エピソード

  • It's Not You. You're Pouring from an Empty Cup.
    2026/02/17

    Ever feel like your home is a pinball machine and you’re the ball? We crack open what it’s like to run on empty while juggling work, kids, screens, school drama, and the relentless noise that seems baked into modern family life. From winter stress and emotional eating to the dopamine drip of YouTube shorts and dueling TVs, we get honest about the sensory overload that makes focus—and patience—feel impossible.

    We explore the invisible labor nobody sees but everyone relies on: laundry that never ends, forms that appear out of thin air, school theme days you miss because bandwidth is gone, and dinners that somehow land on the table anyway. We also wade into the money piece—holiday trinkets that end up as trash, gift bags we wish we could ban, and the tough choices around therapy and support when insurance falls short. If you’ve ever wondered why your temper spikes at the sound of an iPad or why you’re furious at a snow day without snow, you’re not alone.

    Amid the chaos, we reach for what actually helps. A therapist who’s covered by insurance and good enough to keep. The relief of a perfectly placed rage-text that moves the storm from your head to a screen. Small, durable boundaries: one TV at a time, headphones as default, self-serve snacks, and a dinner rotation that doesn’t audition for a cooking show. We trade perfection for progress, choosing one meaningful step a day over impossible routines. And we admit the paradox we all live with: craving quiet while missing them the moment the house goes still.

    If your cup feels dry, come sit with us. You’ll leave with validation, a few workable ideas, and permission to do less on purpose. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs a laugh and a breather, and leave a review with your best “cup-filling” tip—we’re collecting the ones that actually work.

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    37 分
  • It's Not You. It's the Mental Load.
    2026/02/10

    Ever feel like your brain is running a subway map while everyone else rides a single track? We open up about the invisible mental load that keeps households moving—packing lunches, tracking therapy appointments, remembering teacher names, and absorbing the emotions in every room—then get honest about what it costs when the lights go out and the cortisol clock flips on at 3 a.m.

    From nerves and box breathing to a night of calling the police after hearing voices, we admit how thin our margins can get when partners travel and sleep fractures. That leads us to the heart of the conversation: why “always be emotionally regulated” is an impossible bar, and how rupture-and-repair can raise stronger, kinder kids than a forced smile ever could. We share how apologizing to our children challenged old norms, why some friends pushed back, and how modeling ownership doesn’t mean excusing behavior.

    The practical layer is where it gets useful. We talk about the difference between “helping” and true ownership, how to hand off bedtime or sports sign-ups without hovering, and why tolerating a few wrong blueberries may be the price of long-term relief. We also name the extra layers many families carry—ADHD, ARFID, sensory needs—that turn mealtimes and transitions into strategic operations. Community becomes a lifeline: clear asks, shared calendars, and letting a friend handle pickup when you’re tapped out.

    We close with a doable challenge: remove one task from your plate for a week and see what space it creates for rest, joy, or simply a full breath. Perfect parenting isn’t the goal; sustainable parenting is. If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs permission to let go, and leave a review with the one task you’re releasing this week.

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    27 分
  • It's Not You. It's Mom Guilt.
    2026/01/31

    Ever feel like your brain replays every rough parenting moment right as your head hits the pillow? We go straight at mom guilt—naming it, sorting it, and giving it boundaries—so it stops steering the day. We unpack the three big flavors we see most: real guilt when actions don’t match values, fake guilt built on comparison and expectations, and absorbed guilt we carry from other people’s feelings. That framework alone changed how we respond: repair after real guilt, reset after fake guilt, and release after absorbed guilt.

    We get personal. One of us hated motherhood for years and discovered why through EMDR therapy: childhood chaos made normal kid chaos feel dangerous. EMDR, grounding, and breathwork peeled those associations apart and made room for choice. The other side of the mic lives the nightly replay and the zero-to-sixty snap, then the shame that follows. We talk about repair scripts, calming the body first, and the small rituals that keep us from spiraling—box breathing, “and” statements, and circling back with an honest apology. You’ll also hear practical wins for kids: OT for regulation, food therapy that actually expanded picky eating, and better communication with teachers after tough mornings.

    Holidays and high-stakes days add pressure, so we share how we lowered the bar, changed travel plans, and designed days with more outlets and fewer flashpoints. The theme that keeps us steady is community. When we say out loud, I love my kids and I need a break, it gives everyone permission to be honest and get support. If you’re juggling shame, triggers, and endless to-dos, you’ll leave with tools you can try today, a mindset that makes space for two truths, and a reminder that repair matters more than perfection.

    If this helped, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs relief, and leave a review with your best reframe or de-escalation tip—what’s one habit that steadies your day?

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    34 分
  • When Motherhood Looks Different
    2026/01/27

    Some mornings feel like a marathon before 9 a.m. and for parents raising neurodivergent kids, those miles can be lined with judgment, confusion, and a lot of “he’ll grow out of it.” We open the door on what parenting looks like when ADHD, sensory processing differences, and learning challenges reshape the plan. From the first red flags after 18 months to full neuropsychology evaluations, we walk through the real process of advocating when the playbook is missing and the waitlists are long.

    We swap “just try harder” for tools that work: early intervention at home, the role of OT and speech therapy, sensory diets, heavy work, and why a weighted vest or movement break can change a day. We talk about ARFID and why eating struggles aren’t stubbornness, how anxiety can wear surprising masks, and what happens when you educate your village so the burden doesn’t live on one parent’s shoulders. There’s honesty about anger, guilt and the moments you whisper “I hate this,” followed by repair, curiosity, and the reminder that labels are search terms keys to resources, not limits on potential.

    You’ll hear how empathy outperforms advice, how a simple question, “Do you want me to listen or help?”, builds trust, and why self care is not a luxury but the scaffolding that holds us together. If you’ve ever felt alone in the school parking lot, or stared at a wall of conflicting opinions, this conversation offers clarity, companionship, and practical next steps.

    If this resonated, share it with a friend who needs a lift, subscribe for more honest conversations about neurodiversity and motherhood, and leave a review so other parents can find this support. Your story helps someone else take the next step.

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    35 分
  • Welcome to Mom Com. Let's start at the beginning.
    2026/01/20

    Welcome to Mom Com ! A podcast created for moms who are navigating the beautiful, messy, overwhelming reality of motherhood and want a place to feel seen, supported, and understood.

    In this first episode, we’re introducing ourselves, sharing our stories, and opening up about why Mom Com needed to exist. From the loneliness that can quietly creep in, to the pressure to “do it all,” we talk about the moments that made us realize motherhood isn’t broken the way we talk about it is.

    Mom Com was born out of honest conversations between friends who realized so many moms are carrying the same feelings silently. This podcast is here to normalize the hard parts, celebrate the wins, and remind you that you are not failing. It's Not You. It's Motherhood.

    If you’ve ever wondered why motherhood feels harder than you expected, or wished someone would say, “me too,” this is the place for you.


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    26 分