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    YDGM Ep013: Mandy Adams - The Menstrual Cycle

    enJune 11, 2017
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    About this Episode

    “It’s coming from an approach of really trusting what’s really right for us, and hence the work that I’m standing in is allowing women to find their own unique voice, and the more that we stand in that as individuals then we become this collective awakened force of the feminine.”

    Mandy Adams is a menstruality educator.

    What the hell is that, you ask.

    Well, I seriously believe that if every woman and man understood this information that Mandy teaches and shares, the world would be in a much better state.

    There is so much that our cultures do not understand about health, specifically the cycle of the woman’s menstruality. And if information was taught and known almost automatically, such as taught in school, we would understand so much more about ourselves, our children, our lovers, our partners, our mothers, our sisters, our daughters, as well as our dynamic with boys and men in our lives.

    I’m telling you. Listen to this.

    And pay attention. Don’t do anything else but dedicate 100% of your attention on this episode.

    Here are the books and authors recommended by Mandy Adams:
    Vagina, by Naomi Wolf

    Jane Hardwick Collins

    Uma Dinsmore-Tuli

    Alexandra Pope

     

    To contact Mandy, go to her Mandy Adams https://mandyadams.co.uk/

     

    Please subscribe and post a review! Check out my website and sign up in the chat forum and to join our amazing email tribe http://youredoinggreatmom.com/

    Recent Episodes from You're Doing Great Mom

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    YDGM Ep 32: Chantal Challenger, life as a mum and an expat.

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    YDGM Ep 28: Craig Peterson, an American living in Rome

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    YDGM Ep 27: Brendan Waddington on Fatherhood

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    YDGM Ep 26: Julian D A Wiseman AKA My Husband

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    Sperm Virility
    Alcohol
    Foie Gras
    Blue Planet
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    YDGM Ep 25: Lillian Lartey

    YDGM Ep 25: Lillian Lartey

    Lillian Lartey is my guest in this last episode of 2017. She’s a personal trainer, massage therapist, and I consider her a life coach for women because she is so grounded in her values and commitment to having an extraordinary life. She came over to record this episode, and it was wonderful to spend those 90-minutes together. So much of what she said was illuminating for me about womenhood, and motherhood. Lillian isn’t a mother, and yet, she has so much wisdom about it!


    “If we look from the central part of the world going eastwards, a lot of the time when it comes to parenthood, it’s not just the mom taking total responsibility of that child or those children; you’ve got a total village, you’ve got a total town taking care of that child. So that mother doesn’t necessarily have those pressures that they do in the Western world. We also don’t have those pressures of wanting to get a really good job, wanting to have A, B, and C; Take the children to the best school, have the best clothes, have all this money, etc, go on the best holidays - all this pressure adds in. Why? Where as, when we appreciate our lives why we’re here, and that mum gives birth in a village to a child, everybody celebrates that. That’s everybody’s child. It’s not just that mum who’s given birth to that child. It’s everybody’s responsibility.”

     

    Lillian is a personal trainer, massage therapist, and I consider her a life coach for women because she is so grounded in her values and commitment to having an extraordinary life.

    “For mums, I believe, and having worked with mums in the type of work that I do, a majority of the time, if they’re under that pressure to have to hand over their baby, at say, at 6 months, even a year, their bodies physically are not ready to let go. Because it’s such an emotional trauma - one, in terms of when you’re pregnant and you’re carrying a child. There’s so many hormonal activities going on. Two, when you give birth. And in three, through nursing that child. And that body, I believe, has to go through a process of recovery, and that includes when you’re doing the releasing of that child to go into someone else’s hands, in terms of going to school or going to nursery, taking care of the house, etc.”

     

    As a life coach, she has helped women, many of them mothers, to focus on themselves and to achieve happiness, building back their health, self-esteem, and love for life.

    “I’ve had women who wanna be super women, you know business women in particular are like, ‘Oh yeah, I gave birth yesterday, and I’m here today and I’m treatin’ my clients, I’m speaking to my clients, and I’ve got my baby on my boob…’ And I just think, ‘Why’? In the Western world there’s this race to get back and to prove yourself that, ‘I’m a strong woman and I’m going to be a responsible mother, and I can do it all.’ And then they crash and burn.” 

     

    Check out Lillian's website for her business, I Want My Body Back

    YDGM Ep 024: Drea Clark

    YDGM Ep 024: Drea Clark

    “I like to think I lead a very intentional life. And that isn’t that it’s not open to surprises or spontaneity. But I very deliberately chosen … and I’ve been very lucky, I realize that when I say that. Not everyone gets to choose as much ‘cause there’s inherent struggle with being able to just to afford doing things like that. I get that. I love living by myself. I love setting my own hours. I love being able to keep everything clean and neat and how I want it. There’s intention to those things. I really enjoy that."

    Drea Clark lives in LA and works in film. She's my sister's best friend from highschool and we've known each other for a really long time. She's basically considered to be part of our family. I asked her to be on my podcast for this current series of conversations with women who are not mothers, and she was totally enthusiastic to participate.

    I knew it would be a fantastic conversation, a fun one too, because Drea is just so articulate in just about anything. 

    Yeah.

    You ask her about anything, and she'll have something to say about it.

    And it usually makes you want to go, "Hmmmmm."

    I love Drea.

    She's fabulous.

    In this episode, Drea opens up and tells it like it is, raw, and direct, sharing her views on why she’s not a mother and that she’s very happy in her life without children.

    “You should live your life in a way that you feel bad for other people for living it differently.”

    “Oh my God. I had it so good. My parents are legit good parents, and they are a very loving couple. So it’s ironic to me that I’m like, ‘Oh you guys knocked it out of the park on both fronts. Do not take it personally that I am not replicating that,’ because I remember telling them years ago when I sort of knew that I wasn’t gonna have kids - I wanted them to know.”

    If you want to get in touch with Drea or find our more about her, go to her website: dreaclark.com or find her on Twitter @thedreaclark

     You can check out my website, You're Doing Great Mom and be sure to subscribe and write a review. I would be so happy if you all do that. Thanks, and see you next week!

    YDGM Ep 023: Angie Dairou

    YDGM Ep 023: Angie Dairou

    Angie is a successful therapist, working with individuals as well as companies, big and small. This episode was awesome, with so many interesting and thought-provoking nuggets of wisdom, ideas, and stories about motherhood and how we can shift our perspectives about it in the context of applying it to roles of leadership and life in general.

    “That’s part of my mission, really, in working with everybody I do, is trying to get the word out that the more you can be with ‘stuck’ the more you’re life is going to transform, because every time you go to learn something new, whether it’s changing your golf swing… changing a part of their skill, they’re gonna go through a chaos phase as they relearn things. So if every time you see ‘stuck’ as it means you did something wrong, you’re gonna back off and you’re not gonna get the learning. It’s important that we spread that - that stuckness means you are one step away from change.”