Can’t catch your breath during pregnancy?
The majority of pregnant women will at some stage (most likely in the third trimester) experience shortness of breath. This can leave you feeling winded and make even the smallest tasks more challenging.
Can’t catch your breath during pregnancy?
The majority of pregnant women will at some stage (most likely in the third trimester) experience shortness of breath. This can leave you feeling winded and make even the smallest tasks more challenging.
When you’re already experiencing the heightened emotions brought on by pregnancy hormones, small problems can feel like big issues. As exciting as pregnancy can be, the reality is that you’ll have an entirely new to-do list filled with tasks like buying baby equipment, decorating the nursery and handing over responsibilities at work, to name but a few. For some, the announcement of a new arrival can cause relationship tensions. Well-meaning relatives are keen to be involved, and you may have to tread carefully around sensitive siblings and friends who are trying to conceive themselves. Then there’s the challenge of staying on top of things at work when you’re feeling queasy and exhausted. It can all start to feel a little overwhelming.
In recent years, scientists have sought to understand the effects of maternal stress on the foetus in pregnancy. Their studies show that babies are indeed sensitive to a mother’s psychological stress. For example, maternal stress, anxiety and depression may affect a baby’s immune response in later life and has been linked to the development of childhood asthma.
The good news is that there are plenty of simple and practical ways to lower your stress levels, improve your emotional resilience and, in turn, reduce the effects of stress. It’s almost impossible to remove stress from your life completely, but managing stress may be the next best thing.
Emotional resilience is the ability to adapt to outside stresses; the more emotionally resilient you are, the more you may be able to cope should a crisis arise. While some people naturally take life’s challenges in their stride, for others, emotional upheavals and even day-to-day stresses can prove more difficult to shake. However you handle stress, it’s possible to strengthen your emotional resilience.
Try these techniques:
Of course, stressful events may well crop up that are out of your control. So, should you feel your stress levels increasing, try these quick techniques to calm down:
If you’re starting to feel like your stress levels are becoming unmanageable, or you’re worrying all the time, you might be suffering from a Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD). 1 in 10 women suffer from anxiety in pregnancy but the good news is there are numerous ways to manage it. Read about the symptoms of prenatal anxiety and depression, and the treatment and support available.
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