Welcome back to Become a Calm Mama. I'm your host, I'm Darlene Childress,
Speaker:and this episode might be a bit of a rant
Speaker:because I recognized as we have
Speaker:been talking about matrescence on the podcast that this
Speaker:feeling that comes in matrescence, this, uh,
Speaker:transformational transitional time is likened
Speaker:to adolescence, and the insecurity and the
Speaker:transition and the confusion and the overwhelm that comes
Speaker:in adolescence often is mimicked in matrescence.
Speaker:It's a period of time where you're on shifting sand. You don't know who you
Speaker:are, you don't know where you fit, you don't know who you're
Speaker:becoming. And I recognize that as
Speaker:that happens for women, like a mom,
Speaker:it's also happening in her peer group. And I wanted to have a conversation
Speaker:about about how your peer group, the other
Speaker:moms around you might be going through their
Speaker:own period of matrescence and how they might be acting in
Speaker:ways that feel like high school, that feel immature, that feel like teen drama,
Speaker:that feel just like very dramatic and how this often
Speaker:happens in matrescence and in early motherhood.
Speaker:So I invited my friend Danielle onto the podcast so we could just talk about
Speaker:it and normalize that mom
Speaker:cliques exist, that there's a lot of mama drama
Speaker:going on, especially in elementary school, a lot of
Speaker:gossip, rumors, you know,
Speaker:just nastiness. And I
Speaker:wanted to address that on the podcast and have a conversation about it so that
Speaker:you don't feel like you're going insane if it's happening to you. And
Speaker:also just kind of a word of wisdom to all of us that
Speaker:are moms and some ways that we can support each other and be more
Speaker:loving and kind. So listen into this conversation with my good
Speaker:friend Danielle. Hi.
Speaker:Hi, how are you? Okay.
Speaker:Are you ready? Yeah, this is fun. It
Speaker:is fun. Okay, I'll just start. Okay.
Speaker:Okay, welcome Danielle to Become a Calm Mom podcast. You've been
Speaker:on here before. Hi, Dar. It's always nice to be on this with
Speaker:you. Yeah. Um, okay, so I called
Speaker:you today because I had just finished an interview
Speaker:with Dr. Angel Close, and I talked to her about
Speaker:matrescence, which is a word I had never heard before,
Speaker:right? So I'm going to define it for you. And
Speaker:okay, I— what I wanted to talk to you about is Mom
Speaker:Clix and other bullshit, right? Essentially,
Speaker:which is what I decided to title this episode. And
Speaker:I was like, who do I want to talk about this with? And I thought
Speaker:of you because we sort of raised our kids
Speaker:adjacent to each other. Like, our— we were in the same elementary
Speaker:school and, you know, same community, but
Speaker:had different experiences and different friend groups, but we, you know, crossed over.
Speaker:Right. And so I was like, okay, I
Speaker:know you would have some opinions about
Speaker:women moms in these earlier
Speaker:stages of parenting, like a little bit in
Speaker:preschool, but really kind of early elementary school, the dynamic
Speaker:between moms, like kinder through 3rd
Speaker:grade and how— yeah, yeah. How you find your people. At
Speaker:school. Yes. And kind of
Speaker:all of like, there's a ton of energy and drama
Speaker:and emotion in that period of time when
Speaker:you're like, I think it, it was so—
Speaker:matrescence is this idea
Speaker:that becoming a mom and being in
Speaker:motherhood is a transition that you are going through an
Speaker:identity shift and a transition where
Speaker:you're letting go parts of yourself from the past and
Speaker:finding out who you are now that you're a parent. Sure. And
Speaker:it's likened to adolescence.
Speaker:Hmm. So it's kind of like, you know, how when you're an adolescent, you start
Speaker:as a child and then you end up as an adult in that
Speaker:period of time, which is roughly like 10 years or whatever.
Speaker:And your body goes through huge changes, your
Speaker:identity shifts, like you find out who you are, you know, that's what
Speaker:it's true of adolescence. And in some— yeah, it's
Speaker:all trial by fire for sure. Yes, like you
Speaker:just, you just get thrown into this new stage of
Speaker:life as an adolescent, and then you're like,
Speaker:you just go through it. It's, it's typically
Speaker:tumultuous, right? Right. And
Speaker:you come out on the other side an adult, a different person. Like, you know,
Speaker:you're no longer a child. And when with matrescence, it's
Speaker:similar in that you start out without having a child, and then you go through
Speaker:a process, and then you are a mother. And that isn't,
Speaker:you know, there's that postpartum period, but then there's the actual
Speaker:longer period of time where you're in like an identity shift. And as
Speaker:a mom, and I think you can relate to this, it's like
Speaker:that in matrescence, it's not really defined, like,
Speaker:is it in terms of a time period? When I
Speaker:was reading about it, it's like there's kind of this emerging
Speaker:matrescence and then middle, middle
Speaker:matrescence and then late matrescence. So kind of these stages of
Speaker:motherhood really makes a lot of sense. Yeah, right. Like
Speaker:you're kind of in this process. It's kind of like as soon as you figure
Speaker:out this version of motherhood, it kind of shifts on you because the
Speaker:kids change, but you change alongside. So you're kind of always in
Speaker:this metamorphosis. And
Speaker:anyway, so I was thinking, so I finished the
Speaker:interview with Angelle, and when I had
Speaker:read her book called Unburdening
Speaker:Motherhood, where she introduced this topic to me, this concept of matrescence, which
Speaker:I've always thought of as motherhood. That's right, right, right around it.
Speaker:Um, but while I was think reading it,
Speaker:I was thinking about how my own personal
Speaker:story of becoming a mom and like what I learned about myself
Speaker:in those early years and, and insecurity I felt and
Speaker:the confusion and over— I had, you know, just like,
Speaker:just like my adolescence, like my matrescence was also, you know, Sure,
Speaker:sure. Um, which I think we can
Speaker:all relate to, but I was thinking about how other women
Speaker:are also going through matrescence. Well, every woman
Speaker:in motherhood is going through it. Yeah. And I started to think
Speaker:about how they were— I'm going
Speaker:through this massive transition, I'm insecure, I'm
Speaker:confused, I don't know who I am
Speaker:anymore. I don't know who my people are. I don't know where I
Speaker:fit. I don't know if I belong, especially as an adoptive mom,
Speaker:because I always kind of had like the— I came through the back door to
Speaker:motherhood. So all the swap, right, pregnancy and war
Speaker:stories, right, right, right, right, right. So I kind of— and I'm a
Speaker:naturally, uh, I'm a person who naturally doesn't think that they
Speaker:belong in any group, so I had brought all that with me.
Speaker:Sure. And, and so
Speaker:I was just thinking about how if I'm
Speaker:feeling— I didn't think about this back then, this is why I wanted to talk
Speaker:to you about it— but if I was feeling
Speaker:insecure and confused and not sure
Speaker:who I was, all the women that I was
Speaker:around in that period of time were also going
Speaker:through the same thing. Yeah, of course.
Speaker:But we don't identify because we don't have this word matrescence. We're
Speaker:not looking around and being like, well, they're also a teenager, or—
Speaker:Right. I was thinking while you were defining it and you said, well, I've always
Speaker:just thought of that as motherhood, but it actually is
Speaker:helpful to have more language and more
Speaker:vocabulary about the experience of
Speaker:motherhood. The phases of it, the things we go
Speaker:through as people,
Speaker:um, as we mother, right? I mean, whatever that version of
Speaker:mothering is for you, to have more language about
Speaker:it is, I think, super helpful,
Speaker:um, because motherhood is such a generic term, right?
Speaker:So when we're speaking about the word
Speaker:matrescence and equating it to adolescence,
Speaker:right? I mean, I think, sure,
Speaker:we all have certainly,
Speaker:you know, the preschool years and then the early school years and then the high
Speaker:school years, these different periods of time in
Speaker:our mothering process where we feel insecure. Are we
Speaker:doing this right? Are our kids doing this right? Are we
Speaker:making the right decisions? Are we
Speaker:parenting through our values? And I mean,
Speaker:obviously, you know this,
Speaker:hence your career and your podcast. But I mean, I think
Speaker:having more language, the more language there is around that, the
Speaker:better it is for future generations of mothers.
Speaker:Yes, because we can identify. In the previous episode, I
Speaker:talked about how A lot of times when a woman is
Speaker:going through this transition in the different stages of
Speaker:their child, it's often
Speaker:like child referenced. So we say, oh, that's
Speaker:because you have a 2-year-old. Oh, that's because you have a high schooler.
Speaker:Oh, that's because you're in those, you know, middle years where you're doing a lot
Speaker:of driving, right? Instead of— we,
Speaker:we reference like the stage of the child instead of the stage of the woman.
Speaker:Right. And how that can be— we can maybe narrate
Speaker:it from the stage that you're in as a mother and what that challenge
Speaker:could be like for you, because it can feel a little dismissive when you're like,
Speaker:well, that's what it's like to have a 3-year-old, right? It's the terrible twos.
Speaker:Or, you know, but what does that mean for you as a
Speaker:person as opposed to what your toddler is looking like?
Speaker:And how long have you been a parent? Like, this is what it looks like
Speaker:to be a parent for 7 years. This is what it looks like to be
Speaker:a parent for 17 years. And you get better
Speaker:at like understanding yourself in this role. But
Speaker:in the beginning, of course, you don't know. You don't
Speaker:know who you are as a mom. I think it's very
Speaker:challenging even as you get older, but you can kind of start to see, even
Speaker:when your kids are grown, you can go like, oh, I was this kind of
Speaker:mom. Or, you know, I enjoyed this type
Speaker:of play, or this is the kind of things we did as a family. But
Speaker:you're building the car as you're driving it. And
Speaker:yeah, having that label is so helpful— matrescence. So
Speaker:now I want to talk about a, I think, a negative part
Speaker:about matrescence. Sure. And
Speaker:it's this idea that you as a woman
Speaker:are surrounded by other women who are
Speaker:also going through this transition and
Speaker:in the same way that teen girls act
Speaker:towards each other because they feel insecure, because
Speaker:they feel unsure, because they don't know who they are. They're trying to
Speaker:find their people, they're trying to belong, they're trying to fit in.
Speaker:There's traits of teen girls,
Speaker:and I have noticed those same traits
Speaker:in moms when their kids are
Speaker:Like 5, 6, 7, 8-ish. Like
Speaker:sometimes 4, but that is rough.
Speaker:Say again? That is rough.
Speaker:Yeah. Yes, sure. But it's
Speaker:insecurity. It's like, okay, let me— so what
Speaker:I've noticed is that when you have— when your
Speaker:kids are in preschool, It's like you're in war
Speaker:together. Like, everyone is like, oh my God, my kid does that
Speaker:too. You're comparing to figure out, like, is your
Speaker:kid normal? Like, what are you supposed to do? When should you
Speaker:potty train? Your kid sleeping through the night?
Speaker:It's very physical. That time
Speaker:is very physical parenting, right? It's very
Speaker:pick them up, put them down, put them in the stroller, put them in the
Speaker:car seat, put them down, bend down to put their clothes on, bend down to
Speaker:you know, pick them up to put them on the diaper changing table. It's
Speaker:very physical. And so, yeah, you kind of are—
Speaker:you're exhausted, you're weary. It is
Speaker:like a daily battle with a very physical component. And
Speaker:then I think when you— when they're no longer in diapers and
Speaker:they're no longer in strollers and they're— and you send your kid off to school,
Speaker:there's a change in parenting you're going from a
Speaker:very physical parenting to a more
Speaker:emotional parenting, right? And you're starting
Speaker:to wonder, am I doing this right?
Speaker:Yeah, I agree. I also kind of think that—
Speaker:I'm just thinking back for myself, like, all the
Speaker:moms that I met when my kids were in preschool,
Speaker:it seemed like they were— we weren't in
Speaker:competition with each other for
Speaker:place in terms of a hierarchy
Speaker:within the, the subgroup. Like,
Speaker:there was no competition in like who's popular at this
Speaker:preschool. I think everyone's just getting in, getting out. It's just like
Speaker:you're trying to manage your own child, like you're chasing your own kid around.
Speaker:It, it doesn't feel quite the same. Maybe that,
Speaker:um, that feeling that starts to come online
Speaker:when you start to think about your child's social group.
Speaker:Maybe that's what I'm thinking about, right? Right. This period
Speaker:when now there's a lot more social engineering
Speaker:happening on behalf of the kids
Speaker:in that who are they gonna have playdates with? I, I
Speaker:feel like when the, when the kids weren't in
Speaker:elementary school, I felt a little bit like, which mom do I want to hang
Speaker:out with? Like, a little bit more like, who do I vibe
Speaker:with at the park? Or like, who's chit-chatting with
Speaker:me out front while we wait for pickup, right?
Speaker:Like, they had their little buddies, but they were not— it didn't really matter
Speaker:necessarily who the children played with,
Speaker:right? They weren't forming tight social connections,
Speaker:nor was I trying to manipulate who I wanted them to be friends
Speaker:with, right, in those years. Well, and also, I think
Speaker:preschool is fairly transient. It's a short period of
Speaker:time, and everybody knows
Speaker:that in 2 years or 3 years max,
Speaker:you're gonna be moving on to a school that's K
Speaker:through 5th or K through 8th or K through 12, right?
Speaker:A much longer period of time. And
Speaker:so in preschool, it seems it, it's almost like you're dating.
Speaker:It doesn't really matter that much, right? You're not making like a commitment
Speaker:to these people that this is who you're gonna be social with, with your kids
Speaker:for the rest of your life. Maybe you are,
Speaker:Maybe people do build lifelong friendships in preschool, but
Speaker:that's not necessarily how you're feeling when you drop off
Speaker:your kids at preschool. And then I think when you get to
Speaker:kindergarten and the kids start forming a social bond
Speaker:and you start realizing that you're going to be at this school
Speaker:for 5 years or 6 years or 8 years or 12 years,
Speaker:right? Then it's kind of like, well, who, Who
Speaker:are, who are my kids preferring? What
Speaker:group am I going to be in? Are these going to be our longtime
Speaker:friends? And suddenly, are they good? Are these
Speaker:the people we want to be with? I think there starts to be
Speaker:that cattiness comes in because you're right. It's like, I think that's
Speaker:a really good point about the way that
Speaker:you look at the relationships. And when you're saying,
Speaker:you know, lifelong friends, I think the children
Speaker:rarely make a lifelong friend in preschool.
Speaker:Only maybe if they continue living next door to each other
Speaker:or going to the same school, or it's like very close family friends and you
Speaker:vacation together, you keep that relationship going.
Speaker:But you're right, for the most part, those preschool friendships
Speaker:are definitely transient in, in the
Speaker:child's life. And when you're a young mom, you don't really
Speaker:know that necessarily, but you can sense that everyone's gonna go to different elementary
Speaker:schools, right? And in fact, that's a big
Speaker:conversation in preschool, right? That's when it starts, I think, is like, what kind
Speaker:of— what school are you guys going to? And that's, I think, when
Speaker:we start to feel that feeling of like, where's the cool— where are the
Speaker:cool kids going, right? Or like, is that someone
Speaker:that should I be sending my kid with that kid? Or
Speaker:should I— do I want to be with that family moving forward? Like, what's—
Speaker:yeah, that's it. It starts to happen. You start having these
Speaker:conversations because you know that it's a big commitment. It's the next several years
Speaker:of your life, right? And then we add this
Speaker:matrescence thing where you're insecure and you don't know
Speaker:where you fit. So it's like, I think what we do
Speaker:is take that insecurity,
Speaker:and we want to make sure our kids are set up well, or like they're
Speaker:with the right kids or the right group, or we're in the right group.
Speaker:And that then lends itself to judging
Speaker:and criticizing and looking around at other moms and being
Speaker:like, well, she's a hot mess, or I don't want to be around her because
Speaker:I hear how she talks to her kid, or oh, that kid's really
Speaker:bad, I don't want that kid hit my kid. So we're not going to play
Speaker:with them anymore. And it starts to be
Speaker:like a lot of criticism,
Speaker:judgment, you know, observation. And then
Speaker:you get a comparison. Then you get into gossip.
Speaker:You get into like the moms talking to the other moms about that
Speaker:kid or that mom. Yeah. I mean, I think it
Speaker:just keeps going. I think that, you know, in
Speaker:today's world, you have the working
Speaker:moms and the non-working moms. You have, you know,
Speaker:the sports moms and the dance moms versus the,
Speaker:you know, uh, robotics
Speaker:moms, or the, you know, you have like— it just keeps going. There's
Speaker:like— I think that gets defined later in Matrescence. Like, you
Speaker:figure out what kind of mom you are because of your kid, or do we
Speaker:ever really figure that out? No, no, no. But like, define yourself
Speaker:as like, I'm a dad mom, I'm a
Speaker:boy mom. I was a boy mom, so, right, right. That was like,
Speaker:I did boy things. It wasn't even like I was a parent of
Speaker:like sports kids. Like, we just like, just very— so
Speaker:sure. And then I hung out with boy moms, right? Um, right.
Speaker:But I guess what I'm trying to get at is
Speaker:like, like, I, I remember— I don't know what
Speaker:happened, but when my kids were in Kinder and
Speaker:first, the— I was in a friend group.
Speaker:My kids were in the same friend— like, they got into a group
Speaker:with these— the kids and the moms were cool, and I got into
Speaker:the group with the moms, and it was fun. Like, I got invited to mom's
Speaker:night out with them. We always hung out at the park together
Speaker:when early release days happened, and
Speaker:I felt like I belonged. I was like, this is so cool. There was some
Speaker:moms that had kids. My kids were just one grade apart, so some kinder, some
Speaker:first. It was great. And
Speaker:then one day I was sitting at
Speaker:the park, and it was only— wasn't that long into
Speaker:the year. And I realized that all of
Speaker:the moms had done something earlier that day, like they
Speaker:had done some scavenger hunt birthday party thing for one of the
Speaker:other moms. And I, I was
Speaker:like— I wasn't like, what are you guys talking about? I just was like kind
Speaker:of trying to figure out what they were talking about. And then I— it hit
Speaker:me, like everything in my body, I
Speaker:felt like I was in high school again. I just It was like, oh my
Speaker:God, all these moms are doing
Speaker:stuff and I'm not invited.
Speaker:And I'm like, oh my
Speaker:God, I feel like I had like a giant zit on my nose or something.
Speaker:I felt like really an adolescent feeling
Speaker:and I did not know what was happening. And then
Speaker:I started to realize that I was being excluded included on
Speaker:for a variety of things. And
Speaker:then one of the moms started— I found out
Speaker:there was this big rumor that my son had stolen something at his
Speaker:birthday party, and that she had told all
Speaker:these other moms that, that my son had stolen this thing,
Speaker:and that they didn't think
Speaker:that they should play with him anymore. Like, they're— like, my son
Speaker:and me were being excluded. They were at a clique. They
Speaker:let me in for a minute. I don't know which mom mean girl
Speaker:decided I wasn't part of the clique anymore. I got pushed out,
Speaker:and then my kids started to get ostracized, right?
Speaker:Well, sure, because they're being left out too, right? Well, it's like,
Speaker:I think— I don't know if it was a combination, is I'm the bad one
Speaker:and my— or my kid, or both of us, or we're a combo pack, or
Speaker:what. And it was so painful,
Speaker:that period of time, because I had a friend group that—
Speaker:I was newer to the school, and it was just
Speaker:kinder though, so it wasn't like I was that, you know, everyone was new. But
Speaker:some people had been there the year before, and I didn't
Speaker:know how to be. I didn't know who to—
Speaker:right. I still wanted to have my kids stay connected
Speaker:on some level because they weren't completely pushed out,
Speaker:but I could tell the moms didn't want me. I was like, I just felt
Speaker:like I was in high school. And as I've talked about this story with other
Speaker:moms, they have shared with me similar things that have happened.
Speaker:Sure. And I, I
Speaker:resolved that feeling and healed and found a wonderful
Speaker:friend group outside of that group and never looked back. It was
Speaker:great. It worked out right for me. Right. Um, but
Speaker:in that transition period when I'm
Speaker:like, I'm being mean-girled, I'm being excluded, it
Speaker:was so painful. So when
Speaker:I was reading Matrescence and then thinking about, oh
Speaker:my God, this was other women
Speaker:who felt insecure about their own child's
Speaker:place And like,
Speaker:I don't— I've talked to those women since then, right? And
Speaker:they're all like, no one's like necessarily
Speaker:acknowledged that they pushed me out of the group,
Speaker:but they are all less insecure now,
Speaker:right? You know what I mean? Like, they're all— of our kids have grown up,
Speaker:and like, we were in high school together, and I don't know, the friendships
Speaker:flowed in and out. But those early years, you don't trust that, like,
Speaker:I don't know, everyone's gonna be okay. Well, yeah, and I
Speaker:think that a factor there, you know, is
Speaker:that if there's a quote-unquote bad
Speaker:kid, right, doing quote-unquote
Speaker:bad things, is that going to rub
Speaker:off on your child? Yes, that's the fear, right?
Speaker:So, right, that's the fear that stealing
Speaker:kid who did not steal it, by the way. I just wanted
Speaker:to clarify, it's like it did not happen.
Speaker:Lincoln was naughty and he got into lots
Speaker:of trouble. This one was not
Speaker:the case. Um, and
Speaker:those— that friend group, he was in with them from 1st to
Speaker:12th. All of us stayed in the same, so they all— we all know
Speaker:how everybody turned out, right? Right. You know, so,
Speaker:um, anyway, it's like, because
Speaker:you have— if your kid is slightly divergent or, or
Speaker:working through emotional regulation— Lincoln is severe ADHD. I don't know what was
Speaker:going on. Impulse control, first grade. I mean, he was all over the map.
Speaker:And yeah, there was a grace extended to me
Speaker:by the other parents. They weren't like, wow, you're having a hard time
Speaker:raising this boy. Like, no one— everyone's like, right,
Speaker:run away, don't let your kid be with the bad
Speaker:kids, right? Because they're very fear-based, very
Speaker:fear-based. It feels— that's what I guess it
Speaker:feels like, insecurity, right?
Speaker:Right. Because if this is contagious,
Speaker:I mean, I, I think we could, we could document— we could
Speaker:talk about documented cases of social contagion where people
Speaker:are, you know, kids are blamed for creating
Speaker:havoc in communities, right? But the thought of if this
Speaker:behavior is contagious, I don't want my kid catching
Speaker:it. And also, if my kid does catch it, do I know how to
Speaker:handle that? What if I have a bad kid?
Speaker:What if my kid starts stealing? What if I have the one who, right, takes
Speaker:the shampoo bottle at the bounce house birthday party
Speaker:and puts it all over the slide.
Speaker:Um, right. But also, like, yeah, what if that's my
Speaker:kid? And also, I don't even— that is, I don't
Speaker:even know how I would handle that, right? I don't know how to parent that.
Speaker:I'm just gonna avoid it so I don't have to parent it, right? Or—
Speaker:but then I think you look and go, that must be a terrible parent, that
Speaker:mother. Oh yes. But your kid
Speaker:is a reflection of you as a parent, right? Like,
Speaker:if you have a bad kid or a kid who, like, you know, sneaks other
Speaker:people's snacks out of their lunchbox or whatever, that's
Speaker:because you are too restrictive, or you have— I— everybody is
Speaker:blaming everybody. Everyone's judging everybody because we're also
Speaker:at this young stage of parenting, you know, you don't know
Speaker:how to do it. Right. Then you also— everyone
Speaker:thinks that misbehave— no one should misbehave. Like, we've just— we've,
Speaker:we've, in parent education, created a concept
Speaker:that if there's misbehavior, something has gone wrong,
Speaker:right? Well, even if there's like,
Speaker:um, if your child has emotional pain, it's
Speaker:clearly the parent's fault. Yes, right. It got to be something going on in
Speaker:that house. Right. I mean, yes. Right.
Speaker:So then I think it's so interesting because
Speaker:I think that we have tried to create a culture
Speaker:where we recognize that kids do go through painful
Speaker:experiences and they have a lot of emotions and sometimes they're
Speaker:really big and sometimes they lead to behavior
Speaker:that isn't great behavior. And
Speaker:we've done a great job of creating language around
Speaker:that and acknowledging that that happens to children.
Speaker:But we haven't gotten past the
Speaker:fact that all of that obviously
Speaker:lies at the feet of the parent, right? Like,
Speaker:every child's outburst,
Speaker:every child's pain, every child's misbehavior, every child's
Speaker:tantrum is because the parent is doing a bad
Speaker:job. Yeah, right. We definitely still have that,
Speaker:um, the blame there. And I think moms perpetuate it with
Speaker:each other. Um, oh yeah, you know, for
Speaker:sure. And I guess the reason why I wanted to have this conversation is
Speaker:because I want to have
Speaker:moms recognize
Speaker:from a compassionate lens that other
Speaker:women are going through it too,
Speaker:and they're trying to figure it out too.
Speaker:And I know everyone is really scared
Speaker:of how am I— is my kid going to be
Speaker:okay? Or is my kid going to be cool and
Speaker:smart and attractive and athletic
Speaker:and successful. And are we gonna mess them up?
Speaker:Yeah, so we better not put them in social groups that are bad. Like,
Speaker:we have a lot of anxiety. We, we do do a lot of social
Speaker:engineering, and that is a normal
Speaker:thing in parenting because you want to give your kids the best
Speaker:opportunity you can. But
Speaker:making other women— hurting other women in the process and
Speaker:gossiping and spreading rumors and judging and
Speaker:criticizing and shaming and blaming
Speaker:is not the way to do it. Like, it's very
Speaker:painful. And I think if women can realize—
Speaker:because we always say mom, mom, mom, like, we're women,
Speaker:right? Like, a matrescence, almost like, I'm a mom, hey mama, like,
Speaker:mama. I'm guilty of it. It's like, actually,
Speaker:hey, woman who has children, right?
Speaker:Um, it just feels that we—
Speaker:if we understand matrescence and we understand that we're all
Speaker:going through this transition and we're all a little bit nervous and
Speaker:scared and we're trying to figure out what's best for our kid,
Speaker:that we can make decisions that work for our children, but we
Speaker:don't have to be cliquey. We don't have to
Speaker:act like teenage girls and talk a bunch of shit and
Speaker:get into big old WhatsApp group chats and
Speaker:take people off group chats and exclude them and have birthday
Speaker:parties where 14 girls get invited, but there's 15
Speaker:girls in the class. Like being a little
Speaker:bit more aware of the impact that that has.
Speaker:I just think if we can build a little more awareness,
Speaker:it might help some people not get hurt.
Speaker:Yeah, I mean, I think—
Speaker:I also think that if we
Speaker:encourage people to be inclusive rather than
Speaker:exclusive, that they are
Speaker:enriching their lives and the lives of their children
Speaker:in a way that they don't necessarily— can't even necessarily foresee,
Speaker:right? If you operate
Speaker:from a point of,
Speaker:um, fear and exclusivity, and,
Speaker:um, I think then it's detrimental to you. You get less
Speaker:perspective less people to understand what this
Speaker:mothering is all about, um,
Speaker:less input for yourself as a woman, as a mother,
Speaker:and also less of that for your
Speaker:child. And you're, you're actually like
Speaker:doing the opposite of what you hope for your child, right?
Speaker:You hope that you're building empathy with your child. You
Speaker:hope that you're teaching your children right from wrong. You hope that
Speaker:you're instilling values. But if you,
Speaker:um, keep your circle tight and exclude
Speaker:certain kinds of moms or certain kinds of kids,
Speaker:you're actually doing a disservice to your kids
Speaker:by not exposing them to
Speaker:all the different types of people that are out there. Yeah, and
Speaker:teaching them exactly like also, well
Speaker:What do you think was going on? What was the impact of that behavior? Like,
Speaker:right, why do you think they did that? You know, what would you
Speaker:do if you were in that situation? Like, you can
Speaker:use it as teaching and growing and yeah, exposure. And
Speaker:I guess I want to add, it's like you don't have to
Speaker:invite everybody to everything. Like, that's not— it's not— no, of course
Speaker:not. That's clearly not. But I think that we
Speaker:do have a You know, I think
Speaker:bullying has been at the forefront, and
Speaker:we have a lot of thoughts on bullying and
Speaker:where it leads to with kids. And,
Speaker:you know, we've done things like create a buddy bench, right,
Speaker:where the kids who feel lonely or
Speaker:isolated or bullied can
Speaker:can go and sit on it and someone and the kids will come and
Speaker:sit with them, right? But then if they're going home
Speaker:and their moms are doing the same
Speaker:thing to those same kids, what is the point of
Speaker:the bully bench? Buddy bench. Buddy, sorry,
Speaker:buddy bench. We're just really farming
Speaker:out the parenting.
Speaker:To happen at school. Yeah, and you're putting that pressure on the
Speaker:school itself to model. Welcome back to Become a
Speaker:Calm Mama. I'm your host, I'm Darlene Childress, and
Speaker:this episode might be a bit of a rant
Speaker:because I recognized, as we have
Speaker:been talking about matrescence on the podcast, that this
Speaker:feeling that comes in matrescence, this, uh,
Speaker:transformational, transitional time is likened
Speaker:to adolescence. And the insecurity and the
Speaker:transition and the confusion and the overwhelm that comes
Speaker:in adolescence often is mimicked in matrescence.
Speaker:It's a period of time where you're on shifting sand. You don't know who you
Speaker:are. You don't know where you fit. You don't know who you're becoming.
Speaker:And I recognize that as that happens for
Speaker:women, like a mom, it's also happening in
Speaker:her peer group. And I wanted to have a conversation about how
Speaker:your peer group, the other moms around you,
Speaker:might be going through their own period of matrescence and how
Speaker:they might be acting in ways that feel like high school, that feel
Speaker:immature, that feel like teen drama, that feel just like very
Speaker:dramatic, and how this often happens in
Speaker:matrescence. And in early motherhood. So I invited my friend
Speaker:Danielle onto the podcast so we could just talk about it and
Speaker:normalize that mom cliques exist, that
Speaker:there's a lot of mama drama going on, especially in
Speaker:elementary school, a lot of gossip, rumors, you
Speaker:know, just nastiness.
Speaker:And I wanted to address that on the podcast and have a
Speaker:conversation about it so that you don't feel like you're going insane if it's happening
Speaker:to you. And also just kind of a word of wisdom to
Speaker:all of us that are moms and some ways that we can
Speaker:support each other and be more loving and kind. So listen
Speaker:into this conversation with my good friend Danielle.
Speaker:All the values and things like that, but not realizing at home we're
Speaker:maybe not actually modeling the values we want
Speaker:to be. Right. I mean, I think
Speaker:thinking that about the buddy bench before you even start talking, I was thinking we
Speaker:almost need like a mom buddy bench or just even visually thinking of
Speaker:recognizing that the mom who you want to reject
Speaker:might be just struggling and you don't have to become best
Speaker:friends or invite them to every mom's night out and book club and things
Speaker:like that. Being lovely, being kind, not
Speaker:talking shit, not being part of the rumor mill. I
Speaker:am— I know every mom
Speaker:who's in any of the younger elementary school,
Speaker:there is so much drama. There are group— so much
Speaker:group chats in the PFAs, the
Speaker:PTAs, like a lot of bullshit, a lot of
Speaker:shit talking. It's not a kind place,
Speaker:and, and it can be very painful. And
Speaker:why is it so unkind? Because people
Speaker:are insecure, right? That's it. And, and
Speaker:they're not sure what they're doing. So yeah, I mean, I think
Speaker:this is a great conversation to be having. I think it's very culturally
Speaker:relevant. I— did you watch All Her Fault?
Speaker:Yeah. You know, that was such an
Speaker:interesting demonstration of that, right? These two
Speaker:women who were working full-time
Speaker:moms, and they were like so desperate to
Speaker:have a friend, right? That's how they met, drinking a
Speaker:glass of wine in the bathroom at a school fundraiser where they were like,
Speaker:oh my God, get me away from some of these women.
Speaker:And You know, obviously
Speaker:it's an extreme caricature of what it's like, or not,
Speaker:maybe not, I don't know. It's been a while since I've been in elementary school,
Speaker:but I think that,
Speaker:um, yeah, I mean, if we don't want kids to be
Speaker:bullied, if we don't want our kids
Speaker:to be the bullies, if we
Speaker:want our kids to feel that they're growing up in a
Speaker:safe community,
Speaker:we have to demonstrate that.
Speaker:So beautiful. It's exactly
Speaker:what I want the takeaway to be. So thank you.
Speaker:Thank you. I mean, I think that it's just an
Speaker:extension of parenting, really, right? And
Speaker:we're all, we're all in
Speaker:the motherhood stages.
Speaker:We're all trying to figure it out, and the more
Speaker:kindness we have for ourselves about that,
Speaker:the more self-compassion we have, the more compassion we can
Speaker:have for others. And then that does impact our kids.
Speaker:It's like, if this is the type of parent you want to be and
Speaker:you want to raise kids who are kind and compassionate and empathetic,
Speaker:Yeah, you're right, we have to practice it. Yeah, in
Speaker:the communities that we find ourselves in. Yeah.
Speaker:All right, thanks, friends, so much. Of course, I love these
Speaker:conversations on and offline, so
Speaker:anytime. Yeah, and I do want to
Speaker:just tell anyone listening, like, get yourself a Danielle, get yourself—
Speaker:like, I've talked about my Tiffany's and all my various Christians.
Speaker:It's like, get your real people that you feel safe with and that,
Speaker:you know, love and appreciate you as you, and they love your kids, and
Speaker:they see your kids for them like what they are. And yeah,
Speaker:just 100% your people. And,
Speaker:and by the way, I mean, like you said, we, we raised our kids adjacent.
Speaker:We were not in the same mom clique, so to speak,
Speaker:but we always had a very open.
Speaker:We always had this kind of dialogue. And
Speaker:so even though our kids weren't always hanging out together and we
Speaker:weren't always hanging out together, we were having these types of
Speaker:conversations. And yeah,
Speaker:get yourself a Darlene.
Speaker:The more, the more people who have a Darlene, the better.
Speaker:The better. It's the same I feel about it, Danielle.
Speaker:All right, thank you. All right, friend, talk to you later.