Postpartum OCD: Understanding Intrusive Thoughts and Finding Relief

July 10, 20255 min readPostpartum Mental Health
Bloom Psychology - Postpartum OCD: Understanding Intrusive Thoughts and Finding Relief

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Postpartum OCD: Understanding Intrusive Thoughts and Finding Relief

You're holding your newborn near the stairs, and suddenly an image flashes through your mind: dropping the baby. You gasp, pull your baby closer, and your heart races. 💔

The thought was so vivid, so horrifying—and you're terrified of what it means about you.

Or maybe you're giving your baby a bath, and you have a sudden thought about drowning them. You immediately pull the baby out, shaking, wondering if you're dangerous, if you're capable of harm.

These intrusive thoughts feel like proof that something is fundamentally wrong with you. You're convinced you must be a terrible person, a bad mother, maybe even dangerous. You're afraid to be alone with your baby.

What you're experiencing is likely postpartum OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder)—and it's more common than you think.

🤔 What Is Postpartum OCD?

Postpartum OCD affects approximately 3-5% of new mothers, though many experts believe it's significantly underdiagnosed because mothers are too terrified to report their symptoms.

Postpartum OCD is characterized by two main components:

Intrusive Thoughts (Obsessions)

These are unwanted, disturbing, and repetitive thoughts that often involve:

  • Harming the baby (dropping, suffocating, drowning, stabbing)

  • Sexual thoughts about the baby

  • Contamination fears (baby getting sick from germs)

  • Fears about SIDS or the baby dying

  • Blasphemous or disturbing religious thoughts

Compulsions (Behaviors or Mental Rituals)

These are performed to reduce the anxiety caused by intrusive thoughts:

  • Excessive checking (breathing, sleeping position, temperature)

  • Avoiding being alone with the baby

  • Removing all potentially dangerous items from the home

  • Excessive cleaning or hand washing

  • Repeatedly asking for reassurance

  • Mental reviewing or counting

The Key Difference: The thoughts are ego-dystonic—they horrify you and go against your values. You don't want these thoughts. They disgust and terrify you. This is completely different from psychosis, where thoughts might feel real or desired.

Postpartum OCD vs. "Normal" New Mom Worries

All new mothers worry. It's adaptive—worry helps us protect vulnerable infants. But there's a difference between normal new parent anxiety and postpartum OCD.

Normal New Mom Worry:

  • "I'm concerned about SIDS. I'll follow safe sleep guidelines."

  • Occasional anxious thoughts that pass

  • Checking on the baby a few times

  • Reasonable precautions that don't interfere with daily life

Postpartum OCD:

  • "I'm terrified of SIDS. I haven't slept in days because I'm watching the baby breathe constantly."

  • Repetitive, intrusive images or thoughts that loop for hours

  • Checking the baby every 5-10 minutes around the clock

  • Compulsions that consume hours of your day and cause significant distress

With OCD, the anxiety doesn't go away when you check—it temporarily reduces, then comes roaring back, demanding another check. It's a vicious cycle.

Common Intrusive Thoughts in Postpartum OCD

Let me be explicit here because secrecy makes these thoughts more powerful. Many mothers with postpartum OCD have thoughts like:

Harm-Related Thoughts

  • Dropping the baby down the stairs or off a balcony

  • Smothering the baby with a pillow

  • The baby drowning during bath time

  • Stabbing the baby while cooking

  • Accidentally poisoning the baby

  • Shaking the baby out of frustration

Sexual Thoughts

  • Inappropriate sexual thoughts about the baby during diaper changes or baths

  • Fear of being aroused by the baby's body

  • Intrusive images of sexual abuse

Contamination Thoughts

  • The baby getting a deadly illness from a surface you touched

  • Your breast milk being poisoned or contaminated

  • Someone with germs holding the baby

  • The baby's food being contaminated

Religious/Moral Thoughts

  • The baby being possessed by evil

  • Blasphemous thoughts about the baby's soul

  • Fear of going to hell for having bad thoughts

Death-Related Thoughts

  • Vivid images of the baby dying

  • Obsessive worry about SIDS

  • Fear that something you did caused or will cause the baby's death

Reading these might be triggering if you've experienced them. But seeing them written out is important—it shows you that you're not alone, you're not uniquely evil, and these thoughts are a recognized symptom of a treatable condition. 💚

Why Postpartum OCD Happens

We don't know exactly why some mothers develop postpartum OCD, but several factors contribute:

Hormonal Shifts

The dramatic drop in estrogen and progesterone after childbirth affects neurotransmitters, including serotonin. Low serotonin is linked to both OCD and depression.

Hypervigilance

New mothers' brains are wired to be hypervigilant about threats to their babies. For some women, this protective mechanism goes into overdrive, leading to obsessive worry and compulsive checking.

Sleep Deprivation

Chronic sleep loss impairs the brain's ability to regulate intrusive thoughts. Exhausted brains struggle to dismiss random disturbing thoughts that well-rested brains would ignore.

Previous OCD or Anxiety

If you had OCD, anxiety, or perfectionist tendencies before pregnancy, you're at higher risk for postpartum OCD.

Trauma

Birth trauma, previous pregnancy loss, or childhood trauma can increase vulnerability to postpartum OCD.

The Cycle That Keeps OCD Going

Here's how postpartum OCD maintains itself:

1. Intrusive thought appears: "What if I drop the baby down the stairs?"

2. Anxiety spikes: Your body goes into fight-or-flight. Heart racing, palms sweating, intense fear.

3. You give the thought meaning: "I must be dangerous if I'm thinking this. What kind of mother has these thoughts?"

4. You perform a compulsion: Avoid stairs. Put the baby down. Check that the baby is safe. Seek reassurance from your partner.

5. Temporary relief: The anxiety decreases momentarily.

6. The thought returns: Because you gave it power by responding to it. The cycle repeats, getting stronger each time.

The compulsions teach your brain that the thoughts are dangerous and must be taken seriously. This makes the OCD worse, not better.

Why You're Not Dangerous

"Having intrusive thoughts about harming your baby does not mean you want to harm your baby or that you will."

People with postpartum OCD are extremely unlikely to act on intrusive thoughts. In fact, research shows that mothers with postpartum OCD are often overly cautious and protective because they're so horrified by the thoughts.

The very fact that these thoughts disturb you is evidence that they don't reflect your true desires or intentions.

Think about it this way: If you wanted to harm your baby, the thoughts wouldn't horrify you. They'd feel appealing or justified.

The distress you feel is proof that these thoughts go against your values.

Postpartum OCD vs. Postpartum Psychosis

This distinction is critical because many mothers with postpartum OCD fear they're experiencing psychosis.

Postpartum OCD:

  • You recognize the thoughts as irrational

  • The thoughts horrify and disgust you

  • You don't want to act on them

  • You avoid situations where harm could happen

  • You seek help to make the thoughts stop

Postpartum Psychosis (extremely rare: 0.1-0.2%):

✗ Thoughts might seem real or justified
✗ Delusions (false beliefs) are present
✗ Hallucinations (seeing/hearing things that aren't there)
✗ Confusion and disorganized thinking
✗ Potential desire or intent to harm

If you're terrified of your intrusive thoughts and desperately want them to stop, you almost certainly have OCD, not psychosis.

That said, postpartum psychosis is a medical emergency. If you're experiencing hallucinations, delusions, or confusion, or if you have any intent to harm yourself or your baby, go to the emergency room immediately.

✨ How to Cope with Intrusive Thoughts

1. Understand That Thoughts Are Just Thoughts

Your brain generates thousands of random thoughts daily. Most of them are meaningless noise.

Just because a thought appears in your mind doesn't make it true, important, or predictive of your behavior.

Intrusive thoughts are like spam email in your inbox—random, unwanted, and not a reflection of who you are.

2. Don't Engage with the Thought

When an intrusive thought appears, your instinct is to:

  • Analyze it ("Why am I thinking this?")

  • Argue with it ("I would never do that!")

  • Seek reassurance ("I'm not a bad person, right?")

All of these responses give the thought power. Instead, try:

Labeling: "That's an intrusive thought. It's a symptom of OCD."

Acceptance: "I'm having the thought again. I don't have to respond to it."

Refocusing: Gently redirect your attention to what you were doing.

This takes practice. At first, it feels impossible. With time and therapy support, it gets easier.

3. Resist Compulsions (Gradually)

Compulsions feel necessary in the moment—they reduce anxiety temporarily. But they strengthen OCD long-term.

With professional guidance, you'll gradually reduce compulsions:

  • Instead of checking the baby every 5 minutes, stretch it to 10, then 15, then 30

  • Instead of avoiding the stairs completely, carry the baby down once with support nearby

  • Instead of asking for reassurance immediately, wait 10 minutes, then 20

This is called Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), and it's the gold-standard treatment for OCD.

4. Practice Self-Compassion

You're not a bad mother for having these thoughts. You're a mother with a medical condition that's making your brain produce disturbing content.

Treat yourself with the same kindness you'd show a friend struggling with postpartum OCD. Remind yourself:

  • "This is OCD, not me"

  • "Millions of mothers have experienced this"

  • "I'm doing my best to cope with something really hard"

5. Limit Reassurance Seeking

Asking your partner, "I'm not a bad person, right?" or "I would never hurt the baby, right?" feels necessary.

But reassurance is a compulsion—it temporarily reduces anxiety but strengthens OCD.

If you need to share your thoughts with someone, frame it differently: "I'm having intrusive thoughts again. Can you remind me that this is OCD and I don't need to respond to the thoughts?"

💊 Treatment for Postpartum OCD

The good news: Postpartum OCD is highly treatable. 💚

🗣️ Therapy: Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)

ERP is the most effective therapy for OCD. It involves:

Exposure: Gradually facing situations that trigger intrusive thoughts without performing compulsions. This might mean:

  • Being near stairs with the baby while resisting checking behaviors

  • Taking a bath with the baby while not mentally reviewing safety protocols

  • Being alone with the baby for increasing amounts of time

Response Prevention: Resisting the urge to perform compulsions, which teaches your brain that the thoughts aren't dangerous.

This sounds terrifying if you have OCD. That's why it's done gradually, with professional support, at a pace you can handle.

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

CBT helps you identify and challenge the distorted thoughts that fuel OCD:

  • "Having this thought means I'll act on it" → "Thoughts don't predict behavior"

  • "I'm a terrible mother" → "I'm a mother experiencing a symptom of OCD"

Medication

SSRIs (like Zoloft, Lexapro, or Prozac) are effective for OCD and safe during breastfeeding. They increase serotonin, which reduces obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors.

Many mothers are hesitant about medication, especially while breastfeeding. But untreated OCD poses more risk to you and your baby than taking an SSRI.

Talk to a perinatal psychiatrist about your options.

🤝 Support Groups

Connecting with other mothers who have postpartum OCD is incredibly validating. You realize you're not alone, not uniquely broken, and that recovery is possible.

Postpartum Support International offers free peer support groups specifically for perinatal OCD.

What Partners and Loved Ones Should Know

If someone you love has postpartum OCD:

Don't dismiss the severity. Even though the thoughts aren't rational, the suffering is very real.

Don't provide excessive reassurance. Saying "You would never hurt the baby" feels helpful, but it's a compulsion that makes OCD worse.

Instead, say: "I know this is really hard. Your therapist will help you learn to manage these thoughts."

Don't take over all baby care. While your partner might want to avoid being alone with the baby, complete avoidance strengthens OCD. Support gradual exposure instead.

Encourage professional help. Find therapists who specialize in perinatal OCD and ERP. Offer to attend sessions if welcome.

Take care of yourself. Supporting someone with OCD is exhausting. Get your own support.

When to Seek Help Immediately

Most postpartum OCD is manageable with outpatient treatment. But seek immediate help (ER or crisis hotline) if:

  • You have any intent or desire to harm your baby

  • You're experiencing hallucinations or delusions

  • You're unable to care for yourself or your baby

  • You're having thoughts of suicide

  • You're engaging in self-harm to cope

If you're not sure whether you need emergency help, call the Postpartum Support International helpline: 800-944-4773

A Message of Hope

"You are not broken. You are not dangerous. You are not alone."

Reading about postpartum OCD might have been difficult—especially if you recognized yourself in these descriptions. You might feel exposed, ashamed, or more anxious than before.

Postpartum OCD is a medical condition with a biological basis. It's not your fault. It's not a reflection of who you are as a mother or person. And it's treatable.

I've worked with dozens of mothers with postpartum OCD. With the right treatment—usually ERP therapy, sometimes combined with medication—they've gotten better.

The intrusive thoughts have decreased in frequency and intensity. They've learned to not fear the thoughts. They've reclaimed their lives and their joy in motherhood.

You can too.

It takes courage to face these thoughts instead of running from them. It takes strength to ask for help.

But on the other side of treatment is freedom—freedom from the tyranny of intrusive thoughts, freedom to be present with your baby, freedom to enjoy motherhood without constant fear.

"That freedom is waiting for you. Take the first step today."

📚 Resources

Postpartum Support International

International OCD Foundation

  • Find a therapist trained in ERP: iocdf.org

  • Resource center specifically for perinatal OCD

National Maternal Mental Health Hotline

Bloom Psychology

We specialize in perinatal OCD and offer:

  • Individual therapy with ERP training

  • Virtual therapy across Texas

  • In-person sessions in North Austin

Schedule a free 15-minute consultation: bloompsychologynorthaustin.com/book

Call us: 512-203-0146

You don't have to suffer with these thoughts alone. Help is available, and you deserve to feel better. 🌿


Dr. Jana Rundle is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in maternal mental health, including perinatal OCD. With 15 years of experience, she's helped countless mothers overcome intrusive thoughts and find peace. She believes that having disturbing thoughts doesn't make you a bad mother—getting help does make you a brave one.

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Dr. Jana Rundle

Dr. Jana Rundle

Clinical Psychologist, Founder of Bloom Psychology

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