For many new mothers, the earliest weeks of parenthood bring something no one in the delivery room ever mentions: sudden, disturbing mental images involving their baby being harmed. Sometimes those images involve the mother herself.
The thoughts are so unsettling, so completely at odds with the fierce love a mother feels, that most women carry them alone convinced they are uniquely broken, uniquely dangerous, or uniquely unfit. They are none of those things. What they are experiencing is a clinically recognized feature of postpartum depression and anxiety, and the widespread silence surrounding it is making recovery harder for countless families.
What intrusive thoughts actually are
Intrusive thoughts are involuntary mental images or impulses that feel entirely foreign to the person experiencing them. For postpartum mothers, they frequently involve scenarios of accidentally or deliberately harming the baby during a bath, while near a staircase, or during an otherwise unremarkable moment in the kitchen.
The thoughts arrive without warning, feel deeply out of character, and tend to grow more persistent the harder a mother works to push them away. Research indicates that more than half of new mothers report experiencing them, which makes this one of the most widespread and least-discussed realities of the postpartum period.
The distinction that most mothers never hear is also the most important one: being horrified by a thought is precisely what separates an intrusive thought from a genuine desire or intent. A mother who recoils in disgust at a mental image is not a threat to her child. She is a person whose brain is misfiring under enormous physiological and emotional stress and that is a medical reality, not a moral failing.
Why the silence persists
Despite how common these experiences are, they remain among the hardest things for new mothers to say out loud. Research from Brown University, published in 2022 and based on 45 in depth interviews with mothers diagnosed with perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, offers some of the most detailed documentation of this phenomenon to date.
Research also identified a troubling pattern in how medical providers often respond. Rather than engaging meaningfully with the content of these thoughts, many clinicians tend to offer blanket reassurances without exploring the fear, grief, or exhaustion that may be generating the imagery in the first place. That approach, however well-intentioned, can leave mothers feeling unseen and unheard at their most vulnerable.
The role shame plays in keeping mothers isolated
The gap between how frequently intrusive thoughts occur and how rarely they are discussed comes down almost entirely to shame. Mothers who experience these thoughts commonly fear that disclosing them will result in their baby being removed, that they will be labeled unfit, or that the people closest to them will pull away.
That fear does not exist in a vacuum. Cultural expectations of motherhood leave very little room for ambivalence, rage, or darkness and when a mother’s inner experience contradicts the picture of serene, unconditional devotion she has been told to embody, the instinct to hide becomes overwhelming.
Mason’s research also surfaces the racial and socioeconomic dimensions of this problem. The experience of disclosing a mental health struggle is not the same for all mothers. Women from marginalized communities often face heightened scrutiny from child welfare systems, which makes the decision to speak honestly about postpartum symptoms far more fraught and potentially dangerous.
The shame cycle is also self reinforcing. The more a mother tries to suppress an intrusive thought, the more persistent it becomes, which then generates more shame, more fear, and more isolation. Breaking that cycle requires accurate information first and then connection.
How to take a first step toward help
Mental health professionals who specialize in perinatal mood disorders are clear: intrusive thoughts are treatable, and reaching out is the single most important thing a struggling mother can do.
For many women, however, the idea of disclosing these thoughts to a partner, friend, or doctor still feels impossible. Experts suggest starting smaller reading about other mothers experiences, connecting with peer communities, or simply learning that what they are going through has a clinical name and a documented explanation.
Once that foundation is in place, a conversation with an OB-GYN or a referral to a perinatal mental health specialist can open the door to therapy, medication, or both, all of which have strong evidence supporting their effectiveness for postpartum mood disorders.
One clinical distinction is worth understanding before that conversation: intrusive thoughts come with resistance and horror the mother knows the thought is wrong and has no desire to act on it. Psychotic thoughts, by contrast, may feel logical or justified to the person experiencing them. The first is a symptom of anxiety or OCD-spectrum postpartum conditions. The second is a psychiatric emergency. If there is any uncertainty about which category an experience falls into, that uncertainty alone is reason enough to call a provider right away.
The conversation that needs to happen
When more than half of new mothers may be experiencing intrusive thoughts yet the topic remains largely taboo something has gone seriously wrong in how postpartum mental health is discussed and supported.
When mothers suffer in silence out of fear that honesty will cost them their children or their reputations, every member of the family ultimately pays a price. Normalizing this conversation is not about lowering standards for maternal care. It is about making sure the mothers who need help can actually ask for it and that when they do, someone is ready to listen.

