
Motherwhelmed
Challenging Norms, Untangling Truths, and Restoring Our Worth to the World
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Narrateur(s):
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Beth Berry
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Auteur(s):
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Beth Berry
À propos de cet audio
Today’s mothers are struggling, though it's not for the reasons most moms tend to think. We’ve been conditioned to believe our inadequacy is the reason we can’t seem to “keep up” or enjoy mothering more, but nothing could be further from the truth.
We aren’t failing as mothers. We’re mothering within a culture that is misleading and inadequately supporting us. Motherwhelmed is a deep, yet lighthearted exploration of the messy frontier of modern-day motherhood we’re all struggling to navigate.
With compassion, realness, and rich storytelling, Beth Berry:
- Illuminates the mind-sets and narratives keeping us feeling overwhelmed, disempowered, anxious, isolated, and riddled with self-doubt
- Provides the perspectives and tools needed for mothers to rewrite their stories and reclaim a sense of wholeness
- Shares from her 25 years as an idealistic, passionate, all-in mother of four daughters
- Reminds us of our worthiness and reframes our importance
This is not a book about parenting. It’s a book about mothers, our greatness, and how important it is that we thrive. It’s about untangling ourselves from the stories that are keeping us trapped and deconstructing those we’ve outgrown. It’s about daring the lives we’re here to live and, thereby, giving our children permission to do the same.
Until we begin to organize our lives around not only our children’s worthiness but also our own, mothers everywhere will continue to bear the brunt of cultural pain and dysfunction. This matters because we cannot be the changemakers we’re meant to be while so heavily burdened.
©2020 Beth Berry (P)2020 Beth BerryAnd I hated how Beth Berry wrote a book proving how sanctimonious, entitled, self-pitying and whining she is. She thinks she’s an authority on motherhood because she decided to have 4 kids at a very young age, has no career or discernible skills, can’t seem to handle her kids and seems to hate her kids and her life. So what does she decide to do: she decides to write a book complaining about her kids and how tired she is, and lecture other moms at the same time.
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