What pressure do young mothers face in Kosovo?

A few hours after she was born, Cambridge Duchess Kate Midleton left the hospital like nothing had happened. With a light makeup but that gives a man a look like he didn't get out of the hospital but out of some coffee shop, her view has caused social networks to overflow with reactions [...]
A few hours after she was born, Cambridge Duchess Kate Midleton left the hospital like nothing had happened. With a light makeup but that gives a man a look like he didn't get out of the hospital but out of some coffee shop, her view has caused social networks to overflow with the reactions of mothers around the world.
The Royal Forest: Young mothers have a lot of unnecessary pressure, writes the BBC in an article discussing how Kate Middelton looked so cheerful a few hours after she was born.
They've been differing in reactions to Midleton's photograph leaving the hospital. Perhaps she went a little too far with her joy. Maybe it's OK. That's what you should look like after birth. Maybe the media overstepped a little bit. Walk out of the delivery room and get hundreds of cameras waiting outside? Going straight to a TV show?
What kind of pressure do we have on the extraordinary, unmovable mothers...?
In January of this year, a léon was thrown out of the hospital bathroom window and put an end to her life after bringing a baby to life.
One of her family members had declared for the media: “Based on the words of women that she is being told, when her wife is born in this way from time to time, the tea has happened. The birth was under surgery and it had a great time.
In the words of women...
So the first pressure we face as a mother (I've experienced) is that when you go home with the baby, you start visiting from the first 15 minutes after stepping into the yard. It is true: No matter how many children you have, each birth differs from the other, and each child has its own predictability.
It's ridiculous to talk about the treatment of women after birth, when we don't have any statistics or any treatment or any program or anything good that even shows how women are treated before birth.
Thus, in our health - related system, a new mother will be left to go straight home after birth and face her musicists there.
Analyses of épsicologists at home:
Could not feed it...”
“You don't know how to keep the bay...”
“He's hungry, so he's crying...”
The second girl...hmm, equipped with yer”.
“Five weeks don't wake up from bed”.
You'll be back to work in six months.
The biggest pressure on this six-month-old job, if you're a working mother. Personally, I haven't been convinced that this compassion that I had to go back to work after six months was for me, the baby, or to remind me that you have challenges to yourself (or that your life is over because you're a mother). Or do we enjoy excessive rest while taking money?
When I was pregnant with my daughter, Chelsea, I looked for maternity policies at the firm where I worked. I was surprised I didn't find such policies. Then I learned why: No woman who worked in the office had returned to work the way she was asked to do after she was born. But I decided differently. It was very important to work because of my family's finances, especially now when we had a child”, it wrote. Hillary Clinton in an article that had returned to work about four months after the baby was born.
True: Post - birth periods may quickly pass into some form of depression. Easy or heavy. Not women's words. There are hundreds of research on this matter. And there are also many research factors, including changes in the shape of life, especially the first child. The fear of child health. The near future, the distant future.
“I'm the one on the right, in case you care”
This is the description of a photograph that well shows the unnecessary pressure of young mothers who have posted BBC Journal Nina Warhurst. It shows how much food was sent to the bed immediately after birth. Side, Cambridge Duchess, makeup, no food and no pressure...















