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| Edan Lepucki |
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| Amelia Morris |
I love writers and I love Podcasts and I love being a mother, even though my son is a grown-up now! I was thrilled to hear that Edan Lepucki and Amelia Morris have started a podcast, called Mom Rage! You can liste
Amelia
Morris is the mother of two boys born almost exactly two years
apart: Teddy, age four, and Isaac, age two. She is the author of the blog,
Bon Appétempt, named one of the twenty-five best blogs of the year by
TIME magazine, as well as the book by the same name: Bon
Appétempt: A Coming-of-Age Story With Recipes!. Her work has been featured
in the Los Angeles Times, McSweeney’s, The Millions, and USA
Today. She used to host a cooking show called In the Kitchen with Amelia
& Teddy, where cooking on camera with her kids looked fun. Mom Rage is
here to clear the record.
Edan Lepucki has two kids: her son,
Dixon Bean, age six, and her daughter, Ginger, age two. She is the bestselling
author of the novels California and Woman No. 17, as well as the
novella If You’re Not Yet Like Me. Her fiction and nonfiction have
appeared in Esquire Magazine, The New York Times, and McSweeney’s
Quarterly Concern, among others, and she is a contributing editor to The
Millions. Edan created the Instagram @mothersbefore and is the
founder of Writing Workshops Los Angeles.
You can listen and support the podcast here.
I absolutely love the idea of a podcast that is this funny, this brave, this
honest about pain and dark feelings and “mom rage”. Genius idea that everyone should support—and
it’s important to remember that being a mom doesn’t end when your kids leave
home and their own families. And also the rage we sometimes feel against our
OWN moms. Do you think that part of this is because so much in our culture is
changing and it is not longer such a crime to want time for yourself and that
you also have to take time for your adult life, your relationship life, your
sex life, your sitting around and doing nothing life. You are sort of inventing
yourself all over again for a new person.
Edan: Thank you so much!
It does seem like,
lately, we’re talking a lot more about how unsustainable this go-go-go,
eat-an-energy-bar-and-call-it-lunch American life is. And, I think, in the
post-Trump world, many women are like: “Fuck this. I’m calling my congress
members, and I’m doing this clay mask, and I’m going to have an orgasm because
this is my country, too!” Ha. But,
seriously, we’re seeing that we need to take care of ourselves in order to
survive the everyday—and maybe, especially, because no one else has our best
interests in mind.
Couple that with
there being so much great work by mothers out there right now, telling it like
it is, representing the experience. For instance, Ali Wong’s new comedy special
on Netflix, “Hard Knock Wife” lays it all out there, and in the midst of a
hilarious set about the post-birth body, emphasizes just how criminal it is
that our country doesn’t have federally mandated maternity leave. I’m excited by how many books, television
shows, movies, and so on are out there, and I only hope that we see more and
more stories from all kinds of mothers.
I want to talk a bit more about mom rage. A lot of it seems
to be about how much help you have, and what kind of husband and baby you have—and
what kind of friends, too, right? If your partner isn’t doing 50%, it’s easy to
be so resentful that steam comes out of your eyes. If you have a baby with problems or colic. If
you had a baby too young, before you had done all these wild things. Also, I
remember actually raging against other mothers, rather than at my baby, because
they’d tell how I HAD to breast feed
this way, I HAD to have no meds, I HAD to, etc. etc. and I was really resentful. Can you each talk
about this please?
Edan:
I think we all have different “rage” capabilities, based on our upbringing, our
personal temperaments, and the various factors you mention. A crying baby, for
instance, who will not stop, NO MATTER WHAT YOU DO, can make you truly lose it,
as can those judgmental comments from other parents. Ugh!
Amelia
and I have a lot in common: we are both heterosexual white women with husbands
who do a lot of the household duties. And yet, we’ve still got a lot of rage! A
lot of it is toward the culture and all that’s expected of mothers, and the
lack of institutional support for women and families. Our long-term goal for the show is to talk to
a lot of mothers, to hear their
stories. We quote Adrienne Rich from Of
Woman Born on our website: "I believe increasingly that only the
willingness to share private and sometimes painful experience can enable women
to create a collective description of the world which will be truly ours." We agree.
I was so interested in the way both of you talked about your
births and what you expected and what actually happened. I planned a birth with
my husband in the room, which was beautiful and perfect and wonderful, and two
days later, I became critically ill, comatose, with a mysterious blood disease
that I was dying from. Three months later, I was allowed to see my baby. So when I finally was well enough to come
home. Because I was so ridiculously
happy to have this healthy baby, to be alive and to have help (my husband works
at home), I didn’t feel rage to my son—so do you think your experiences before
the baby is even conceived shape the way you handle what goes on?
Edan: Caroline, that
sounds like a traumatic birth! I’m glad, ultimately, it didn’t shape your early
experiences with your son. It can be
difficult, if you end up having a birth that’s different than the one you
planned for or imagined for yourself—some women never really recover from that,
and for others, it’s not a big deal. In episode 3 we talk to a midwife,
Kathleen Potthoff, about these very issues, and it’s so complicated, because
every mother is different. She talks about getting to know her clients and
learning about what they’re bringing to the pregnancy. I don’t think I really have an answer here
except: maybe? Or: Sometimes? We bring
all our history—the good and the bad—into our lives as mothers. And there are even
those studies that say we carry ancestral pain and suffering in our DNA! At the same time, it doesn’t always feel that
DEEP, you know?
Do you think you each have the same parenting styles? Where
do you find inspiration for raising your kids? I find that motherhooding, like
kids, grow and change. No one would think of raising kids like they did 100
years ago with all that not sparing the rod stuff, but when I had my son, I was
determined to do exactly the opposite of how I was raised—and I’m still not
sure I did the right thing because he is now 21 and when I ask him if I was a
good mom, he rolls his eyes! Is it
possible to ever know? Or is the answer to find advice/respect/a shoulder from
other moms?
I’d say that neither
Amelia nor I adhere to a specific parenting “style” and in that way, we’re
similar. I guess other, little, stuff aligns: We both breastfed our kids, we
both potty trained at two, and we moved our kids out of cribs around that time
as well. While all that is important, it also can feel superficial. Believe it
or not, we don’t spend that much time talking about naps and feeding and all
that jazz—we’ve spent more time talking about motherhood as a concept, and our
writing…and our feelings!
I depend on my mom
for almost all my parenting advice. She has 5 kids, 6 grandkids, and knows
everything about children and what to do with them. Amelia has a more
conflicted relationship with her mom so she asks her friends for advice; in the
podcast she refers to her “Earth Mother Friend” Kara a lot! Finding a mom friend can be so helpful—it’s a
special relationship.
We have an episode
with author Meaghan O’Connell coming up, and, with her, we talk about how some
mothers reject their own mother’s advice. I get that—and I agree, the “rules”
and “wisdom” of parenting is not a historical, it’s always shifting. However, it
makes me sad to think people would rather Google something than ask their own
human mother—or any human mother that they know personally. Why do people have
more faith in technology, and in crowdsourcing, than in receiving knowledge
from a woman with lived experience? Crowdsourcing parenting questions is my pet
peeve since parenting is so about your individual family and circumstances! But
I digress…
I love that one of you aspires to be the villain in terms of
getting discussion going—especially because moms are not supposed to be
bitches. Please talk about this!
This is just our
little joke, but, yes, I am the self-appointed villain of the show because I
tell it like it is, and I imagine Amelia as having a far softer, sweeter
personality. But we do dig into this somewhat…like, why do I have this idea
that I’m some kind of monster? I don’t think I’m unique in this feeling; when
we don’t act in the ways we think a “good” mother should act, it’s easy to
believe certain accepted behavior is natural and that your reaction is abnormal
and something to be ashamed of.
I also really love the music that opens each podcast! How
did you decide that? Will you change the music?
Thanks! Amelia’s
husband Matt Bookman wrote our theme song with their two sons, Teddy and Isaac.
I love it and we will use it for every episode!
What’s obsessing you now and why?
Amelia’s always
obsessed with her self-help books, like Women Who Run with the Wolves by
Clarissa Pinkola Estes and The Wild Edge of Sorrow by Francis Weller. And
competitive gymnastics; when UCLA won not long ago, she was so excited!
I’m into the
aforementioned comedy special, Hard Knock Wife, by Ali Wong. I am just
finishing The Changeling by Victor LaValle—what a weird beautiful marvel of a
novel! Oh, and learning Italian--that’s my jam right now.