I shooed my baby away. I was experiencing Postpartum Detachment, and I didn’t even know it. If you feel like a ghost in your own life, grab The Identity Guide to start finding “you” again.

Jasmine from The Unveiled Mama in the Nook discussing postpartum detachment.
The face of a mom who felt nothing. Let’s talk about why

Minutes after an exhausting natural birth, when the movies say I should have been weeping with joy, I was cold. I was numb. I didn’t want to hold him. I didn’t even want to look at him. I watched my partner do the first skin-to-skin while I stared at the ceiling, feeling like a stranger in my own body.

If you are reading this at 2 AM with a heavy pit of guilt in your stomach because you don’t feel “the bond” stop holding your breath. You aren’t a monster. You aren’t a “bad mom.” You are experiencing Postpartum Detachment, and there is a biological reason your brain has pulled the plug on your emotions.

The Science of Postpartum Detachment: Why Your Brain is in ‘Battery Saver’ Mode

As a mother who has sat in the “Nook” and deconstructed this piece by piece, I realized that “willpower” wasn’t the problem. My biology was. Here is the concrete data on why you feel numb:

The Dorsal Vagal Shutdown: Your nervous system has a “safety switch.” After the intense physical and emotional trauma of birth, if your brain feels overwhelmed, it enters a Functional Freeze. It literally disconnects your emotions to ensure you survive the physical recovery. You aren’t “cold-hearted”; you are in a physiological shutdown.

The Oxytocin Blockade: We are told oxytocin is the “love hormone,” but Cortisol (the stress hormone) acts like a physical wall. If your stress levels are through the roof from sleep deprivation or birth trauma, the oxytocin literally cannot reach its receptors.

The Identity Shock: You didn’t just give birth to a baby; you experienced the “death” of your old self. Your brain is grieving while trying to care for a stranger.

The “Nook” Truth: What to Do Today

When I was in the fog, everyone told me to “just cherish the moments.” That advice is garbage when you feel nothing. Instead, try these three Low-Pressure Resets:

Passive Bonding: Sit in the same room as your baby, but don’t force eye contact or “cuddling.” Just exist in the same space. Tell your brain: “We are safe. There is no rush.”

Narrate the Numbness: Speak it out loud. “I feel numb right now, and that is okay.” Taking the power away from the secret guilt lowers your cortisol levels.

Lower the Sensory Load: Postpartum detachment is often triggered by being “touched out.” Use noise-canceling headphones or dim the lights. If your senses aren’t screaming, your heart has more room to breathe.

You Don’t Have to Wander in the Fog Alone

I spent months trying to “fake it until I made it,” and it only made the detachment deeper. I don’t want that for you.

If you are currently in that “ghost mode,” start with my Free Identity Guide. It’s a 3-page roadmap to help you switch off battery-saver mode and find the woman behind the mama again. It’s the first step to feeling like you again.

➡️ [Download the Free Identity Guide]

And when you’re ready to go deeper, my 4-Week Postpartum Healing Journey is where we do the real work. It’s a guided reflection for the mom who is “under construction”—the one navigating the rage, the numbness, and the identity shift with brutal honesty. We move from “surviving” to actually feeling again.

[Start your 4-Week Healing Journey Here]


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3 thoughts on “Postpartum Detachment: Why Do I Feel Nothing for My Baby?”

  1. You are so strong and I commend you for even sharing this! So raw and real. I love youuu and always praying for your journey!

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