A teaching on releasing the myth of standard postpartum recovery timelines, instead cultivating moment-to-moment presence and trust in individual healing pace.
Medical culture imposes universal timelines: six weeks, twelve weeks, return to exercise by three months. Mothers internalize these benchmarks and measure themselves against external standards, creating stress when their actual recovery diverges. Dipa Ma taught that attempting to force experience into predetermined shapes creates suffering; instead, complete presence to what is actually happening reveals its own rightness. Applied to postpartum recovery, this means releasing the timeline-measuring mind and instead asking: What does my body genuinely need today? Can I do this activity with presence and integrity, or would it compromise my healing? Am I ready for this progression, or is forcing it? These questions cannot be answered by any external standard—only by intimate presence to your actual body. Some mothers heal in six weeks; others require months. Both are normal. The suffering comes not from extended timelines but from the internal friction of believing recovery should be faster. By cultivating presence to each day's actual capacity and releasing the timeline-measuring mind, mothers paradoxically often recover faster. More importantly, they recover with less psychological anguish and greater trust in their body's intelligence. This is Dipa Ma's core teaching: presence is always the most skillful action available.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.