Alexandra Sacks and Catherine Birndorf are reproductive psychiatrists: medical doctors who specialize in using therapy to help women navigate pregnancy and its aftermath. “Even if motherhood has been a lifelong desire,” they report, “once it arrives, many women find themselves feeling lost somewhere between who they were before and who they think they should be now.” In "What No One Tells You," Sacks and Birndorf try to help women reconcile those two people by pushing back against what they call the “bliss myth,” the idea that motherhood should be pure joy:
"[T]his wasn’t the last time in her pregnancy or motherhood that she would be troubled by mixed feelings—about her son, about herself, about her choice to become a mother. And for Julie, as for many mothers, these ambivalent feelings sent up red flags. Anything less than joy and contentment, Julie thought, must mean there was something wrong. But that couldn’t be further from the truth. The expectation that babies bring ultimate happiness is not only unrealistic, it’s dangerous. Our culture reinforces a story of motherhood that has left out doubt, uncertainty, and the bittersweet, and this myth has become hazardous to women’s mental health. It’s time to rebirth pregnancy and bring parenting down to earth…. Everyone understands that adolescence is an awkward phase. But during matrescence, people expect you to be happy while you’re losing control over the way you look, feel, and relate to everyone around you."
The bulk of the book isn’t this philosophic, however. Rather, it explains how the concept of the “good enough mother” can prevail in various scenarios. Traveling for work. Stopping breastfeeding. Interacting with childcare providers. Sleep deprivation. In-laws. Sacks and Birndorf have helpful, practical tips for each of these contexts and more. “If you’re feeling extra-sensitive,” when it comes to financial woes, for example, “try to find a way to explain your fears to your partner so she can understand that it’s anxiety, not anger or manipulation, behind your strong feelings about spending.”
Throughout, there was plenty that didn’t apply to my life now, or to past-me either. And yet, I felt that they just got the struggles I experienced upon becoming a mother. “With so much out of your control, it can be tempting to become extremely strict about what you can control, but this can lead to an unhealthy all-or-nothing mentality—as if a normal level of being good isn’t good enough,” they write. Guilty as charged. I also count myself among the mothers who “find themselves feeling like their mind is never in one place.” Sacks and Birndorf say they hear this so often in their clinical practices they came up with a term for it, “the divided mind.”
"We think of the divided mind as a cognitive and emotional state that is a consequence of the changes in how you spend your time and attention when growing and then caring for a totally dependent human being. Your mind is literally divided, as you’re dealing with your own life while tending to another’s."
I also felt seen by their recognition and normalization of competing interests: “[Y]our friends and family, and even your spouse or partner, will be competing with your baby for your attention. Motherhood will also compete for the time, energy, and resources you’re used to investing into your own life: eating, exercise, recreation, organization, sexuality, and work.” Some tensions, some unpleasant feelings, they assure, aren’t fixable. The goal is learning to process and tolerate—not eliminate—the push and pull, the contradictions, the impossibilities, and the resentments.
“Motherhood, like all complex experiences in life, is a mix of both positive and negative,” they conclude: “Loving your child doesn’t change the fact that sometimes the work of caretaking is not fun. Yet for many moms, admitting that there are moments, days, or even weeks when you want a break from your [child] is scary because it can make you ask yourself: Am I trapped with this feeling forever? … Does this mean I don’t love [them]?”
Spoiler alert: The answers are no and no. I figured that out eventually, but it sure would have been nice to read "What No One Tells You" at the get-go.