I’ve not seen anyone say that they think she has postnatal depression because she’s decided to go back to work. I don’t think discussing the potential of her having it belittles it in any way either. We just think that she’s just not interested in being a mum because of reasons that have been discussed, such as leaving her baby multiple times a month to go on holiday, saying she doesn’t feel guilty when she leaves her to go on holiday, having the nanny care for her 24/7 when she doesn’t do anything 90% of the time, leaving her job at PLT to “focus on being a mum” but then ends up in New York for a fashion show with PLT who she no longer really works for. Couple that with what she’s said in the past about not feeding her during the night when she was a newborn, putting her to sleep in her nursery when she was extremely little and small things that we’ve picked up on in her vlogs, it doesn’t show her in the best light. Her actions and behaviour don’t match her words and the image she tries to portray of wanting to be a mum since she “came out of the womb” and that she was “put on this Earth to be a mum” (her words) so I don’t think it’s uncalled for that people have the opinions they doI have read the thread and to an extent, I understand some of the comments, but as a midwife who sees all different types of women (stay at home, entrepreneurs, young, old, rich, poor) there's no "right" way to be a mum. I don't agree with a lot of what Molly does, hence why I'm on this thread to start with, but postnatal depression is serious and I don't think Molly has given off any of the signals that she's suffering. People on here are saying she's undeserving of having her baby because she's been on work trips and has a nanny, and my personal view is every mum parents differently. If she chooses to go on work trips, that doesn't make her less deserving of having a baby than someone who stays at home.
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