What happened to this podcast? I listened to all stories and loved it! I sometimes check, hoping to find new more episodes, but since March nothing was added.
I am 27 weeks along and this is helping me through the “I am going to ruin this small person inside of me” phase of pregnancy anxiety! We aren’t going to ruin these small people!
Love this podcast and the rawness of moms and hearing what they experience. There’s no mask on and we’re able to hear the things that help us know we’re not alone. I hope this podcast resumes!
I love this! I feel like there is something for everyone on here. I here not only my own story being told by others, but also I get to hear what some of my friends are possibly going through. Still waiting to hear how to dealt with the Self righteous on mother in-law, that expects you to be here mirror image...I’m sure eventually it will come. Love it keep going!
Love the openness of these very brave women (and some men). I have been able to relate on so many levels. I struggle with the vocal fry. It can be so distracting that I miss her important points and advice. I think the content beats the sound quality, but I can see why some bail. Stay healthy all!
It’s intriguing to be able to listen in on what other mothers are going through in such a private way, in a therapist’s room. I love the calming voice of Dr.Alexandra Sacks as well as her supportive and realistic feedbacks. Thank you for making such great content!
Absolutely living for this podcast! So glad I found it. Covers such a huge range of motherhood experiences. Love listening to stories like mine but also stories that make me ask new questions and have interesting conversations with my mom. Just loving it all :)
These are such important conversations and the questions Dr. Sacks asks are so, so valuable. I love that there is no beating around the bush and the stories just feel so honest, raw, and real. Please make more of these sessions available!!!
I’m a new mom and began listening to this show recently. I absolutely love and appreciate all of the stories told because they are SO real and SO intimate. 10/10 stars for me. Thanks to all the women who shared their worlds as mothers.
This podcast allows me to think critically about my emotions related to being a mom. It’s a nice way to reflect while I walk and listen. One note: the vocal fry is distracting. I love the content and care of your message, but once you hear the vocal fry, you can’t unhear it.
An intimate look at the secret dark and scary parts of motherhood that no one talks about. I’ve related so deeply to many of the topics discussed on this podcast. It’s made me feel less alone in some of the struggles I’ve faced, and more aware and compassionate toward myself and other moms.
This is my favorite podcast! Even if you read the synopsis and think to yourself, “I can’t relate to that.” listen anyway and I promise you’ll glean something beneficial from it. It truly surprises me that I love this podcast more than all the other ones I listen to. It might surprise you too.
Amazing hardships that these mothers endure. And the psychiatrist guides them through what it means to examine their lives and how they got where they are. And then judges them gently in the direction that will provide them the best outcome
I really cannot get over Dr. Alexandra Sacks. I can’t get through a single episode because of her. She is not a good listener and is not a good therapist. On top of that, she is inauthentic, pretentious, and is trying too hard to put on a show. Otherwise, the topics are great and content to be gleaned from those topics rich. Dr. Sacks is not it.
This is the best podcast for the upper middle class professional woman and mom. This describes The maxes our burnt out American mom and how we can improve our situation
Dr Sacks is doing something new with these open therapy sessions with mothers: revealing the thoughts and feelings behind the facade of the mom who juggles it all with a smile on her face. I think it’s really important and frankly vital that these topics are being brought up and that we continue the conversations so as moms we stop feeling alone, wrong, different, etc.
I wish it spoke a little bit more to a larger audience and less just preaching to the choir - as important as it is for us moms to hear it!
Both as a mom and therapist, I love this show. Talking about these issues, that I feel are universal, is healing. Motherhood can be very lonely at times, this podcast normalizes mom issues. I look forward to a session each week.
Though I actively pursued becoming a mother, though much later than most women, I identify with Anne. I sense deep insecurities and anxiety from her own immigrant upbringing that simultaneously didn’t appeal to her yet she idolized her own mother’s hard work and self sacrifice. It’s hard to come to terms with the modern world, where it’s much easier on us and our kids, and the much harder time our own mothers had. I love this podcast so much. Every single episode is worth listening to multiple times.
This episode brought me to tears. I felt each ache and sorrow of ending a long and hard relationship with someone who I loved and had a child with. I resonate with difficulty in navigating relationship feelings apart from navigating expectations in parenting- it’s so hard. This woman’s story was similar to my own and helped me feel less alone, but also helped me name my feelings and my struggles in co parenting and single parenting. This podcast is one of my favorites- there are so many different beautiful layers of motherhood. I think Dr. Alexandra Sacks ability to nurture and help these women is so special.
I know this same feeling. I call it the “search for the me of me who never grew to be” phenomenon. I too was adopted in 1948, in the US but was lied to about my adoption, a family secret that caused great trauma in the adoptive family, and birth family when I found them, all the way through to now, I am 71. I understand!
Omg !! I love this one ! It hits home for me having a bi racial baby girl . She’s over a year now but I can really relate to her concern and pain. It’s hard to live in a world where this conversation is still happening . But it take strong parents to help guide their children to have their families through these discussions!
I was never the type to really listen to radio cast or podcasts but one day I was interested in finding one about motherhood and the struggles I go through on a every day to see if others relate, and I came across this one & it’s the absolute best! I love this podcast. They talk so in depth about many things that go unheard, or is not really spoken about such as if it’s okay to be happy with only one child or the struggle of not really liking motherhood, or even just postpartum. They go over what could cause a lot of the trauma and stress we go through on a day to day, and it really just helps the healing soul, at least for me. I give it 5 stars and I don’t normally do reviews!
Dr. Sacks offers thoughtful and insightful support and wisdom to these mamas coming from a variety of backgrounds with a variety of issues. So grateful for this podcast and her work!
This podcast is so incredibly raw and uplifting. Each episode I begin thinking I can’t relate to the specific story and by the end I’m in tears so touched by the common threads of motherhood. I am so thankful for Dr. Alexandra Sacks’ incredibly important work. She has been a beacon of light for me as I navigate new motherhood.
This podcast provides a window into so many postpartum struggles. I appreciate the variety of topics and honest conversations about what happens after pregnancy.
As a mom of two young babes, I love this unique angle of seeing inside people’s lives and the challenges and hardships that parenting can bring with it. Listening into therapy sessions as people work it out with Dr. Sacks really is so special, vulnerable and intimate. I look forward to each episode.
Finding Dr. Sacks work came at a crucial time in my parenthood journey. My anxiety with my first child never faded with time it seemed to snow ball after having a second child. I felt abnormal and horrible with my many intrusive thoughts. It was so crippling that I felt so much fear of losing my first child ....that I wouldn’t leave the house unless my husband was with or it was must. After reading your book and listening to your podcasts my anxiety has softened and I’m able to control most of my negative thoughts. And to know that it’s normal and *gasp* okay to experience some level of anxiety with parenthood.
Also ...becoming a mother isn’t as innate as society makes it appear.
Thank you for everything Dr.Sacks
Came across the podcast recently and I love it. It’s so personal to me as a mother and as someone who frequently struggles with everything that entails. It brings out so much emotion to get to listen to others share their own personal stories and experiences in such a deep and honest way.
I absolutely love listening to these sessions about real moms going through some REAL tough situations. Some I can relate to and some I can’t fathom the thought of having to go through. Dr. Alexandra Sacks does such a great job at guiding all of us moms through those struggles.
All the benefits of a mom’s group without leaving your living room. I think the host is very knowledgeable and I like her academic perspective. I think the sessions could benefit from being a bit longer and more therapeutic but overall, the take aways from the show are great. I hope the show keeps growing, digs deeper and covers more topics. It helps to hear others going through a similar experience. The one episode I didn’t like was the one about the kid with a genetic disorder. It just seems so ableist. I hope the host will cover disability again from a place of empowerment and acceptance.