Today I want to explore an idea with you. Something that has been permeating within me ever since I had a divine conversation with Nicole Matheson on her new book, The Beauty Load (episode number 211). During that conversation we talked about how we often gaslight ourselves and each other when it comes to the beauty load. This heavy load we carry around the way we should look, the way we should present ourselves, the way we should be viewed and seen as women. Listen as I reflect and think about:
- How well meaning comments, with right intention, often answers we have been taught to say can actually be unhelpful in acknowledging each other.
- How we can start to question our own realities, memories or perceptions.
- How to stop dismissing our own feelings and allow ourselves to be heard, within our heart, head and within community.
- Turning the conversation around, both externally and internally with each other and with ourselves.
There needs to be a change in the way mothers are valued and seen in our society. We are here to spread the whispers of Matrescence together.
Find out more and receive your Matrescence map here https://amytkb.wpengine.com/matrescence/
Transcript
Welcome to the Happy Mama Movement Podcast.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I'm Amy Taylor-Kabbaz.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I would like to start by acknowledging the Gadigal people of the Aura nation
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:on which this podcast is recorded, as the traditional custodians of this land.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And pay my respects to the elders past, present and emerging.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And, as this podcast is dedicated to the wisdom and knowledge of motherhood, I
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:would like to acknowledge the mothers of this land, the elders, their wisdom, their
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:knowing and my own elders and teachers.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Welcome back Mamas.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Today I want to explore an idea with you.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Something that has been permeating within me ever since I had a divine
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:conversation with someone just recently.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:If you haven't listened to it yet, I have a recent podcast episode with Nicole
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Matheson on her new book, The Beauty Load.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Episode number 211 and recently she was in Sydney and asked me to host her
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:book launch, locally at a beautiful little bookstore here in Sydney.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And during that conversation we talked about how we often gaslight ourselves
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:and each other when it comes to the beauty load, this, uh, heavy load we
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:carry around the way we should look.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:The way we should present ourselves, the way we should be viewed and seen as women.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:What this sounds like is, Oh, I hate my hair.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It just isn't working for me today.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And your girlfriend, your sister, someone with all the right intentions
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:says, no, you look beautiful.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I love your hair.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I always love it.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Now, that's what we've been taught to say.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And so there is no guilt here or shame.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:But actually when you look at the definition of gaslighting, it is
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:when you make the person who has stated something question their
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:own reality, memory, or perception.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:In other words, you silence them in some way, making them feel the thing
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:that they've just said isn't true.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And as Nicole said in this conversation, in the bookstore, actually, we need to
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:start acknowledging that when a woman says, Ugh, my hair, that is what she's
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:feeling in that moment, and instead of dismissing it, we don't wanna say,
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Yeah, don't love your hair either, but acknowledge that that's the feeling
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:she's holding about herself at that time.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Ever since that conversation.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I have been thinking about this over and over again around motherhood, and how we
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:both gaslight ourselves and each other.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:The way we gaslight ourselves, I have heard this, I would like to say hundreds
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:of thousands of times over the last decade from all the women I've listened to.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I don't even know if I could put a number on it.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It sounds like this, but I'm so lucky that I get to stay home.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:But I'm so grateful that my baby was healthy, but I'm so lucky
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:that I fell pregnant in the end.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:So many people have it so much worse than I have.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And in that moment, we're dismissing our own feelings.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:In that moment, we're questioning our own feelings, our memories,
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:our perceptions, and our reality.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:We're not allowing ourselves to be heard, even within our own
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:heart, even within our own head.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And then if we are to share outside, if we are to say to anybody around us how we are
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:feeling, we're also often, unconsciously, let me say this, unconsciously gaslit.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Oh, but it will pass, and these will be the best years of your life.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Oh, she's just a animated little one.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Oh, that's just what motherhood is about.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Oh, why don't you just sleep while the baby sleeps?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:All of these little dismissive moments.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:None of this is intentional, I'm sure.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It's what we have all been taught to say to each other.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:As women especially.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:We placate each other.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:We try to make each other feel better.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:We try to remind each other that it's all good.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I've been there too.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:You're beautiful, you've got this.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It's a mixture of gaslighting and spiritual bypassing, and
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:it's time we need to stop this.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And so I said in this conversation, what do we say instead?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:What do we say to someone in front of us who is trying to show us a
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:glimpse of what they're feeling?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And our automatic reaction inside of us is to say, Oh, but you're such a great mum.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:You're doing such a great job.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I know it's so hard, but you know, these are the best years of your life.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It goes so quickly.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:When in fact she feels like this is the worst and longest time of her life.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Oh, do I remember that?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Those days, it just felt like months within 24 hours.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And everybody around me would say, Oh, but it goes so quickly.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And yes, in hindsight it kind of did.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:But in that moment, I felt dismissed.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I felt like my reality was wrong.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I felt like I was thinking about this the wrong way.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:So what do we do?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:How do we stop gaslighting each other and ourselves?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I think it has to start with when we listen to each other.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Can we make this promise to each other here right now?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:No matter what it is, whether as my friend Nicole Matheson talks about
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:in her book, The Beauty Load, and one of your girlfriends or your sister
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:or your daughter says, Ah, I don't feel good in the way I look today.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Instead of just dismissing it and putting a bandaid over the top of it
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:and say, No, I love the way you look.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Can we just pause and take a breath and say, Ah, I know those moments.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I know what that feels like.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Doesn't feel good, does it, personally, I think you look awesome, but I know
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:what it feels like to not feel that.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And can we do that to each other in motherhood?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Can we please, please, please stop dismissing the struggles of, well,
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:at least I have a healthy baby.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:When the birth was incredibly traumatic.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Can we stop saying things like, you're so lucky you get to stay home when
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:she's actually deeply struggling with her loss of identity in her work.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Can we just meet each other in our truth and try not to rush into the next step?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:You may have heard me say this many, many, many times before, but the change we
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:want to see in motherhood begins with us.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It will be us.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:We are the ones who begin to change the way we talk about this.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:We acknowledge it, we fight for it, we speak about it.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:The way we acknowledge it in each other and the way we
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:acknowledge it within ourselves.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:And that means when you hear that internal dialogue, or I like to call
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:it the inner mean mama, dismiss your feelings by internally gaslighting you.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Oh, but you should be so grateful that you get to do this.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Can we come back to that voice and say, actually, you know what?
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:This is hard.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I get it.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It's hard.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:It probably will get better one day soon, but right now, I'm sorry, it's hurting.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I see it.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I think that's how we start to turn this conversation around,
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:both externally and internally with each other and with ourselves.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:I hope that lands.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Until next week, Divine Mama Community, thank you for being here.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Thank you for continuing to have these conversations with me and with each other.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Truly, this is an act of activism to have these conversations and be
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:open about how we are really feeling.
Amy Taylor-Kabbaz:Thank you.
Hello!
I'm Amy.
I'm a matrescence activist - here to revolutionise the way you feel about yourself as a mama, and transform the way the world values and supports all mothers, everywhere.
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