Clinicians and the women they care for cannot understand
female fertility in its entirety without taking into consideration
its relationship with the psychosexual self. Psychosexual
self is the thoughts, emotions, and self-perceptions that
are reciprocally related to the biological self. Motherhood
and fertility are sources of identity for women.4 They have
been described as natural instincts and “physical, psychological
and social completeness and fulfillment.”24 In-depth interviews
of 10 Swedish women who became pregnant and
had an induced abortion revealed that they sometimes experienced
an unexpected understanding of self and one’s fertility.
1 This understanding involves facing an unexpected, intuitive
desire to be fertile and meeting a changed body with
strong and mixed feelings. During the early stages of pregnancy,
some women described their bodies as a whole, including
both body and emotions.1 The fact that women who
have an unexpected pregnancy are often happy despite the result
not being congruent with their initial desires also demonstrates
fertility as a positive, innate phenomenon.25 Interviews
of 19 women who wanted children but could not easily conceive
revealed that when the power of fertility is not available,
some women feel guilt, inadequacy, and failure, demonstrating
again the relationship between the biological and
psychosexual self.24 Clinicians need to be aware that what
might appear to be ambivalent or incongruent feelings are
แพทย์และผู้หญิงที่พวกเขาดูแลไม่สามารถเข้าใจความอุดมสมบูรณ์ของเพศหญิงในสิ่งทั้งปวงโดยไม่ต้องคำนึงถึงความสัมพันธ์กับตัวเองpsychosexual psychosexual ตนเองเป็นความคิดอารมณ์และการรับรู้ด้วยตนเองที่มีความสัมพันธ์ซึ่งกันและกันด้วยตนเองทางชีวภาพ Clinicians and the women they care for cannot understand
female fertility in its entirety without taking into consideration
its relationship with the psychosexual self. Psychosexual
self is the thoughts, emotions, and self-perceptions that
are reciprocally related to the biological self. Motherhood
and fertility are sources of identity for women.4 They have
been described as natural instincts and “physical, psychological
and social completeness and fulfillment.”24 In-depth interviews
of 10 Swedish women who became pregnant and
had an induced abortion revealed that they sometimes experienced
an unexpected understanding of self and one’s fertility.
1 This understanding involves facing an unexpected, intuitive
desire to be fertile and meeting a changed body with
strong and mixed feelings. During the early stages of pregnancy,
some women described their bodies as a whole, including
both body and emotions.1 The fact that women who
have an unexpected pregnancy are often happy despite the result
not being congruent with their initial desires also demonstrates
fertility as a positive, innate phenomenon.25 Interviews
of 19 women who wanted children but could not easily conceive
revealed that when the power of fertility is not available,
some women feel guilt, inadequacy, and failure, demonstrating
again the relationship between the biological and
psychosexual self.24 Clinicians need to be aware that what
might appear to be ambivalent or incongruent feelings are
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