Guarded, Grateful, and Growing: Mila Maxwell on Identity, Healing, and Writing Through It All
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What happens when life pushes you to your emotional limit, and instead of snapping—you write a novel? In this deeply moving episode, Brian sits down with Canadian author Mila Maxwell for an honest, soul-searching conversation about identity, vulnerability, and the healing power of storytelling.
Mila opens up about growing up with a sister who has cerebral palsy, navigating emotions she didn’t always feel allowed to express, and how writing fiction gave her permission to tell the truth in a way that finally felt safe. From anxiety in childhood to hypervigilance as a parent, she shares what it's taken to dismantle old emotional patterns—and how her debut novel has not only helped her heal, but helped others feel seen.
What You’ll Learn:
How writing fiction became a safe space for truth-telling
Why lowered expectations and high standards can lead to emotional resilience
How growing up with a neurodivergent sibling shaped Mila’s emotional landscape
The shift from survival mode to intentional self-regulation
How parenting, therapy, and creativity can unlock buried emotions
Powerful Quotes:
“Her struggles don’t diminish mine. I’m allowed to feel things.”
“I’ve lowered my expectations, but I’ve raised my standards.”
“I didn’t let it out, because I didn’t know how. But the writing—changed that.”
Highlights:
Mila’s vulnerable look at emotional armor, self-compassion, and finding balance
The origin story behind her novel—and the sentence that came to her just before sleep
How fictionalizing her life gave her more creative freedom (and emotional safety)
A peek into what it’s like parenting after growing up with complex family dynamics
Follow Up with Mila:
Instagram
Facebook
Mila's Site