Articles Tagged ‘Physiological’

Communication of mourning

The loss of the child after the 25th week or birth: what methods of communication with the mother and the copy in the early stages of mourning Mourning is an emotional response and physiological processes related to change if the latter suffered a loss. Mourning is a path that is divided into several phases, in which the variables of the emotions are directly proportional to the value that each of us gives what he has lost. It can happen, for example, that the spontaneous fetal death of a child unwanted lead in parents more pain relief .. The same is true of a malformed child or disabled person. This occurs even if the parents were aware and had agreed to keep it. Before getting into specific, which will be the theme of loss of communication, I think it is appropriate to obtain an overview of possible biopsychic and emotional context of the women with whom we deal and to which we will communicate that have lost their baby during pregnancy or shortly after birth. It should be bo...

Pain and pleasure

It is very difficult to talk about this, because for most of us experience of childbirth is placed in a hospital protocol and is not referred to as a moment of sexual woman's natural cycle. Yet, in nature this is the birth, so let me outline some considerations, conscious of its delicate nature and that may be very different from woman to woman. The pain is associated, anthropologically, rites of passage and initiation: this is not just about femininity, but is easily applied to femininity, if we think, for example, that a component of pain joins nell'esordio same sexual cycle women with menstrual pain that many women receive early adolescence. To cite another example, pain related to tearing hymen has a symbolic importance in the sexual life of the girl who becomes a woman. The puzzle-like pain, love and death is in fact a hallmark of many cultures and a category we can easily apply to sexuality, and I think especially the female sexuality. Apply to female sexuality will some n...