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Postpartum Crying Spells: Baby Blues or Something More?
It's day four postpartum, and you cannot stop crying. You're crying while feeding the baby. Crying in the shower. Crying when your partner asks how you're feeling.
You're crying for no reason at all—and then crying harder because you feel ridiculous.
Everyone keeps telling you this is normal—the "baby blues," they say. It'll pass. Your hormones are just adjusting.
But as the crying continues into week two, then week three, you start to wonder: Is this still the baby blues? Or is it something more?
Here's what you need to know about postpartum crying, when it's normal, and when it's time to get help.
What Are the Baby Blues?
The "baby blues" affect 70-80% of new mothers. They typically start 2-3 days after delivery and involve:
Crying spells that come out of nowhere Mood swings from happy to sad within minutes Irritability or feeling on edge Anxiety about the baby or motherhood Feeling overwhelmed by the enormity of what you've taken on Difficulty sleeping even when the baby sleeps
The Key Characteristic of Baby Blues: They're temporary. The crying and mood swings typically peak around day 5 and resolve within 2 weeks.
If you're in week one or two and crying frequently but otherwise managing, you're likely experiencing normal baby blues. They're uncomfortable, but they'll pass.
Why Do Baby Blues Happen?
Hormonal Crash
During pregnancy, estrogen and progesterone levels are 10-100 times higher than normal. Within 24 hours after delivery, these hormones drop to nearly zero.
This isn't a gradual adjustment—it's a cliff. Your brain, which has been bathed in pregnancy hormones for nine months, suddenly has to function without them.
This dramatic shift affects:
Serotonin (mood regulation)
Dopamine (reward and motivation)
Oxytocin (bonding and mood)
Think of it like hormonal whiplash. Your brain is struggling to recalibrate, and crying is one of the side effects.
Physical Recovery
Your body just performed a Herculean feat. Whether you had a vaginal birth or C-section, you're recovering from major physical trauma while also being sleep-deprived and responsible for a helpless infant.
Physical exhaustion amplifies emotional sensitivity. Everything feels harder when you're in pain and exhausted.
Life Disruption
Your entire life just changed. You're:
Responsible for keeping a human alive
Learning to breastfeed (if you're choosing to)
Dealing with painful recovery
Not sleeping
Adjusting to a new identity as "mother"
Navigating changed relationships
Even when you wanted this baby desperately, the magnitude of the change is overwhelming. Crying is a natural response to major life transitions.
Sleep Deprivation
You're getting 2-4 hours of broken sleep per night. Sleep deprivation doesn't just make you tired—it dysregulates your emotions.
You lose the ability to maintain perspective. Small frustrations feel catastrophic. Your emotional filter disappears.
Crying is what happens when your exhausted brain can't process everything you're experiencing.
When Crying Is Normal (Baby Blues)
Baby blues crying looks like this:
Baby Blues Timeline:
Timing: Starts 2-5 days postpartum, peaks around day 5, resolves by 2 weeks
Triggers: Overwhelm, exhaustion, hormonal surges, sentimental moments
Frequency: Several times a day, but not constant
Recovery: You can be comforted, distracted, or calmed down
Functioning: You're still able to care for yourself and the baby
Between episodes: You have moments of joy, connection, hope
If this describes your experience and you're within the first two weeks, you're likely experiencing baby blues. Be gentle with yourself. This will pass.
When Crying Signals Something More (Postpartum Depression)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects 1 in 7 mothers. Unlike the baby blues, PPD doesn't resolve on its own and requires treatment.
Here's how to distinguish PPD from baby blues:
Duration
Baby blues: Resolve within 2 weeks PPD: Persist beyond 2 weeks or start later (anytime in the first year)
Intensity
Baby blues: Crying spells are uncomfortable but manageable PPD: Crying is more intense, frequent, and disrupts your ability to function
Additional Symptoms
PPD isn't just crying. It also involves:
Persistent sadness or emptiness
Loss of interest in activities you used to enjoy
Difficulty bonding with the baby
Feelings of worthlessness or guilt
Thoughts that the baby would be better off without you
Withdrawal from loved ones
Changes in appetite (eating much more or much less)
Sleeping too much or inability to sleep even when baby sleeps
Physical symptoms (headaches, digestive issues)
Thoughts of harming yourself or the baby
Functioning
Baby blues: You can still care for yourself and the baby, even if it's hard PPD: You might struggle to perform basic self-care or baby care tasks
If your crying has persisted beyond two weeks, or if you're experiencing multiple symptoms from the PPD list, it's time to reach out for help.
"You can love your baby and still mourn what you've lost. Both can be true simultaneously."
Postpartum Anxiety and Crying
Sometimes crying isn't about sadness—it's about anxiety. Postpartum anxiety (PPA) affects 10-15% of new mothers and often involves:
Constant worry that something terrible will happen to the baby Racing thoughts you can't turn off Physical symptoms: heart racing, shortness of breath, nausea Difficulty relaxing or sitting still Sleep disturbances even when exhausted Irritability and feeling on edge
With PPA, you might cry from:
Overwhelming worry and fear
Exhaustion from constant hypervigilance
Frustration that you can't relax or enjoy motherhood
Feeling trapped by anxiety
If your crying is paired with intense worry, panic, or physical anxiety symptoms, you might have PPA rather than (or in addition to) PPD.
The Crying Nobody Talks About: Grief
Postpartum crying isn't always about hormones or mental health conditions. Sometimes it's grief.
You might be grieving:
The loss of your pre-baby life and freedom
Your pre-pregnancy body
Your career identity or momentum
Spontaneity and alone time
Your relationship dynamic with your partner
The gap between your expectations and reality
This grief is real and valid. You can love your baby and still mourn what you've lost. Both can be true simultaneously.
If your crying feels like grief—mourning a former version of yourself or your life—that's normal. Allow yourself to feel it. Grief needs acknowledgment, not dismissal.
What to Do When You Can't Stop Crying
1. Check the Basics
Before assuming it's PPD, rule out physical causes:
Are you in pain? Unmanaged pain from birth recovery can trigger crying spells. Are you eating? Low blood sugar makes emotions harder to regulate. Are you severely sleep-deprived? Even one night of better sleep can help. Are you dehydrated? Especially if breastfeeding, dehydration affects mood.
Sometimes addressing basic physical needs reduces crying significantly.
2. Name What You're Feeling
When you start crying, pause (if you can) and ask: "What am I actually feeling?"
You might discover you're:
Overwhelmed (too much to do, not enough energy)
Scared (about your ability to be a good mother)
Lonely (isolated and unsupported)
Angry (at your partner, your situation, or yourself)
Grieving (for your old life or unmet expectations)
Naming the emotion creates a tiny bit of distance and helps you address the underlying need.
3. Allow the Tears
Crying isn't weakness—it's a biological stress release. Tears contain stress hormones (cortisol), so crying literally helps your body regulate.
Instead of fighting the tears, try:
Going somewhere private and letting it out
Telling your partner, "I need to cry for a few minutes"
Putting the baby in a safe place and crying in the shower
Remember: Fighting tears takes energy you don't have. Sometimes you just need to cry it out.
4. Reach Out
When you're crying frequently, isolation makes it worse. Reach out to:
Your partner: "I've been crying a lot. I need support."
A friend or family member who won't judge
A postpartum support group (online or in-person)
Your doctor or midwife
You don't have to explain or justify the crying. Just say, "I'm struggling and I need help."
5. Track Your Symptoms
If crying continues beyond 2 weeks, start tracking:
How often you're crying
What triggers it (if anything)
Other symptoms (sleep, appetite, anxiety, thoughts)
How long episodes last
Whether anything helps
This information helps healthcare providers assess whether you have PPD or PPA and determine the best treatment.
6. Ask for Help with the Baby
Constant caregiving while emotionally fragile is exhausting. You need breaks.
Ask for (or accept offers of):
Someone to hold the baby while you shower/nap/eat
A friend to come sit with you
Your partner to take night feedings a few times a week
A postpartum doula for practical and emotional support
Taking a break isn't selfish—it's necessary.
When to Seek Professional Help
Please reach out to a maternal mental health specialist if:
Crying persists beyond 2 weeks postpartumYou're experiencing symptoms of PPD or PPA (listed earlier) You're having thoughts of harming yourself or your baby
Call 911 or go to the ER immediately
Call Postpartum Support International: 800-944-4773
Text "HELP" to 800-944-4773
You're unable to care for yourself or your baby. You feel hopeless or like things will never get better. You're withdrawing from your baby or loved ones. Crying is interfering with bonding with your baby.
Important: Getting help isn't admitting defeat—it's taking care of yourself and your baby. PPD and PPA are medical conditions that respond well to treatment. You don't have to suffer through this alone.
"Crying isn't weakness—it's a biological stress release. Tears contain stress hormones, so crying literally helps your body regulate."
💊 Treatment Options
🗣️ Therapy
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) helps you identify and change thought patterns that contribute to depression and anxiety. Interpersonal Therapy (IPT) focuses on relationship changes and role transitions that trigger postpartum depression.
Look for a therapist who specializes in perinatal mental health. This training makes a significant difference.
Medication
Antidepressants (SSRIs like Zoloft, Lexapro, Prozac) are effective for PPD and PPA. They're safe during breastfeeding and can provide significant relief.
Many mothers are hesitant about medication. But untreated PPD poses more risk to you and your baby than taking an SSRI.
🤝 Support Groups
Connecting with other mothers experiencing PPD or PPA is incredibly validating. You realize you're not alone, and you gain hope from mothers who've recovered.
Postpartum Support International offers free online support groups.
Practical Support
Sometimes what you need most is:
Sleep (partner/family taking night shifts)
Help with household tasks
Time alone to recharge
Connection with other adults
A postpartum doula or mother's helper can provide this practical support, which often reduces crying spells significantly.
What Partners and Loved Ones Can Do
If someone you love is crying frequently postpartum:
Don't dismiss it. "It's just hormones" or "Everyone goes through this" minimizes their pain. Don't wait for them to ask for help. PPD often makes people feel hopeless and incapable of asking. Take initiative. Track symptoms with them. If crying persists beyond 2 weeks, note this and encourage professional help. Provide practical support. Take the baby for a few hours. Do the dishes. Order food. Let them sleep. Listen without trying to fix. Sometimes they just need to cry while you hold space. Normalize getting help. "I think talking to someone who specializes in postpartum issues could really help. Can I find some names for you?"
A Message of Hope
If you're crying constantly and feeling like you'll never feel normal again, please hear this: You will feel better.
Whether this is baby blues that will resolve on their own, or PPD/PPA that needs treatment, this is temporary. You will not cry forever. You will not feel this overwhelmed forever.
I've worked with hundreds of new mothers who felt exactly how you feel right now. With time and (when needed) professional support, they healed. They found joy in motherhood. They felt like themselves again.
You will too.
"It's okay to cry. It's okay to need help. It's okay to not be okay right now. What's not okay is suffering in silence."
It's okay to cry. It's okay to need help. It's okay to not be okay right now.
What's not okay is suffering in silence, convincing yourself you should be able to handle this alone. You shouldn't have to.
Reach out today. You deserve support, compassion, and care.
📚 Resources
Postpartum Support International
Helpline: 800-944-4773
Text "HELP" to 800-944-4773
Free online support groups
Find local resources: postpartum.net
National Maternal Mental Health Hotline
24/7 support, call or text
Bloom Psychology
We specialize in postpartum depression and anxiety. We offer:
Individual therapy with perinatal mental health specialists
Support distinguishing baby blues from PPD/PPA
Virtual therapy across Texas
In-person sessions in North Austin
Schedule a free 15-minute consultation
Call us: 512-898-9510
You don't have to cry through this alone. Help is available, and you deserve to feel better.
*Dr. Jana Rundle is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in maternal mental health in Austin, Texas. With 15 years of experience supporting new mothers, she understands that postpartum crying is often a signal that you need support—and that asking for help is a sign of strength, not weakness.*
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Dr. Jana Rundle
Clinical Psychologist, Founder of Bloom Psychology




