The Therapy Edit - THROWBACK - On Questioning Your Identity

Episode Date: December 30, 2024

In this THROWBACK solo episode of The Therapy Edit Anna considers how mums start to question their identity as they settle into the roll of motherhood.She shares the section on 'Who Am I?" from the Li...ttle Book of Calm for New Mums and offers grounding thoughts on how we can reconnect with ourselves and accept who we are.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome to the Therapy Edit podcast with me, psychotherapist Anna Martha. I love bringing bite-sized thoughts and conversations to support your well-being in your busy lives. Behind the scenes, we are working on bringing you a whole new series, but in the meantime, we have delved into the archives and will be sharing some of our most loved nuggets, lightbulb moments and powerful chats. I hope you enjoy them. Hi, and welcome to today's episode of The Therapy Edit. This is just a solo one, so it's just me sharing something for the next 10 minutes. And I wanted to share a thought with you about how often we question our identity as moms.
Starting point is 00:00:42 You know, we might think back to pre-kids, who we were, what we enjoyed, what it felt like to be us and wonder where and how that all changed. Where did we go? where have I gone amidst all amidst everything that I'm doing each day and everything that I'm facilitating for the kids? So I have picked up my book, The Little Book of Calm, for New Mums, and I'm going to read a section to you because basically all the sections are in response, just a few pages in response to different feelings and states that you might be experiencing. So I'm going to read you the one that says, who am I? For the moments where you're just wondering, where have I gone?
Starting point is 00:01:23 And the little mantra, so each chapter has a mantra, it says, now is not forever. We know that, don't we? We know that now is just a moment in time and it's not forever. But sometimes the feelings, the challenges that we're experiencing are so kind of feeling so all-encompassing and so intense that we can lose that sense of perspective. You know, it's like the peak of a labor contraction, you know, where you just feel like, And there are moments where you feel like it's never going to be normal again. You're never going to feel okay again.
Starting point is 00:01:57 And sometimes we need that moment of, we need to just touch on that prospectiveness to remind ourselves that this season of life that we're living in, this stage of life is just a stage. It's just a time. And I look back to so many of the different challenging parts of motherhood to do with routine, especially in those early days where I just think, I'm literally never going to sleep again. my child is never going to sleep or these tantrums are never going to stop or, you know, I don't know, I'm always going to be facing this challenge in my relationship or my friendships or and actually, you know, we know when we look back that things do change and they do move
Starting point is 00:02:37 and they do change shape and they shift. But sometimes in the moment, you know, just reminding ourselves to remember, to zoom out a little bit and know that this time, it's, it's, just it's a chunk of time. So yeah, I'm going to read the words to you. Who am I? Now is not forever. Every moment that passes adds something to who you are. Even when you're sitting still on the sofa pinned down by a sleeping baby, to expect yourself to always feel acquainted with this current version of you at a time in life where everything is changing more often than the British weather is a tall order. Do you find yourself doing that that we're just always trying to, you know, so often we're just trying to get to know ourselves and get used to ourselves. And
Starting point is 00:03:28 actually, you know, everything is always changing. We wake up. Every day is a different version of ourselves. And sometimes we can overanalyze ourselves in a way and want to grasp, you know, grasp a hold of a certain stage or a certain version of ourselves when actually we're always changing. We're always transitioning. We're always moving. So to feel acquainted with the current version of you at a time in life where everything is changing more often than the British weather is a tall order. This is an incredibly intense period in your life. Demanding so much time and energy, it can be tricky to see the wood for the trees when you're using all of your available energy and resources to help you find your feet in this new, ever-changing normal. now I know that in this section I'm referring to kind of those early
Starting point is 00:04:18 early months and years of motherhood but actually I currently have a three-year-old he's a six-year-old I cannot get that right I cannot go that wrong I'll be in trouble he's just turned six they don't like it when you get the age it's wrong do they understandably so three-year-old a six-year-old and a seven-year-old and it's still always changing it's still you know there's so many stages that we're still transitioning through things are changing schools are shifting there's there are endings and a lot of my available energy and resources I'm using it to help me find my feet in this new ever-changing normal. So regardless of what parenting stage you're at,
Starting point is 00:04:56 how old your child or your children are, I'm sure you're late. I remember finding it hard to even imagine a time where I'd not be dreaming of bedtime at lunchtime or leaving the house laden down with a suitcase-sized bag of essentials delayed by a pill explosion or another feed. But that time did come. The things that make me feel like me require energy. For me, they're laughing with friends, writing creatively, walks in nature, thinking clearly, reading good books, enjoying being with family. When I go through times of change or overwhelm, I have less available energy and fewer resources to engage in or enjoy these things. Books gather dust, words don't come easily when writing emails, let alone books, and I'm too tired to fight the anxious thoughts that
Starting point is 00:05:42 draw my attention from being more present with those I love. That energy will return, I promise you, as life settles into more of a rhythm. And don't forget, grief can come with change. Not because you don't appreciate the stage of life you're at now, but because you miss elements of how you felt when you had freedom and energy and more abundance. Don't we do that? We kind of look back and we think, oh my gosh, I used to have that energy to do this and think about that or engage in this thing and I just don't have that at the moment. As you find your feet, I encourage you to think about those things that make you feel like you. What are they? What are those things that make you feel like you? Who are the people you can most be yourself around? What did
Starting point is 00:06:29 you do for fun? What were you doing when you'd lose track of time and the rest of the world would turn into a blur as you engaged in this activity? This is called a flow state. You know, when you're doing something that you love or you're in a situation that you're just so immersed in it that you're not even think about time, you're not even thinking about things that you're worried about, things that you've got to do tomorrow. And it's a really wonderful state to be in. It's actually so good for our mental health and sense of self and confidence and our heart rate and our stress levels. It's an amazing thing to seek if you can. How can you do small versions of those things now? What are those things that you love doing?
Starting point is 00:07:10 How can you do small versions of those things that fit with your current energy levels and your current resources and your current capacity? What does I used to do? I used to love going running actually. I really hate now. My knees can't handle it. I'm 36. I don't know if my knees should be like this now, but they are. I just can't. I can't do it. So what do I do instead? I do some like gentle stretching. I do some yoga. I like going on the static exercise bike. You know what I'm not going going to be going out for hour long runs these days, but I can do 10 minutes, five minutes of stretching in the garden. That's what I've been doing recently. So how can you do little bits of those things? Even if your time and your resource and your energy don't allow you to do the things
Starting point is 00:07:54 that you'd really love to do, how can you still do a little something? For me, those things we're listening to a few minutes of audiobook as I fell asleep, rather than force my tired eyes to read. They were to get out for a walk each day, even if it was a speedy trip round the block, and to commit to messaging or speaking to a friend or family member daily, even if it was a quick text message. I would type disjointed creative thoughts into my phone notes rather than sit at a laptop. I literally have about 60,000 words of disjointed creative notes on my phone. and that's okay, you know, how can you nod to and honour those parts of yourself? It's okay to miss yourself.
Starting point is 00:08:39 It's okay to dream of a stage when you'll have more time and energy to do the things that make you feel like you. It's more than okay. It's entirely normal. Go gently on yourself. You are not gathering dust. You are not gathering dust. Parts of you are not gathering dust.
Starting point is 00:08:59 You have not gone. You are just loving and living. in a different way. And that is hugely productive in itself. For everything there is a time. A motherhood isn't a time to wave goodbye to who you are. No, it's the time to get what you can for yourself that strengthens you and brings you joy. You are deserving of joy. We spend so much time as moms, don't we? Facilitating joy for other people. But you are deserving of doing the things that bring you enjoyment if that even if that's the only end goal you are deserving of that you are deserving of that even it was just a little bite-sized chunk so often we can overlook the bite-sized
Starting point is 00:09:45 chunks and think you know what i i don't want to eat a bite-sized chunk when i'm hungry for the full meal but actually that bite-sized chunk is going to give you something we don't think oh i'm not going to put my phone on charge for 10 minutes when the battery is low and i've got to go out because that 10 minutes will give me something. That 10 minutes will give me that opportunity to communicate if I need to. You know, we don't overlook that. So don't overlook those little bite-sized chunks that arise in your day and in your life. There's little opportunities that might not be everything you're hungering for,
Starting point is 00:10:19 but it is something to give you that little touch, that little sense of yourself, to engage in that part of you that should not be sitting dusty on a shelf. So the tip for this chapter is to make a nice, note in your mind or written down of the things that strengthen you and bring you joy. How can you implement small things throughout your day or week that nod to these things? So that's from my book, The Little Book of Calm for new mums, but the major feedback has been that it is relevant. People are finding it really helpful at all stages of motherhood. So
Starting point is 00:10:49 don't overlook those bite-sized chunks, those little opportunities to engage in you, things that bring you joy because you're deserving of that. You're deserving of that. You're deserving of all of those bite-sized things. And they add up in the end, don't they? They add up. And there will be a time. There will be a time in your life where there are more opportunities or you have a little bit more resources to do these things. And then you can take advantage of those. But don't just put yourself on that shelf and think, you know what? I'll do that in five years when the kids are at school. I'll do that next year. I'll do that next month. No, how can you just nod to that now? How can you nod to that now?
Starting point is 00:11:30 I hope you enjoyed this episode. Grab a copy of my new book, The Uncomfortable Truth. Change your life by taming 10 of your mind's greatest fears, where we tackle some of life's uncomfortable truths that rob us of energy, joy and headspace, such as some people don't like me, I'm going to fail. Bad things will happen. And as we move into a place of radical acceptance of these truths,
Starting point is 00:11:54 you will find yourself living more freely and intentionally with more presence and confidence. than ever before. You can find it at your usual bookseller. But in the meantime, just feel free to hit subscribe. And if you enjoyed this episode, please do share it so that we can get more ears benefiting from the words that we share.

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