Maria Aparecida saw in the reborn community an incentive to return to live after a deep depression that isolated her from the world
Summary
Maria Aparecida has passed the deep depression and panic syndrome when she found emotional relief and a support network in the community of small reborn collectors, transforming her routine and saving her vitality.
For over a decade, Maria Aparecida Donizete lived to take care of her husband, who was forced to bed in 2010. The total dedication isolated her from the world. “I stopped living. I didn’t participate in the house, nothing,” he said in an interview with Land now This Thursday, 15. In 2017, the death of the mother, with whom she shared the house, Immersed Maria Aparecida in a deep depression. Until then life marked with obligations, life seemed to no longer have meaning.
“I couldn’t answer the phone, I couldn’t open the gate.” He searched for medical assistance, looked for a psychiatrist, but, in his opinion, the treatment had no effect. “I didn’t have the strength to leave.” The crises intensified. “One day I was very bad. I almost passed out, a very strong chest pain, I started to tremble, to have tachycardia. I thought of heart attack.” In the AU, the diagnosis: Panic syndrome.
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It was only in May 2022 that something began to change. Still inmates, Maria Aparecida accepted an invitation from her son to a short departure in Ibirapuera Park in San Paolo. There he had an unlikely meeting: a group gathered with realistic children. It was a encounter of baby collectors, hyperreal dolls, handmade, simulating infants.

The interest was immediate. The brightness in the eyes of his mother moved her son, who a month later presented her the first baby reborn. When he opened the box and saw the gift, he could not contain tears.
But the charm went beyond the doll. Maria Aparecida fell in love with the community and the Union. Then he contacted the organizer of the meeting and soon participated in the meetings with other “reborn mothers”. Today there are eight children.
The meetings occur mainly in the Ibirapuera and Villa-Lobos parks. “We make a picnic, it is a very hot afternoon. What attracts attention is the friendship that we created between collectors, admirers of art and between the” stork “(the artists who make children).”
The impact on your life was immense. “Today, thank God, I have a practically normal life. I already go home, I go to the market, I can already solve the problems.” Children, however, come out only for meetings. “They remain in their corner. Once a week he dusts out, because it is an art, and it is expensive,” he explains. It also changes its clothes and takes care of synthetic hair with the cream. “It’s pleased. It’s a hobby.”
Source: Terra

Ben Stock is a lifestyle journalist and author at Gossipify. He writes about topics such as health, wellness, travel, food and home decor. He provides practical advice and inspiration to improve well-being, keeps readers up to date with latest lifestyle news and trends, known for his engaging writing style, in-depth analysis and unique perspectives.