When Birth Brings Shame: Holding the Parts We Don’t Talk About

when birth brings shame

When birth brings shame – For many people, pregnancy and birth are wrapped in images of joy, anticipation, and something almost sacred. And for some, that is true. But there is another side to this story that often stays hidden, clandestine and heavy, laced with something many women don’t want to name.

Shame.

Not because anything has gone “wrong” in the way we’re often told to measure it, but because birth can place women in an experience that feels exposing, vulnerable, and, at times, profoundly out of control, and this is when birth brings shame.

The Body That Suddenly Isn’t Yours

Many women spend years building a relationship with their bodies, learning how to care for themselves, how to feel safe enough in their own skin in a world that constantly scrutinises how they look.

Then labour happens.

In that space, the body can shift from something personal and protected to something observed, examined, and, at times, handled by others. Internal examinations, unfamiliar faces, different professionals coming and going, there can be a sense that your body is no longer fully your own.

There isn’t always choice in who is present. There isn’t always time to process what’s happening. And while these interventions are often necessary and carried out with care, the experience of them can still feel overwhelming.

Some women describe feeling highly visible and yet completely unseen at the same time, this is another instance when birth brings shame.

“Just Try to Relax”

It’s a phrase often said with good intention. But in moments of pain, fear, or vulnerability, it can land very differently.

If it were that simple, you would already be relaxed.

When your nervous system is overwhelmed, when your body is doing something intense and unfamiliar, being told to relax can feel invalidating, as though your experience isn’t being fully seen or understood.

And in those moments, something subtle can happen: you may begin to shrink yourself. To quieten, and to endure.

The Silence That Looks Like Consent

One of the most misunderstood parts of birth experiences is this:

Compliance is not always the same as consent.

When someone feels overwhelmed, frightened, or outside of their window of tolerance, the body can move into survival responses, freeze, flop, or fawn. Speaking up may not feel possible. Not because you don’t want to, but because your system is trying to keep you safe in the only way it knows how.

You might nod. You might smile. You might say “okay.”

But inside, it doesn’t feel okay at all.

This can leave a lasting imprint, especially when there’s a conflict between knowing that medical intervention was necessary, and feeling that something about the experience didn’t feel right in your body.

When Birth Doesn’t Feel Empowering

There is a powerful narrative that birth is natural, that the body “knows what to do,” and that it should be an empowering experience.

But for many women, birth can feel frightening, intense, and at times traumatic.

Interventions such as emergency caesareans, forceps deliveries, or other complications can leave women physically and emotionally depleted. For those who value independence, suddenly needing support can feel disorienting and, at times, deeply unsettling.

And then come the thoughts:

Why couldn’t I do it?
Why can’t I just get on with it?
What’s wrong with me?

The Weight of Expectations

Alongside recovery, there can be another layer, the expectation of what a “good mother” should feel like.

Instant connection. Endless patience. Natural instinct. Gratitude. Joy.

But what happens when reality doesn’t match that picture?

Some mothers feel disconnected. Some feel overwhelmed. Some feel frightened, resentful, or unsure. And instead of seeing these as human responses to an enormous life transition, they can internalise them as failure.

This is where shame begins to take hold.

Not I did something wrong.

But there is something wrong with me.

Why Shame Stays Hidden

Shame thrives in silence.

If you feel exposed, judged, or “not good enough,” the last thing you want is to draw more attention to it. So you keep it in. You smile. You say you’re fine. You try to be what you think you’re supposed to be.

Inside, it can feel very different.

Shame can manifest as:

  • Avoiding talking about the birth
  • Minimising what happened (“it wasn’t that bad”)
  • Laughing things off that didn’t feel funny
  • Feeling like you have to perform or prove you’re coping

And the more it stays unspoken, the more it can start to feel like part of your identity.

The Power Imbalance No One Prepares You For

In medical settings, there is an inherent power difference. There are people there to help, to treat, to intervene, often in moments where safety is the priority.

You may feel the need to be a “good patient.” To cooperate. To not make things difficult. To trust that others know best, even when something inside you feels unsure.

But within that dynamic, it’s possible for your voice to feel smaller.

That doesn’t mean care is wrong. It means your experience within that care matters.

Clear communication, explanation, and genuine consent are essential, not just for safety, but for dignity.

After the Birth: When It All Surfaces

For some women, the impact doesn’t fully hit until later.

In the weeks or months after birth, there may be:

  • Anxiety or intrusive thoughts
  • Low mood or disconnection
  • A sense of confusion about what happened
  • Feelings of violation or loss of control

And alongside all of that, another layer:

I should be okay by now.

This can deepen the shame, making it even harder to reach out.

Sitting With Shame, Not Fixing It

In therapy, these are the moments that matter most.

Not rushing to reframe. Not trying to tidy it up.

But gently, carefully, making space for what feels difficult to say out loud. To bear witness to the real story.

Shame often softens not through being challenged, but through being witnessed, by someone who doesn’t turn away, who isn’t uncomfortable with it, who allows it to exist without judgement.

For many mothers, this is the first time their experience has been truly heard.

And in that space, something begins to shift.

If This Resonates With You

If parts of this feel familiar, it doesn’t mean there is something wrong with you.

It means you went through something significant, physically, emotionally, and psychologically.

Your responses make sense.

There is space for your experience. All of it. Even the parts that don’t fit the story you thought you’d have. Get in touch HEREif you need support.

When birth brings shame was written by Julie E. Lee

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