BEZERRA, Julian de Macedo.
Resumo:
Motherhood in itself, involves an intense psychological reorganization mother during pregnancy and throughout the life of your child. The mother needs to work out his feelings about pregnancy and child, seeking to adapt forward to this role and to changes in the family. When motherhood comes with a child with mental suffering, this time of a woman's life becomes even more complex and challenging. Thus, this study aims to understand and analyze the experience of motherhood in users mothers perspective of a Psychosocial Care Center. The methodological approach of this research is embasou the qualitative approach of exploratory-descriptive light of the Collective Subject Speech by Lefèvre and Lefèvre (2005). Data collection was conducted from January 2015, were interviewed seven mothers. At the end of the study may be highlighted in general, that mothers had a limited view about the perception of motherhood experience, since most of the time was unveiled just the feeling of surprise, taking maternity been generated in an atmosphere without planning prior, but before the fact, came a sense of accomplishment and happiness to these women. The Psychosocial Care Center investigated in the study presented himself as an extremely important service for tracking of motherhood with the mental suffering. Without this reference service certainly motherhood before the mental suffering would behave in a more impactful and sorrowful way. Another important point was the search for faith in God as a supporter of this process of suffering between motherhood and the madness. The religion and faith are generally balms for human sorrows, no different in this research. It is understood that it is necessary to empower more and more these women on the care process, as with the actors, the mother is one of the most important caregivers in this process. You also need a better look at them, because it is not enough to treat only the individual with mental suffering, but all the family context around it, improving assistance aimed mainly to the mother figure, which, in most cases, is the main caregiver.