Baby BluesBaby Blues : PhrasesMeaning: Feelings of depression or anxiety, experienced by some mothers following childbirth. Origin: Had anyone mentioned 'baby blues' prior to WWII they would have been thought to have been talking about colour - specifically the colour of someone's eyes. Most babies are born with blue eyes due to a lack of the melanin pigment until sometime after birth. The use of the term 'baby blues' to mean eyes is a natural development, which came about in the USA in the early 20th century. For example, this from the American author Rex Ellingwood Beach's novel Winds of Chance, 1918:
In the 1940s 'baby blues' began to be used with the meaning we now usually give it, i.e. post-natal depression. In his best-selling baby care book Expectant Motherhood (1940), Nicholson J. Eastman wrote:
Interestingly, in a later 1960s edition of the book Eastman suggested that expectant mothers should limit themselves to no more than ten cigarettes per day. How times change. I have found an earlier mention of 'baby blues' in a 1909 edition of The Syracuse Herald:
This is a jocular piece which lists various plays on the word blues. I don't think it can be viewed as an early citation of the 'baby blues' phrase with its current meaning, more a coincidence. Phrases Index | ||
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