The Maternal Journal podcast
Our new podcast is here!
Join us for a deep dive into m/otherhood, journaling, creativity and mental health hosted by Maternal Journal producer, artist, writer and midwife Laura Godfrey-Isaacs.
You'll hear from ten exceptional writers who share insights about their parenting journeys and discuss how creativity can positively impact mental health and well-being. So, grab your headphones, settle in and join us to explore these inspiring stories together.
Each episode also includes a new journaling guide designed by our guests for you to try at home or you can sign up for a free workshop and journal with a group guided by a trusted person.
Episodes
1 - Maternal Rage and the Invisibility of Motherhood
Laura talks to award-winning journalist and writer Saima Mir about her feelings of obscurity and anger in the transition to motherhood. They discuss the struggle to combat conflicting stereotypes imposed on mothers and how writing and creativity can offer ways to positively affect mental health and well-being.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
2 - Overcoming Trauma and the Power of Writing
Laura is joined by award-winning writer and editor Sinéad Gleeson who reveals her extraordinary journey of motherhood overcoming trauma, illness and disability. She discusses the power of writing and extends valuable advice to anyone struggling to put pen to paper.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
3 - Fatherhood, Grief and the Grace of Everyday Parenting
In this episode, Laura sits in conversation with Nikesh Shukla, an author, editor and screenwriter. Together, they discuss Nikesh’s memoir, Brown Baby, a love letter to his daughter, which interrogates race, family, home, and grief from his perspective as a father and explores how parenthood changes our perceptions of life, what it means to be a writer and the writing process.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
4 - The poetry of motherhood and memory
Laura speaks with award-winning author, poet and activist, Jacqueline Saphra. The conversation explores love, family history, birth and relationships. Jacqueline reads two of her beautiful poems highlighting the power and resonance of poetry in processing emotions and experiences.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
5 - Radical peer support for Black mothers
Founder of The Motherhood Group, a social enterprise that supports the Black maternal experience, Sandra Igwe discusses her advocacy for the importance of ‘radical peer support’ for Black mothers. Sandra is also a writer and poet, and author of My Black Motherhood: Mental Health, Stigma, Racism and the System. In her book, she uses her voice, and many other Black mothers’ experiences to demand that Black women are listened to, believed, and understood by healthcare professionals.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
6 - Finding your voice through creativity
Artist, writer, editor, lecturer, speaker and curator Sarah Lightman discusses her graphic memoir, The Book of Sarah, which looks at her childhood, cultural history and explores her mothering experiences through text and images. She gives an introduction to graphic narrative work and cartooning, particularly the powerful history by Jewish women.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
7 - A midwife’s story and finding your flow
Laura and Leah Hazard both practising NHS midwives, writers and birth activists, discuss how to bring evidence-based information about midwifery, birth and women’s bodies into the public sphere in a way that’s accessible, relatable and relevant to our times. Leah’s new book, Womb: The Inside Story of Where We All Began, expands on the history of women’s reproductive lives interwoven with her own personal story.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
8 - Embracing Life’s “Unshaped Mess”
Laura speaks with memoirist and bestselling author Cathy Rentzenbrink. They consider the power of writing for mental health, advocating for a focus on process over content. Cathy tells us how writing has helped her understand and manage traumatic life experiences. She stresses the importance of authenticity in journal writing against the partial truths often portrayed on social media.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
9 - Some of the Unspoken Challenges of Being a Mother and Parent
Laura talks to best-selling author and podcaster Katherine May. They discuss the struggles she faced in pregnancy, including depression and feeling out of place. Katherine shares her insights as an autistic mother and the importance of finding your own path in parenting. We discuss her approach to writing and the positive impact of a supportive environment and open discussion.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
10 - Redefining Motherhood and creativity: Giving Yourself Permission
Laura speaks to Julie Phillips, an award-winning writer, biographer, book critic and author of the influential book – Baby on the Fire Escape. They unpick the challenges and stereotypes of motherhood and creativity and the conflict between societal expectations and personal desires. Julie shares her own experiences with journaling and the importance of protecting your individuality as a parent. We discuss other important topics like the need for improved societal structural support for mothers, including paid parental leave and affordable childcare.
Also available to listen on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google, Amazon Music, Pocketcast, and PlayerFM.
Our original pilot episode - Journaling in Challenging Times – featuring cartoonist, writer, and artist Henny Beaumont is still available to listen now. Henny tells us about her beautiful book – Hole in the Heart – a graphic novel about mothering her daughter Beth who has Down’s Syndrome. She also gives life advice on what to do when things take an unexpected turn and how journaling can help.
Thank you to our funders, Arts Council England, and partners, Art House Wakefield, University of Sheffield and OG Podcasts.
Original music by Kerry Priest.