Esther Calling - Depleted Mothers Club - podcast episode cover

Esther Calling - Depleted Mothers Club

Nov 06, 202331 minSeason 6Ep. 17
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Episode description

How do you begin to define a new identity for yourself when you've left the comforts of the world you've known in search of a bigger life? This is what Esther helps a new mom of two figure out as she navigates a new country, new friendships and a new approach to big changes. How to not put the pressure of everything on your partner and try to build a community to support YOU. Esther Callings are a one time, 45-60 minute interventional phone call with Esther. They are edited for time, clarity, and anonymity. If you have a question you would like to talk through with Esther, send a voice memo to [email protected]. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

We moved about two years ago. My family and his both live in Mexico. So we don't really have any family here. They're all back home. I don't know. Now it feels after two years of living here. It feels like to me, I don't belong anywhere. Like when I go back home, I kind of feel like it won't be long anymore. But when I'm here, it feels the same. I don't really have close friends. I don't have any family. I'm going to stay at home mom. So it's really hard to meet new people.

So it just sort of feels like I'm stuck in this no-man's land. And I can't seem to make a home here. And when I go back to Mexico, it also just doesn't fit anymore. This episode of Where Should We Begin is brought to you by Progressive. Most of you aren't just listening right now. You're driving, cleaning, even exercising. But what if you could be saving money by switching to Progressive?

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Secret whole body deodorant keeps you fresh from your pits to your bits. Learn more at secret.com. So here we are. And all I know is that you are here for the past two years that you have arrived from Mexico. And that it's been a very challenging transition. Very. Yes. Tell me more. So I have two very young children. One is four years old. The other one is one year old. One was born back home. And the other one was born here a year ago.

And we moved mid pandemic, which was strange. So it was kind of hard leaving all our family behind. But we really wanted a chance to grow as a family and not have the rest of the extended family in our lives so much. That was a mutual wish. Yes. Because we both have really big families back home. We're both from the Jewish families. So those can be really overbearing.

There's a lot of love there, but there's also a lot of control. There's a lot of over involvement. And, you know, we kind of wanted to let ourselves as a family grow with our own values and like our own mentality. And we wanted to just be by ourselves for a while. Are you the first children in your families to do so? We're both the youngest from our families. And we're both the first to do this. And our families were not happy with the decision. And each year that we decide to stay.

The angry are both our families get because they're like, why are you there? It's a choice. It's not like if my husband had to work here, it would be wanting. But he has freedom to work back home.

Each year, it gets more challenging to explain that to them. And to like say, look, I know what we're doing is maybe harder, but we're also our kids are getting opportunities. They wouldn't get back home. Things I didn't get back home. I had a lot of love, a lot of family, a lot of friends, but I didn't have a lot of freedom.

I couldn't walk to school. I couldn't go to a playground. I didn't know any kids that weren't Jewish. So, and same thing happened with my husband. So that's we decided that we wanted our kids to at least from the early years be able to like look at the world from like a broader place. So, is it accurate for me to understand that you chose to transition from an extended family model to a nuclear family model just as you were having two very little children.

At the time when you need the extended family, the most is when you decided that you wanted to try a little bit more independence. Yes, exactly. That's what we did. Do we see the paradox? Yes, we do. So, you both appreciated the presence and the love and the support of a very tight-knit community and extended family, but you also both felt slightly choking. And you aspired to have greater freedom and independence as a couple together.

And did you find that? I understood for the children, but for the two of you, have you found the freedom, the choices, the personal expressions that you felt was not part of your life in Mexico? For sure, because we had to be a team here. Like, back home, I took care of the kids, he went to work, I had help, back home, a lot of help, I had help in my house, I had help with my family.

And then at the end of the day, we would like, okay, we would meet halfway, let's say. But here, I think it's been really good for us because we have to, like, we are each other's friends, we're each other's company, especially at the beginning that we really had no one here.

We ended up being each other's best friends, let's say. We always had a really good relationship in communication, but this has taken it to a very intimate level that I wouldn't have gotten back home because there are too many distractions. But it's also been really hard to lean, at least for me, I can't speak for him, but for me, it's been really hard having to only lean on one person for everything. Whereas, back home, you have different people to lean on for different things.

I think that's been a big challenge. Tell me, I'm going to go back first, how have you changed as a woman, as a mother, who is experiencing the first years of motherhood away from all the role models of mothers? Well, being a mother really didn't change much coming here, I'm pretty much, I think, the same person I was back there. But I think as a woman, I really lost my way.

I don't know if it's because I'm so far from home or because I became a mother, I just lost track of my own path. And it's really hard to regain a path when you're so far away from what you know. But what I've been here, really, because I have so little help, I've been really into my maternal role.

All the rest, I kind of sacrificed for now. Like I said, so it's a couple of years, you know, when they really need you and they need you to be there. And then after that, I'll see what I want to do in my life. Did you used to work in Mexico? No, I didn't use to work. I used to study metal smithing back in Mexico and here too.

So I tried to start my own jewelry company back in Mexico before I moved where I did everything myself. It wasn't like, I can't even say company, it was literally something I did from start to finish. So I started in Mexico and then exactly like a couple of months in, we moved to the city. And it was mid pandemic and obviously it's like really hard, especially if you don't know anyone.

And it was when I only had one child and he was starting school. So I had a little more time. So I reached out to a couple of boutiques, like, you know, I really tried to start this, but it was really, really difficult to even get an answer in this city. It's like they didn't answer your calls, they didn't answer your emails to sell online was very hard for me because I make everything by hand. I don't know. It was, it was not an option.

And with all the overwhelmingness of being a mother, I was, I just, you know, in Spanish, you say, I don't know if there's something like that in English. But I was like, no, that's it. This is not worth it. It's taking too much of my time. It's stressing me and I'm not even getting anything out of it. So I kind of let it go. And that was like my one thing that I was passionate about for myself.

So ever since I drop that, yeah, I've been really, really lost like I'm in a good place with my partner and I'm in a good place with my kids. But I'm completely lost like within myself. I don't even know where to start. Well, that's where we're going to start. Look, Bumble knows you're exhausted by dating all the must not take yourself too seriously and six once that matters. And what do I even say other than hey?

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So I want to hear just a little bit about when you say I'm in a good place with my partner and I'm in a good place with my children because those are pillars that we're going to be resting on as we try to retrieve the woman that is behind the wife that is behind the mother. And something happened and you're not sure what happened to you. Yeah, that.

Because you suddenly came from a very close system where there was a ton of involvement of people and then suddenly you were projected into the extreme opposite where it's not just that you have freedom. But that if nobody answers your emails and you can't connect with anyone then this freedom becomes isolation loneliness silence. And you kind of are thinking whatever happened to me I was a social person. I had a passion. I created I learned.

And it started postpartum or it started separately. I think I think it's always been there like even before I even got married because I never really had like a job like I went from graduating from the university and I got married. I have some internships. I had some stuff I liked but I never really had like something that that I was working towards. And then obviously I had really bad postpartum depression with my first kid. You say obviously like it's obvious.

No, no, I'm sorry you're right. I've always been very like anxious person. I tend to get like panic attacks and I've been in therapy for I don't know 15 years. So it was expected that like I wasn't surprised that I that I had it. So after I had my first kid that's really things got really bad like I was really sad but no one really knew because I've always been a really good mother.

That kind of postpartum depression that you don't know no one knows that you have it. You know, it's not like I couldn't get out of bed. I was fine. I was I was out and about but I was really unhappy. Because it's important for us to understand is this only child one and child one was happening in the midst of your multi distraction life in Mexico. So if you got if you were lost other people could always find you. If you didn't know what to do other people could always suggest let's go do XYZ.

Correct. And what you think you I'm hearing from you is second time came a postpartum again. But there was not enough distraction to take you out of yourself. It's not about just I've been anxious my whole life. I mean you're saying this with the semi smile but this up very I know because I I'm really open about it. So I like to me it's it's normal like I don't know why you right now. Like in this right now that I'm talking this moment. Yeah. I'm I'm wound up. I don't know.

I'm like I'm I think I may too. Breathe. Okay let's do that together. Let's put our feet on the ground. Yes. So we breathe in. And then we take another sip. And then we're going to breathe out in eight. One more. It's breathe in. Take another sip. Fill yourself up and ground the feet and then eight. And then even more down. Yes. You can close your eyes. And this anxiety where in your body is it mostly? Is there a particular place? And I get like that in my shoulders.

Okay. Shall we roll them a bit? Just use them up. So what happened the second time? And how did you get out of it the first time? I stopped breastfeeding. That was a game changer for me. I had a really hard time with it. It didn't come naturally. He was never full. He was losing weight. It was like a nightmare. So as soon as I made the decision, which was really hard, I felt really guilty at the time. Once I stopped breastfeeding, everything started to change.

I had a lot more help. My husband would help me feeding him and I could sleep better. How many months? Three months. And also like I started to regain my body. Like I could feel my body was mine again. That was really hard for me. Like I didn't like sharing my body. I know my friends tell me. It's the most beautiful thing and it is beautiful, but it's also a lot. And then what happened? What allowed you to make this very major decision? And to actually realize that it may even be a generous act?

Honestly, I should have done it for myself. I didn't. I did it for medical reasons for my son because last time before I stopped breastfeeding, that I went to the doctor. He told me, if you want to keep breastfeeding, you can keep breastfeeding. But he has to start taking a bottle every time after he breastfeed. Because he is malnourished. He was malnourished. He wasn't gaining weight. Like they even did blood tests and everything. So I was like, okay,

this is no longer even about my health. If I'm not even going to look at my own health, I'm going to worry about his. And I didn't even stop there. After that, I kept giving him a bottle and I kept pumping, which was horrible in itself. Like it was a nightmare. And that lasted for maybe another month where I kept pumping. And then I just, I was like, enough. And when you stopped, you baby was fed. He stopped crying. You stopped feeling terrible that you couldn't feed him.

And a different bond began to grow between the two of you. And the postpartum lifted. For sure. And the second time? The second time I held on less for breastfeeding. I didn't have postpartum depression. I had baby blues, I think. I had no worries near as bad as the first time. And I breastfed for two months, but not even that well. Like only, like I didn't... No, I don't know the work. Like I wasn't like super strict about it.

So yeah, it was like, it's fine. I'll do whatever it needs to be done. If I have to stop, I have to stop. And I had a little guilt, not like the first time around when I stopped breastfeeding. But nonetheless, I did feel a little guilt for second time around. But this time, even though my depression wasn't as hard, I was lonelyer than the first time. Because everyone came when the baby was born. Like my family and my husband's family, my mother came and stayed for a month.

Which it was wonderful, honestly. It was really, really nice to have everyone. But when everyone left, it was super hard. You didn't have the mommy blues, but you had the woman blues. That, exactly. Now comes the question of who are the people in your life here? With whom you can create what you came to do here, which was to create a family of choice. You have the family of origin, which you're very tight with, but which you felt you wanted to emancipate from.

And in a way, this wasn't migration of emancipation for both of you. When was last time you noticed a federal comment period? You know the type, federal government is passing a law or changing a rule, and they want to hear what you think about it. Well, one of those comment periods just kicked off and runs for the next two months, and it's a big one. The federal government wants to know what you think about their plan to re-schedule marijuana. Not what time you take your smoke breaks, Pakoli.

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What have you done together and apart towards this greater sense of emancipation, differentiation from your family, from your culture, from your community? The goal was not to leave it, to reject it. You're very connected to it, but you wanted more. Yeah. So the first thing I wanted to do was to get a little bit of a sense of emancipation. But you wanted more. Yeah. So the first thing we did was put our older son in non-religious school.

So he knows kids from different types of religions, ethnicities, some have same-sex parents, same gender parents, are you? So there is really, you know, within his class of 10 kids, everyone comes from different places, have different stories, which to me is great for a three and a four-year-old. He gets to meet children with all kinds of different backgrounds and stories, nationalities, language, relationship configurations. Do you get through him? No. Where are all the parents?

Where are all the parents? That's the thing that's been challenging in this city, to be honest. It's really hard to connect and we came during COVID, so we didn't see the parents. Like we would drop off of the kids downstairs. I never saw anyone. I never even saw the kids until like a long time after. Just now, two years in, we've made maybe two really good friends, like couple friends from our kids school.

And that's been nice, and I love it, but it doesn't, like you said, like, I don't have a mother here, not a mother, per se, but like a motherly figure. Yeah, I don't have that closeness with anyone except for my husband. And I feel like it's a very big load on him and on myself. Like I don't want him to be my mother, my sister, my best friend. And that's what's happened during these two years. And that's what's brought us closer together, but that's also been to me unacceptable.

Like I need to have more really close people, and it's very hard to do it. Even the mommy and me classes from around where I live. They're all nannies. You know what I mean? So like I've tried doing, and I go to the playgrounds, I really do try to connect, but it's, I don't know, it's really hard. And I find, that's the other thing, like I find that, even though I like my son to look at other cultures, I don't feel like I quite fit into the American culture.

Like my real close friends are other immigrants. They're not American, they're from other places in the world.

I can relate. You know, when I arrived the same, I meet many foreigners from all over the world, before I met any people born in the United States, but that connection between other people who are going on a parallel journey is actually very meaningful, because you may come from very, very different places, but you often encounter some of the same challenges about entering this particular society, this particular city, you know.

And the people that you have met, there's the Circle of Wyden, as you meet one, you meet there two people, who meet there four people, etc. Is that happening? Not really, to be honest. We're friends with those people, but it doesn't really go deeper than that. There are also really basic parents, like most of these women that are my friends, work full time, which I admire so much, I don't know how they do that. So they're not even like in the same rhythm as I am.

Okay. The friends you make in the first year or two or three, when you arrive in a new city or country, you're not necessarily the people with whom you're going to live the future. Sometimes out of ten, you stay in touch with one, but one introduces you to two, to three, and then suddenly another one arrives, and that becomes the person with whom you connect, with whom you start to share a slice of life, and the others kind of dissipate.

So that's the first thing, I'm meeting and I'm examining everyone by, will you be my next best friend? At first you don't make necessarily best friends. You create a social carpet. You create a network of people that you can share activities with, but they don't have yet to become deep bonds. And sometimes you just invite two, three people to your home and you just say, I work less than you at this moment, let me take care of this.

And you don't expect them to invite you back, because they're too busy to be able to reciprocate, and you say, I'm happy to be the headquarters, where we gather. Yeah. Yeah. And sometimes you say to each of them, why don't you bring somebody that you really like and you think I should know? That's an easy idea. You're so not alone in this situation. They're all over. The depleted mothers that have arrived and are raising their young children on their own.

They don't even have to come from another country for that matter. This is a conversation that if it's done with others, in and of itself, it already changes the reality. Yeah. So that's one very low risk. It's all about low risk, right, at this moment. And then sometimes you just go alone with them, and the children stay together, so that the kids can make friendships with each other. If they click, you don't have to just do it, it can be all kinds of subsystems, mini configurations.

Then I do think you can ask the people back home, who's here? There is some communities right here that are heavily Latin and Jewish and progressive and trying to discover a new world. Just go and attend. Go on a Friday night on a Shabbat and see what happens there if it speaks to you. Become a little bit anthropologist together. Let's go discover. Maybe every week we go to one thing that is not familiar to us. And we see what we like, what speaks to us, we discover.

Because in some way you know the life you have left and you don't yet know the life that you can have. You're in a liminal space between what is no more and what is not yet. But the shift you want to make, and I'll leave you with that, is that you experience the unknown at this moment, the future or the world that is here, you don't feel familiar. You still experience it with great anxiety and trepidation. And I would like to invite you to experience it with anticipation and curiosity.

That's why you came. Because you were curious, what else is out there? What other lives exist? What is the world that is larger than the one I grew up in? And when you go and you become sad and lonely and depressed, you lose touch with the curious one that's inside of you, with the exploratory part of you, with the part of you that is hungry for discovery, the part of the two of you for that matter.

And every time you will come to your husband and say, there's something I want to try, you will bring a tremendous amount of energy to your lives together and to your relationship. And that will change your whole migration story. This was an Aster calling. A one-time intervention phone call recorded remotely from two points somewhere in the world.

If you have a question you'd like to explore with Aster, could be answered in a 40 or 50-minute phone call, send a voice message and Aster might just call you. Send your question to producer at estaraparal.com. Where should we begin with Aster Paral is produced by magnificent noise, where part of the Vox Media podcast network, in partnership with New York Magazine and the Cut.

Our production staff includes Eric Newsom, Eva Walsh over, Destri Sibli, Huwete Katana, Sabrina Farhi, Eleanor Kagan, Kristen Muller, and Julian Hanne, original music and additional production by Paul Schneider, and the executive producers of Where Should We Begin are Aster Paral and Jesse Baker. We'd also like to thank Courtney Hamilton, Mary Alice Miller, Jen Marler, and Jack Saul.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.