Men must understand some of the changes due to pregnancy include preferences that could change. PHOTO | BD GRAPHIC
By DR FRANK NJENGA
In Summary
For a lay person, pregnancy is a matter of losing shape, complaining of nausea and labour.
I am five months pregnant and I can’t
stand my boss for no apparent reason. Every time I see him walk into the
office, I feel like confronting him over flimsy things. I am told that
these mood swing are normal but I fear that I could eventually hurt my
career.
Recently, I asked to be transferred from the sales department but he refused. This has annoyed me and however much I would like to control my moods, I feel I could break down. Is there a way out of it?
Recently, I asked to be transferred from the sales department but he refused. This has annoyed me and however much I would like to control my moods, I feel I could break down. Is there a way out of it?
Your question is likely to bring tears of
understanding from some female readers who can, with ease, resonate with
your predicament.
Sadly, some men will dismiss it, insisting that
pregnancy is a natural state and all you have to do is pull yourself
together, and after four more months, all will be back to normal. How
wrong such men are! If only they knew.
Allow me to address a rather unusual topic, that of man’s health.
John Grant is a doctor who has specialised in men’s
mental health. His book, published in 2007, examines presentations in
which men suffer from mental disorders, in ways that are different from
females.
Whether one looks at childhood, adolescence or even
old age, men suffer illness in ways that are often different from
women. A visit to a drug treatment centre will confirm that men are more
likely than women to be admitted for drug and alcohol addiction. The
rates of drug abuse in men are much higher, and often associated with a
higher incidence of violence.
Special challenges
It is also known that men have earlier drinking
related accidents and arrests than women. Their coping skills are poorer
than those of women, and, perhaps, not surprisingly, they have more
school and work related problems. Worse, they do not seem to recognise
the effect it all has on families and, unlike women, hardly recognise
family problems due to alcohol.
One could go on to discuss the special challenges
men have, including erectile dysfunction, orgasmic disorders, problems
within marriage, if only to illustrate that ignorance is the order of
the day with respect to mental health in men. Men are as human as you,
even in their ignorance of the physiology of pregnancy. Many need help
but are too afraid to seek it while others die due to lack of knowledge.
On your “mood swings” in pregnancy, let me assure
you that many women go through what you are experiencing, and if I am to
believe what I have been told, the joy of holding one’s newborn baby
makes all mothers glad that they endured the suffering they went
through.
For a lay person, pregnancy is a fairly
straightforward matter of a woman losing her shape, getting a large
tummy, complaining of nausea, and later tiredness and eventually going
into labour, and soon all is done.
As any medical student will confirm, pregnancy is a
very complex balancing act, in which different chemical reactions take
place, first to ensure that the egg and sperm meet in the right place,
and time, but more importantly that after fertilisation, this new
“foreign body” is not rejected by the mother.
Indeed, unknown to most, many pregnancies are
aborted by nature because of many different reasons, including hormonal
imbalance. Others are lost because the embryo has a major malformation
of one type or another that is incompatible with life.
The sudden and dramatic increase in oestrogen and
progesterone allow the pregnancy to proceed, but can also be responsible
for the mood swings. Not only are mood swings in evidence but physical
changes such as weight gain, changes in gait, as well as the curvature
of the back bear testimony to the war that is going on between the new
and the old state.
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