloquent and well said. She definitely deserves some kind of recognition for standing up for herself and other mothers who suffer from ppd. I dig TC as an actor but I don't care if I ever hear him open his big, fat mouth again.

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Marc Jacobs

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I was going to post this! I'm glad someone else did. She is very classy indeed. And you know, I really think she's right--there's no doubt that there are many people who know more about PPD than they did before this whole affair. Probably there were a lot of people who never even knew it existed, and now they're aware of it.


Vitamins and exercise, huh? What an ignorant pile of crap.



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Dooney & Bourke

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I know this was a while ago.... but I want to say duh tom...


Vitamins alters your body chemistry just like Paxil alters your body chemistry.


Am I going crazy or is he?



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