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On the Chinese Traditional Practice of Postpartum Care, “Zuo yuezi”

By Shako | Wednesday, January 23, 2013 | 5 Comments

8A 2013 01 23 ExpectingBaby 600x400 On the Chinese Traditional Practice of Postpartum Care, Zuo yuezi

I am surprised that the Chinese traditional practice “Zuo yuezi” (坐月子), sitting the month, referring to a specific diet and lifestyle of women after childbirth for one month, is considered a news story by a mainstream media. The Los Angeles Times recently profiled this thousand-year-old practice, citing a new Chinese American mom’s practicing “zuo yuezi.”

Back in 2004, The Los Angeles Times covered the changing ways that new Chinese moms in China were honoring this tradition. Although many cultures have their own postpartum traditions, the tradition of “zuo yuezi” is so prevalent that businesses providing “yuezi” services have popped up for something that was traditionally kept within the home.

According to believers, the month-long regimen helps women recover from childbirth, produce more breast milk and recalibrate their bodies. In addition to the special diet, new mothers are supposed to rest in bed and avoid contact with water — that is, no shampooing or showering for 30 days.

The normal diet in this tradition is to stay at home and stay away from water, no drinking or showering for one month. The new mother is treated like a princess at home by her family. She is not allowed to do any chore or housework, but relaxing and nursing her baby. The theory behind is that food is divided into “cold” and “warm” as in Yin and Yang. Movement after childbirth could create lifelong muscle pain for the woman.

Follicles expand during childbirth, leaving the body vulnerable to cold. The prohibition against cold goes beyond diet. In the month after giving birth, women should not wash their hair or go outdoors. Hard-core yuezi observers stick to sponge baths.

To research about this practice, I asked a friend who gave birth to a child a year ago, and practiced “zuo yuezi” after. She said the process was surprisingly painful. The new mother could be made depressed by this “yuezi” thing, and many women do it simply because their moms or mother-in-laws require them to.

“The baby often woke up at night and cried all the time. I don’t know what to do. I can’t take shower, wash my hair, drink water or go out. It was quite depressing,” she said.

What she was allowed to drink during that month was wine, date water and pig feet ginger soup, which were all considered to be “warm” food to fight away the coldness inside her body.

Since it sounds like imprisonment more than childcare, why do they still maintain this tradition?

My friend said she had no choice under the absolute authority of her mom and mother-in-law who were with her the whole time. Her husband basically supported her practice, because all they want is the health of the baby, who, in their theory, eats everything the mother eats from her breast milk.

“I counted down everyday to the day I could take shower,” my friend said.

photo credit: phalinn via photopin cc

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Facebook Comments (Beta)

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Ahmed-Sanchez-De-La-Cruz-Kim/58700922 Ahmed Sanchez De La Cruz Kim

    Putting aside Traditional Chinese medicinal theories, it’s more or less true in conventional medicine that what the mother eats does go to the baby.

  • http://www.jozjozjoz.com jozjozjoz

    What I don’t understand is the purpose of avoiding water… no shampoo or shower for 30 days?! No wonder new Moms are supposed to stay inside during this time… they stink and no one wants to be publicly exposed to their funk!

  • http://twitter.com/heyitsjohnnyc Johnny C

    There is a similar practice by some culture groups in Eastern Indonesia in the islands around West Timor which was ultimately banned by Suharto. Women just after childbirth stayed inside round houses with no windows WITH the child, inside a makeshift sauna. They can not leave anywhere between 40-100 days, and food is brought to them, while showering or defecation is handled by community members. They believe it helps strengthen them against evil spirits and germs by being inside the steamhouse for that time frame. The result is, women are depressed, isolated, and permanently scarred. Nowadays, it’s not practiced as much due to the ban, but they have windows where neighbors can come by and talk to them so they aren’t isolated as much, but the kids still need sun and outside exposure.

  • http://www.facebook.com/tinabot Tina Tsai

    I just learned about this practice talking to a friend who did it. I don’t remember my mom doing this when my baby sib was born, but then again, she was an entire Pacific Ocean away from an oppressive mother-in-law. I’ll ask her about it mañana.

  • tonkotsu

    many chinese i know follow this tradition, but to varying levels. Not everyone follows this exactly the way it was back in the old times.

 
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