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“Unusual” Doesn’t Mean “Unimportant”: Trusting Your Body After Birth

“Unusual” Doesn’t Mean “Unimportant”: Trusting Your Body After Birth

Posted on December 4, 2025December 4, 2025 By Kirsten Fisch
Kirsten Fisch
Co-Founder at - Momentum Health Network

Kirsten Fisch, MSN, RNC-MNN, IBCLC, LCCE Kirsten is a women's health nurse who specializes in high-risk pregnancy and postpartum care. She is certified in Maternal Newborn Nursing, a board-certified lactation consultant (IBCLC), and a Lamaze Certified Childbirth Educator. She works with women from conception through the postpartum period. Passionate about empowering women throughout their reproductive journeys, Kirsten combines evidence-based care with compassionate support to promote the health and well-being of mothers and babies.

After birth, most people expect a certain kind of recovery: cramping, vaginal bleeding, breast changes, intense fatigue, and emotional ups and downs. Much of this is normal. It’s what we prepare families for.

But I always tell my postpartum patients something very specific:

“A lot of postpartum recovery is normal… until it isn’t.”

And the only way to know the difference is to pay attention to your body, trust your instincts, and speak up when something feels off.

As a nurse, I would rather someone call their provider ten times and be reassured than stay silent once and suffer a complication that could have been addressed earlier. I would much rather you be labeled the “difficult” patient than become the patient whose warning signs were missed.

A Patient Who Knew Something Was Wrong

I recently cared for a postpartum patient who began experiencing severe, full-body cramping that jolted her awake from sleep. These were not typical uterine cramps. Her entire body would seize in sudden, painful spasms.

On paper, everything looked reassuring.
Her vital signs were stable.
Her lab work was normal.
By standard measures, she appeared to be a “healthy” postpartum patient.

She did have a history of gestational hypertension, but she never quite met the criteria for preeclampsia. Because of this, and because her tests looked normal, her symptoms were repeatedly attributed to anxiety, exhaustion, or stress.

But she knew something wasn’t right.

Night after night, the episodes continued. Each time she reported them, she was reassured. And each time she was left with the same feeling: My body doesn’t feel okay, even if the numbers say I am.

The Limits of “Everything Looks Fine”

Modern medicine depends on measurements: blood pressure, labs, scans, and vital signs. These tools are critical, but in the postpartum period, they do not always tell the whole story.

After childbirth, the body is experiencing one of the most dramatic physiologic shifts it will ever go through:

  • Massive hormone changes
  • Significant fluid shifts
  • Changes in blood clotting
  • Cardiovascular and nervous system adjustments
  • Immune system changes

This is not a stable time in the body. It is a fragile, transitional time.

Early warning signs of serious postpartum complications do not always show up clearly in labs or vital signs. Sometimes they show up as strange sensations, subtle neurologic changes, unexplained pain, or symptoms that don’t fit neatly into a textbook description.

And when symptoms don’t make sense to us, they are at risk of being minimized.

When Symptoms Are Labeled as “Anxiety”

One of the most dangerous moments in care happens when symptoms are repeatedly labeled as anxiety or “somatic.” Once that label is applied, everything that follows is often viewed through that lens.

At that point:

  • New symptoms may be brushed aside
  • Escalation may be delayed
  • The patient begins to question themselves
  • Trust erodes

Postpartum patients already walk a fine line between normal recovery and serious complications. When they stop trusting their own instincts because they’ve been dismissed, the consequences can be devastating.

“Normal Until It Isn’t”

This is why I tell every postpartum patient:

  • Most things after birth are normal—until they aren’t.
  • If something feels wrong, your body is trying to tell you something.
  • You do not need to wait until you are “sure” to call your provider.
  • You are never wasting our time by asking a question.

I would rather evaluate a symptom that turns out to be benign than miss one that is dangerous. I would rather reassure you early than treat you in crisis later.

Being assertive about your health does not make you difficult.
It makes you safe.

“Unusual” Does Not Mean “Imagined”

The biggest lesson this patient taught me is this:

When a symptom doesn’t make sense to the provider, that doesn’t mean it isn’t real.
It simply means it hasn’t been fully understood yet.

Postpartum safety requires more than pattern recognition. It requires:

  • Curiosity when things don’t fit expectations
  • Humility when the body doesn’t follow the textbook
  • Persistence when symptoms continue despite reassurance

Many serious postpartum conditions, neurologic, cardiovascular, hypertensive, thrombotic, and metabolic, can begin subtly. Often the earliest warning sign is simply that the patient feels “off.”

And very often, the patient is right.

A Message to Postpartum Patients and Families

If you are pregnant or recently gave birth, please hear this:

You are not dramatic for paying attention to your body.
You are not anxious for asking questions.
You are not difficult for calling your provider.
You are not overreacting for advocating for yourself.

If something doesn’t feel right, call. If you feel dismissed, call again. Ask for another evaluation. Ask for a second opinion. Bring a support person with you if needed.

Your instincts matter. They are a critical part of your care.

A Cultural Shift We Still Need

If we truly want to improve postpartum outcomes, we must move away from:

  • Reassurance without investigation
  • Dismissing what we don’t immediately recognize
  • Equating “normal labs” with “nothing is wrong”

And move toward:

  • Listening without bias
  • Staying curious when symptoms are atypical
  • Partnering with patients instead of overriding them

Because unusual does not mean unimportant.
Because stable does not always mean safe.
And because sometimes the difference between early intervention and catastrophe is whether someone trusted the patient—and whether the patient trusted themselves enough to keep speaking up.


Medical Disclaimer:
This article is for general education and awareness only and is not intended to replace personalized medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always contact your healthcare provider, go to the nearest emergency department, or call emergency services if you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health. If something does not feel right to you, trust your instincts and seek care right away.

Kirsten FischCo-Founder at - Momentum Health Network

Kirsten Fisch, MSN, RNC-MNN, IBCLC, LCCE Kirsten is a women's health nurse who specializes in high-risk pregnancy and postpartum care. She is certified in Maternal Newborn Nursing, a board-certified lactation consultant (IBCLC), and a Lamaze Certified Childbirth Educator. She works with women from conception through the postpartum period. Passionate about empowering women throughout their reproductive journeys, Kirsten combines evidence-based care with compassionate support to promote the health and well-being of mothers and babies.

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