Spinning Plates with Sophie Ellis-Bextor - Episode 67: Melissa Hogenboom
Episode Date: June 6, 2022Melissa Hogenboom is a Dutch-born science journalist, now working at the BBC. A mother of two, she is also a documentary-maker and author of a fascinating book (which she astoundingly wrote... during her maternity leave) called The Motherhood Complex, which mixes her own personal experience of motherhood with proper science. It’s fascinating, as is the documentary ‘A Mother’s Brain’ which is still on bbc iPlayer now. There’s so much that happens when you become a new parent and Melissa introduced me to the phrase ‘matrescence’ which is the physical, hormonal, emotional and social transition to motherhood. We talked about how your brain changes and improves with motherhood (the opposite of what we’re normally led to believe!) and Melissa also shared one of the most surreal post birth stories I have ever heard - trigger warning for anyone squeamish - the story she tells about being in the shower is NOT for you.Spinning Plates is presented by Sophie Ellils Bextor, produced by Claire Jones, and post-production is by Richard Jones. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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Hello, I'm Sophia Lispector and welcome to Spinning Plates, the podcast where I speak
to busy working women who also happen to be mothers about how they make it work. I'm a
singer and I've released seven albums in between having my five sons aged 16 months to 16 years,
so I spin a few plates myself. Being a mother can be the most amazing thing, thing It can also be hard to find time for yourself and your own ambitions
I want to be a bit nosy and see how other people balance everything. Welcome to Spinning Plates
Friday
lunchtime and
Yeah of
I've sort of dipped in and out of Jubilee things. There's a street party on Sunday. What's the weather gonna be like?
I mean, I suppose it's quite fun to take kids along isn't it it's funny because we've just
come back from a boating trip for half term and we saw so much jubilee things including
windsor castle uh so obviously kids all waved to the queen on the way up and on the way back
mickey my three-year-old was naked and he did a very special
sort of body dance facing windsor castle especially for her majesty uh it wasn't a political statement
he's just three and likes to do that kind of thing anyway how are you getting on i'm feeling
i'm feeling pretty good a little bit wiped can i be very boring i have some sort of weird sinus-y cough cold thing that I've had
for nearly two weeks and it's really starting to annoy me. You know what it's like. Obviously,
with a cold, you're not like, there's not seriously anything wrong with you, but colds are just that
thing where you're trying to do all the things you normally do, but you just can't quite forget
about it. I've never had one quite like this before. I wake up in the morning and it's like
my whole face hurts. What is that? Is it sinusitis? Maybe. I've never had it quite like this before. I wake up in the morning and it's like my whole face hurts. What is that? Is it sinusitis?
Maybe. I've never had it before.
I suppose I should be excited to be experiencing a new ailment.
Well, anyway, I've had enough of it now.
It's been five days of this particular phase of the cold.
Anyway, sorry, I told you it was boring.
And what else is happening?
I can hear Richard in the studio.
He's listening to live mixes of the tour that we did because i think we're going to put it all together and
bring that out at some point on a final album so that's quite fun i said it's fun it means i'm
listening to him listening to my voice which i find very difficult to listen through i'm not
very good at listening to mixes because it's got me in it what is it about our own voices that
means we don't like hearing them recorded and played back?
That's strange, isn't it?
And this afternoon I've got a gig.
I'm off to Witchwood Festival
where I'm playing alongside Boney M.
So that's exciting.
I think that'll put me in a good mood.
So I'll pack my sparkly bits in a little while
and get myself all ready.
And then this weekend I've got the kids by myself this weekend
because Rich has got another festival on Saturday and another one on Sunday and I haven't I'm home
so that's fine we'll be fine so long as the sun is shining we can get out and about and do some
stuff for the end of half term and it's funny because this boating holiday was really cute
like we had lots of fun but we also always seem to time it where one of our kids is at an age where they're sort of slightly growing out of it.
That's what it feels like anyway.
So Kit, who's 13, was struggling a little bit with the concept of essentially camping on water with his family 24 hours a day for four days consecutively.
He was quite happy to get home.
But of course, he also had fun.
He jumped in the river and swam about.
We did some late-night playground action in a local park
when it was just the kids, which was quite cute.
We had some yummy food.
We poodled about.
He got to do a bit of steering.
Even Mickey was quite into the locks.
And Jessie and Ray, they had a little bit of swimming time too.
And it was all very Nuts in May,
which is a Mike Lee film, which if you haven't seen it, go and watch it because it little bit of swimming time too and it was all very nuts in may which
is mike lee film which if you haven't seen it go and watch it because it's one of my favorite films
and in nuts in may it's about candace marie and keith her husband and they go on a very earnest
camping trip in the uk so it's set in the i think it was done in the 70s sort of mid 70s and so
whenever richard and i do a half-term break with the kids in May, we always think of it as our nuts-in-May holiday. It very much is. Anyway, I'm sure you're already tiring of my
slightly bunged-up voice. So I will get on to this week's podcast guest, which is
brought about by a documentary I saw on the BBC iPlayer. It's not very long. I think it's about
25 minutes long, and it's called A Mother's Brain. And I was intrigued, and I watched it, and it's completely
fascinating. It's about all the changes that go on neurologically, socially, emotionally,
physically, hormonally, when you become a mother or primary carer, or basically when you begin
raising a child. So it talks about all the different stages and how some things affect, you know,
whether or not, you know,
you're the person who gave birth to the baby,
you can still be affected neurologically
and other stuff is about the natural social
and emotional changes that happen when you're a mother.
And I found like, for me,
I thought the documentary articulated a lot of emotions
I felt when I became a mum that I wasn't able to articulate.
I thought, yes, no wonder it's such a big deal it's affecting you on sort of all aspects of your sense of self really so I looked up who'd made the documentary and the woman who presented it
she's called Melissa Hogan Boom and then I found her book uh called The Motherhood Complex and
started reading that and I just sent an email out into the ether to melissa and said i'd really love to talk to you as i said it's an email it
wasn't an email i remember now i dm'd her on instagram uh i've got a bad habit of sliding
into dms if i want to introduce interview people for the podcast it's a good job my teenage children
aren't around to hear me say sliding into dms because i know they would have cringed and laughed at me saying that and i do understand
that normally the context of that is different um anyway melissa got back to me and came around
and we had a really fascinating chat she's a really exciting thinker and has that wonderful ability to take lots of bits of information,
sort of scientific and lots of different studies,
and then clarify it into a way that makes the information really open and easy and digestible.
Because even though she's super smart, she obviously has a generosity about her that makes her want,
she wants other people to get excited about what she's super smart, she obviously has a generosity about her that makes her want, she wants other people to get excited
about what she's learning about too,
which is what all the best teachers are like,
isn't it?
So yeah, we had a lovely chat
and now you can listen to it
and I will sit back
and I might not go for a cup of tea actually this summer.
I might go for just a hot drink.
I think I just need something a bit herbal
and boring
just to kind of try and soothe me a
little and I'll see you on the other side all right see you in a bit
so why don't we start with the here and now, Melissa?
What are you up to at the moment?
What's going on with you?
I am...
What am I up to?
Right now I am making quite a lot of films for my team at BBC Real,
so making a really interesting piece about the science of nature and nurture,
so what part of our um behavior is defined by our genetics and
what part is defined by the um way we grew up and scientists look at that using twin studies and
it's actually really fascinating and it's got me thinking a lot about the way i'm um raising my
children actually because there's there's a lot of research that shows um genetic genetic twins
raised apart are more alike than fraternal siblings raised together so that shows genetic twins raised apart are more alike than fraternal siblings raised together.
So that shows the genetics has such a huge role
in how children grow up.
So even two of your boys would be more different
than say genetic twins
who are not raised in the same household.
And so in some sense, it kind of justifies,
like we often say, our children are who they are and they'll be who they be.
And parents often think we can mold them
into how we want them to be.
And it's actually really, really reassuring.
Like, of course, we have a really important role.
We teach them a lot of things.
We give them a lot of structure.
But we can't mold them into being who we want them to be.
And I think that helps me as a parent.
So even though this film is not about parenting at all,
actually researching it has been really helpful just on a personal level as well yeah that's so
fascinating and actually I think it's a sort of if I'd had to uh come to my own conclusion I would
have come to the same one but I think it took me uh getting it wrong over the years to understand
that because I think especially with my first you're putting so much
emphasis on what you notice about them and like oh that's a little bit you and that's a little bit me
and what about if we do this that and the other and I think you know you think a lot about your
own childhood and the things that were formative and you think I want to give you the same tools
so that you can reach the point where you know you feel good about everything and yeah and then
you soon realize actually what am I doing they're not they're not me they're not a miniature version of me this is a new person and they have a new
take on things and I've just be a bit more reactive but um that's good for taking the
pressure off yeah I think that's what the scientist interviewed said parents of one child are
environmentalists parents of two children are geneticists because you realize oh wow my second
child is so different um and then like like my daughter sometimes says things like i'm like why don't you wear this today you know it's a
it's a nice day of celebration she goes i will want i'll wear what i want because i know what
i know and i'm like fair enough so like she's got this really strong idea of what she wants
and actually i i try and respect that even though it can be really difficult
yes i know that's the thing you're like encouraging the spirited independence and
then suddenly it comes back at you in spades you're like encouraging the spirited independence and then
suddenly it comes back at you in spades you're like yeah a little bit too spirited a little bit
too independent um so the reason I wanted to speak to you is because I watched well I've been reading
your book and I've watched your documentary um which was Mother's Brain and I found it so
completely fascinating and you through your book and the documentary have articulated
a lot of things I felt without being able to articulate any of them um so yeah I want to
really what came first in terms of the site were you always interested in how motherhood affects
people not at all um actually I'm I'm a science journalist by background so I've been reporting
on science for a lot of
many years, and I've always wanted to write a book, lots of journalists want to, but it wasn't
until I'd had my second, and I was three months in, so he was three months old, and I was like,
why is no one writing about how overwhelming and strange this is? And it's like I needed to
articulate as well what I was experiencing
and then I thought there must be um a lot of science that explains how mothers feel this
shifting identity and when one side takes over um and then the more I looked into it I found there
was loads of stuff that backed it up from brain science to biological changes to social expectations
and I was like wow okay I really I really want to write about this to validate um what mothers like myself are experiencing and it was actually surprisingly easy to write because
every little research paper I found or every scientist I spoke to just opened up this
understanding I was like okay this is why it felt so overwhelming coming back to work this is why
I I really struggled when I became a mother, not in terms of mental health.
Like I loved it.
I loved being a parent,
but I definitely had these two competing identities.
And I don't know if it's because, you know,
I'd always identified as a journalist,
as someone who's ambitious.
And then suddenly I had this child
and people saw me in a different light
that I might've seen myself.
And that's fine in many instances,
but it's not when one, how people see you is different than how you see yourself and that often happens in motherhood
so you know you're just mother or oh you're a mum now you've got different ideas or you might not
get invited to the same events and they're all like small small instances over your day or your
week but they add up and it's why mothers often feel kind of overwhelmed or why they lose their sense of self a little bit yeah completely and I think like you my overwhelming feeling about being a mother is
really positive but I still found all these strands that made me feel like the edges have
been knocked off me a little bit and that you have to sort of re refine those edges again and
sort of set out your stall again.
And I think, yeah, with your books,
it's called Motherhood Complex.
It feels like you've sort of taken all these many nuanced things,
pretending on it that it's physiological, neurological,
you know, physical changes or perception
and, you know, cultural things
and how we think of what a mother should be,
what a parent should be um and it's really fascinating and it's brilliant to have it all in one place
and i love your very sort of pragmatic clear way of looking at it all so you just distill it all
in this way that's never you'll have your your personal take on it but it also doesn't ever feel
like it's being sentimental or it's just kind of like quite a clear I suppose very scientific approach of just
okay yeah that explains that and that makes sense of that and the reason why I was then not
traumatized by those events is because actually I had these elements that weren't part of that
but I think it's so brilliant it's like really real clarity in that thank you yeah that's why
I always try to bring an evidence-based approach to the way I was writing it both because then you can understand it from a factual point of view
it's okay well this is you know not only validates your experience but actually there's evidence to
show why we feel the way we do but also just to dispel some of the myths or the like like the
opening chapter and what the documentary was called about the mum brain, I was so frustrated at how motherhood or when you're pregnant or when you're a new mum,
we like diminish our competency.
We're like, oh, it's mum brain or, oh, you know, I'm just a bit tired because, you know, pregnancy brain.
And I was like, wait a minute.
Like, I felt like I was overachieving after I became a mother, maybe because of some of the expectations.
And I felt like my brain was really clear. And obviously, I was tired some of the time. And then it was just amazing to find out
that the neuroscience shows that our brain is actually being optimized in these really beneficial
ways during pregnancy and motherhood, and it's lasting. And if you look at brain science,
that's not particularly surprising. Like you're a musician, your brain will probably look different
to a non-musician because you've specialized in a way that you know it makes your neurons optimized it's like it's like when you weed a
garden you know you keep the good things and weed out the bad that's what's happening in your brain
a little bit you're the neurons that you're needing are getting strengthened and so that
really happens in a a huge way in the shift to motherhood so much so that if you scan the brains
of non-mothers and
mothers you can actually see the difference which is amazing and so rather than think of the mum
brain as something detrimental it's actually something to you know celebrate and to I think
something we can we know we're optimized for motherhood in a way that's beneficial for us
and it means that um you know we were doing more than
ever before and what i really always want to get across in this is it's not just biology in this
instance um it's so of course when we're pregnant our brain or our body is being primed for motherhood
but the there's a huge important part from experience as well and it shows why
um you know same-sex male parents also have like different brain changes
that occur or non-biological parents um and that i think that's really important to highlight
because there's so much expectations put on mothers to be the biological carer this is what
we're meant to do this is what we're made for and that's actually a quite an it can be quite a
negative um attitude if you're then put into this hole that
this is what you're made for because then you will do more and you'll be the more of the primary
carer and you'll do more of the mental load um but actually you know anyone can do a lot of the
things that mothers do and your brain will adapt it's just biology sometimes gives us gives us a
bit of a head start yeah absolutely i think you're right that whole thing about the primary caregiver and how your brain adapts just purely by spending time with your child
is really important for people to to hear because as you say so much of that expectation
of mothers to take on the mother loads is is cultural and passed down and I suppose we're still dealing with so much in terms of it's very
recent that women have felt able to be pregnant publicly uh adapt their workplace to suit the
fact that they are raising a young family that the aspects of it that are we haven't quite got
to the bit where we can then delegate again because we're so busy still trying
to make sure we've got that all how we need it first absolutely and part of that is because
women are judged for things in a way that men just aren't like there's really interesting studies to
show that like if you go into um a room that's messy and it's attributed to jennifer you judge
her personality traits or if it's john you don't and that's kind of just shows and you
know people people expect certain things of women that they don't have men and that filters down to
the carer level and in the workplace as well and there's there's a reason there's still a
motherhood penalty that's what sociologists call it the fact that women's earnings um decline as
soon as they become children if you look at the average and the graphs and they never never um
and as soon as they become children, if you look at the average and the graphs
and they never match up again.
And so if you're constantly on a back foot
and sociologists also call this,
they call it a structural lag.
So society is aware of the inequalities
and by being aware of it,
it's like, oh, you know,
we're aware that women are paid less,
we're going to talk about it,
but there's not actually that much being done
and there's still a lot of biases.
Like the, you know, women who are mothers it but there's not actually that much being done and there's still a lot of biases like the you
know women who are mothers are often like given a lower um starting salary than non-mothers there's
there's you know studies that show that and they're judged as being less ambitious less
competent less focused and there's no evidence that shows they are and you know like I would
argue that when you have a finite time, you actually can be much more productive.
Like I know I have to leave at five to do the pickup,
so I make sure I hit my deadlines to get my job done.
And I do, and I never struggle with that.
But yet, I think the reason why many people feel
that kind of competing or negative clash in their identity
is because they're aware of these expectations.
Like a journalist friend of mine was like, oh, I'm not gonna um tell my team I'm pregnant yet because they won't give me the big stories and I'm like well that's not how it should be like yeah but
it's just it just is it's how it is yeah I suppose yeah I mean even just laying it all out like that
sounds exhausting and like a little bit of a hand and on your forehead when you're trying to move
forward and as you say I think part of the reason why I loved having these conversations is because
of how the moment I became a mother it did change my relationship with work really significantly
in terms of making me actually like sort of focus my ambition a bit more and just made me think well
if I'm going to spend time away from my baby it's got to count I don't want to come home having just not really done very much of my day it's got to be have a bit more value to it
so I feel like I sort of edited a lot of stuff out you know yeah but sometimes that's detrimental too
yeah I think I think I did the same I didn't want it to define me which is why I felt like mixed
about writing about it because I was like I'm writing about the very thing I don't want to
define me I don't feel it so strongly now it's like almost embracing it's helped but I think I became more ambitious
after I became a mother as well because I was determined to prove that that wouldn't
affect me but I think that's quite unhealthy and I think that's a cultural pressure it's like the
culture expects you to not come back full-time to take a full year off to to then not want to
promotion or not want to work overtime and so I
was like no I'm going to prove them wrong do this but I was kind of denying the fact that my life
had hugely changed I was exhausted I wasn't sleeping but I just pretended everything was
fine um and it you know it did get easier when my daughter started sleeping more um but I definitely
felt I had to like put on this brave face and I wish now that I'd known what I
know now and I could be like no you know you can be vulnerable it's important to show that not only
just for yourself but also for younger colleagues or people who don't have that experience because
until you explain it or tell people about it they they don't know what you're going through
yeah and also the energy you'd need to put into getting making changes happen at that time that's like the
last that's so far down your priority list to have the energy to say actually I think this isn't quite
right how this is set up you know you're too busy adjusting to new motherhood and then by the time
you've got past it and feeling better about stuff um it's all a bit of a blur I know it's it's it's
all such a blur but I think I'm sure that that
must be evolutionary right like why would you have a second child if you remember how crazy the first
one was or a third or a fourth yeah I know it's interesting all of that what you were saying when
you found your mum's diaries that which that so that the chronology so you wrote you started
writing your book when your second was little, is that right? Or researching it?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then after you'd finished your book,
is that when you did more of the documentaries?
Yeah, I think writing it and telling my mum about it
unlocked memories for her,
and then she started sharing kind of screenshots of her diaries.
But it was actually a really supportive boss when I came back to work,
and I was really open about the fact that I'd written this book on mat leave and I wasn't quite finished.
So I came back.
Which, by the way, is pretty impressive in itself, isn't it?
I've also written a book.
We get to read it.
It's a really complex, very researched book.
Let's just say I didn't go to any mum groups, didn't meet up with anyone.
I was in almost isolation before the pandemic happened.
Came back to work in 2020.
And then six weeks later
I was uh working at home again but my um my boss Mary she's called she she's a mother as well but
she um was really interested in my book and encouraged me as soon as I mentioned it she's
like oh we should do a documentary about that and I didn't think that would be allowed because you
know like obviously journalists often write books but you're not if you work at the BBC
you're not meant to promote your books to obviously you're allowed to talk about them but you know she
was like you've done this research for a whole year and it's it's a unique angle so we should
make a film about it so she encouraged me to do it and gave me the freedom and headspace um and
then because I commissioned films for my own team and I'm in charge of the commissioning it's kind
of up to me how to use my time um as long as I'm you know all the other works getting
done and so it was just amazing during like lockdown to be able to do this documentary and
like I had to piece it all together by finding filmmakers in different countries getting them to
the the experts I needed one bit of traveling which was going back to the Netherlands to um
see my mom and it was actually my director Pierangelo he's called he's brilliant creative genius who
said oh let's just tease the fact that she's your mother and not mention it to the end because you
know you've got a reason to speak to her she's she's been writing about motherhood 30 years ago
and what was so interesting about it she felt the similar pressures that I did so she was training
to be a GP had to stop her training when she got pregnant and she was like how can I just be a mom
and not a doctor how can I combine these two things and that's the exact feeling when I first
came back to work but I couldn't quite articulate it I was like how can I how can my two identities
collide because I felt they were split and I was keeping them separate because we have such a
different home working life a home life and a work life those
are two very different spheres and they don't align especially in the UK you know we are
kind of applauded when we work overtime it's encouraged it's seen as a marker of success
we value ourselves based on our work and our jobs and our home life is not respected
which is very different to the Netherlands where people clock off at five and if you're staying
late they're like why haven't you gotten all your work done today are you not
you know working hard enough so it's just a it's a very different um that's actually a massive
different thing isn't it yeah it's just a huge cultural expectation and it you know it filters
down into happiness as well and uh gender equality in the mental load like if you've got the higher
earner and i know you spoke about this in your podcast before you've got the higher earner
coming home later because they you know they have more responsibility to earn money for
the family then who's gonna not prioritize their career the lower earner and that statistically is
usually the woman so coming up against all these things I think it's just so it's so challenging
and therefore so important to talk about it with your colleagues your team your bosses and that's
why managers also have to understand that,
which is now that I'm in a position where I manage a team,
I'm so aware of what people have,
or how important it is to respect what people have going on,
whether they're carers, whether they have other things
that take up a significant amount of time.
You need to give people space to live
because people aren't just living to work.
They're, you know, also working to live.
And I think the pandemic has reset that a little bit.
Yeah, I think, you know, it's also, as you said,
it's not just about if the life outside of it is family.
It could be, you know, your hobbies, your pets,
anything that's in your life that's significant
that you need to give space to to make you actually work better
and be focused on work when you're there and then have time for that.
You know, that balance is really, really important.
And actually, I would say that, yeah, is it...
Did you say his name, Pierre?
Piangelo.
Piangelo.
I think the fact that he didn't say about it being your mum
in the documentary means that this's this really moving bit.
I'm trying to remember, as you ask your mum,
you say something like,
was it, were you glad you became a mum?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And she just cups your face and says,
oh, darling, it's the best thing ever.
I was like, oh, I didn't realise.
And it's really moving.
But also the fact that there's, you know,
you were reading her diaries written 30 years before your motherhood started and yet there's so much that
resonates and so much of that time when you're just thinking hang on a minute how do I how do
I anchor this and what is happening to me and is this normal and I just love the fact that there
might be better conversations that go around it about the significance.
Can I ask you something?
With the brain change, is that something that stays?
I think, well, the studies are so emerging,
but they found that two years later it was still,
you could still notice it.
So they haven't, I think they're working on the follow-up scans,
but that suggests that it is long-lasting.
But, you know, science has still come out of that that and i reckon your brains continue to change as your children
yeah grow up and then um but yeah it was it's i think the benefits you feel from that kind of
hyper optimization continue and some of this stuff would be things like in pregnancy
i mean i'm trying to remember what i've read but that the your your ability to empathize
grows yes that's what they the the changes they found were in areas important for empathy and
theory of mind so understanding the um the thoughts and process of others because you have to switch
to you know caring only for yourself to suddenly knowing where the food is knowing when someone's
hungry being attuned to their cry like this study that show you know you become more attuned to a
baby's cry as soon as you become a mother your hormone activation intensifies especially to your own
baby's cry and so your emotional effect is just hyper attuned and that's so important I mean you
see with women who suffer from postpartum depression lose that ability so it just shows
that the support is so i mean this
is a different slightly different topic but the support that enables them to be the mothers they
need to be is so important to that mother-child bond yeah which is why i think recognizing it
and recognizing the signs of um a good bond and having a support of community and family is so
so vital because you know it's the next generation they're not just a baby you're not just a mother it's it's like it's huge it is and i think i mean i agree but the
postpartum depression is obviously its own conversation but i suppose that all falls
under this umbrella of just significant things happen and you're going to feel this whole realm
of emotions um some of it you might be anticipating and quite a lot you just won't be
and I mean I remember I was lucky that I had my mum just down the road when I had my baby I wanted
to be a mum I was very happy to have Sonny but um I still found it really isolating I felt I felt
quite early didn't you so I had him I was just past my 25th birthday,
but I also had him, yeah, two months earlier.
I was supposed to have him in June, and he came in April.
So I missed out a fair bit.
I didn't have him.
I'd signed up to a kind of NCT type thing,
but the classes hadn't started yet,
so I hadn't met anybody else that was having a baby
at the same time as me, and none of my friends had kids.
So a lot of that was quite different and um and i think as
well because i was coming from music where i didn't feel i felt at the time that there was a
bit of uh what's the word looking a bit down their nose at the fact that i was about to be a mum it
would be oh well you're not going to be able to you know good luck with keeping going
with the singing because you're going to have a crying baby at home and you're gonna be changing
nappies now it's not going to be singing and putting on your nice frocks and wearing heels and
I just thought oh is this it I'm frumpy at 25 and that's sort of game over for lots of stuff
um and I think you know I think people feel like that in maybe in not such an extreme way because
it's not so closely related to their day job.
But just that sense of who you are and what you might have lost and where you, yeah, where are the edges of you now?
What am I supposed to be doing now that I'm a mum?
I think for me, the place I always think of really is soft play.
Because a soft play is for me the place where I feel the least of myself.
Yeah.
soft play is for me the place where I feel the least of myself yeah you know I'm just sat at one of those plastic tables with a little pair of shoes next to me trying to spot my child
running through tunnels it's noisy and I just feel like what what is where am I you know like
spin the globe there am I sat like I feel like I've just lost all sense of the things that make me feel like me. I think, I think that's so, that's such a good analogy. And every, like, a lot of mothers I've
spoke to have felt this as well, but most people don't talk about it or they don't know how to
articulate it because I think it's so expected, like you're expected to become a mother, you know,
little girls are marked as dolls from a very young age in a way that boys aren't it's increasing but not as much um my daughters even said to me oh mommy when I am bigger I want
to be a mommy I want to have breasts and your bras like it's so like it's we're in such a
gendered world so if you think about how early it starts these expectations of the caring roles
we'll have so then when we do become mothers there's an also like this idea that we should
just well you know you chose it so enjoy it and this is you now whereas we have a whole other
life before motherhood that you can't just forget about or hide and I think that's where this why
this clash can be so problematic because if you're expected to suddenly put everything before your
child including yourself and your own happiness then that is like a huge risk factor for
you know lasting relationship dissatisfaction unhappiness mental ill health so I actually
I always talk about how important it is to put yourself first and to understand
what you need and what you want because it's important for your happiness and if you're happy
your kid's going to be too. So it's not about being selfish
and not attuning to the needs of your child
because obviously you will be doing that.
And I think that's really important
to talk about more as well
because I think that element of self-sacrifice
is so unhealthy.
And then what would you want your own children to think
when they become parents?
Do you want them to sacrifice themselves? You would tell them no, right? So why would you be your own children to think when they when they become parents do you want them to sacrifice themselves you would tell them no right so why would you be doing it for them
and there is an element of you know like we we we are you know nurturing this new human we have to
keep them alive but that doesn't mean you know that you can't you cease to exist so I think that's
that that's really helped me in my parenting for sure yeah I mean I think there's so many things
I'm thinking about while you're saying all that i think going back to the gender stereotyping
i think that's really dangerous as well because then it means you're basically into you've linked
femininity and being a grown woman intrinsically with motherhood. And I was thinking before you arrived about,
I've got loads of girlfriends that don't have children.
And the majority are by choice.
That's just not something I wanted to do.
And then it's a question that comes up.
It's a thought process that they face.
It's conversations they have to have.
And we've made it so intrinsic to,
well, that's obviously something you're going to want.
And then if it's something that you are going to want then as you say you've got to sacrifice a lot of
yourself because that's the life that you wanted to have and that's all really dangerous but then
I suppose the sort of final of the whole thing is that when you are a grown woman and you are
raising the kids you actually are trying to I sometimes worry that
I'm putting so much pressure to be across everything and then I'm like well how am I
you know I've got five sons like am I saying to them you know when you if you partner up with a
woman make sure she can be across everything like what am I trying to do you know what I mean where
am I what am I what ideal am i trying to paint for them like
what can i what can i let go what can what plates can i smash i guess it's it's so difficult though
i think this is definitely tied to the mental load that's put on women even before they have
children and to your point about um motherhood being expected like there was um i went to this
talk where i think it was someone from the women's equality party said you're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't.
So you're judged if you don't become a mother.
And then if you do become a mother, you know, your idea of what you can achieve is also judged.
But yeah, the mental load is such another thing that's tied into what it means to like how we're conditioned and socialized.
And just in case listeners haven't come across it,
it's like the thinking about doing, so the organizing, the planning, the thinking about
the meals, the doctor's appointments, the nappy sizes, the holidays. And you can't, it's invisible,
which is why it's called mental load. And you can't switch it off, you can take it to work.
And it often increases during the shift to motherhood, largely because of the lack of paid parental leave for fathers.
And then there's no handover.
So even in couples where you anticipate doing everything equally, if you don't have an actual conversation about it,
it's the person who stays at home that does the most because they know where the clothes are, the nappies, children um the the doctor's appointments because they've
done it all and um I remember there was this one instance I went to Berlin for um a work thing
and I'd left a list for my husband of what to feed the kids because I was just across all the
meal things and I'm like I'm never going to do that again because until someone else learns even
by failure they're not going to need to do it and then it even so it continues to be
your load another scenario is often like oh yeah the the dad will take the kids on a play date the
mom will pack the bags and pack the snacks because they know they're like oh don't forget this don't
forget that and um it's a time thing so it's not it's it's never a thing where it's often the
fathers want to get involved but then there's also tied into that there's an element of
maternal gatekeeping women are judged for ways that men are if they're chilled like if you're
if your kid's hair is not brushed it's funny if the dad's brought him to school but you know
oh if a mum does it I can't believe they're not wearing matching socks and um so it's you see
there's this double expectation and then if you're judged on how your kids turn out then of course
you're going to take more care
and control of it which is why the mental load continues so there has to be a handover it has
to be end to end and I think that's why that's part of why it can feel so exhausting and it ties
into kind of the yeah it ties into all the things we've been discussing so now so how has your
writing this book and doing how has it helped or what's it, how's it changed your relationship with raising your kids?
It's definitely validated what I've experienced and it's made me let go.
Like I call it the motherhood complex.
I've definitely feel that less.
Like I still don't fully feel like a mother, if I'm honest.
Like I still have this kind of slightly compartmentalised view of it.
Like when I'm with my kids, I'm in the moment,
but when I'm at work, they feel a little bit abstract.
But it's definitely like now I feel much more confident
in the fact that it's not going to hold me back by talking about it.
It's part of who I am,
but it's part of loads of people's experience.
And I think those early years is when the shift is so it's most dramatic and now you know it's just it's been part of everyday
life for five years so it's and I talk about it a lot now right and I think that helps so people
know more about it and I think raising awareness is part of the first hurdle to making people
understand that you know and I like when I I also remember a conversation I had
with a colleague when I came back to work I was like oh I know it's ironic that I'm writing about
it because the reason why is because I didn't want people to think of me as anything less and
she's like oh I've never nobody thinks that no one's ever thought that so it shows an element
of it is in your it might just be in your mind as well so obviously like the societal expectations
are definitely not in your mind but the feeling of needing to prove yourself like if you are you know if you're a respected employee within a nice team
there's you don't necessarily need to go out above and beyond I definitely I think it's helped and
it's made me want to write about it more and I've continued to write like columns about it and I do
blogs and talks and I want to do follow-up books. So I think it's definitely an area that is worth exploring.
Yeah, and it's so rich.
And there's all these, you know, studies and all this research,
but actually bringing it on, I suppose it all ties into the,
as I said before, the sort of, you know,
the fact that it's still such an evolving place
in terms of how we handle parenthood, motherhood.
And, you know, it makes me think a lot about,
you know, if I'm flicking through Instagram,
I think, generally speaking,
new motherhood is so much more visible
than it was when I had, like, 20 years ago now,
nearly, when I had Sonny.
But at the same time, there's so much of it
that's still on such a pedestal and seems so hard to you know live up to so I think these conversations are so
good for people to be able to understand that actually it's really complex and there's loads
going on and this is why you might be experiencing this that and the other but so I was reading your
book in the studio last week and um it starts with what happened to you after you had your first baby,
which I read out loud to everybody in the room.
I mean, I'm someone that I've got quite a strong...
I'm really interested in medical stuff, and I've got quite a strong stomach,
but what happened to you when you had your baby is pretty shocking, Melissa,
I have to say.
It's a good story.
Bloody hell.
Do you mind telling me
again of course it was actually really therapeutic writing about it um so yeah I had a an emergency
c-section with my first um it was very jolly is that the right word probably not but you know
like my water's broken it it was emergency in the sense that I was in labor um and she was breached so she was the
wrong way around um and the doctor's like do you know what that means I'm like yeah yeah it means
c-section but it wasn't it was nobody was at risk so my daughter was fine I was fine um so you know
they still got her out in four minutes after you know I went in thinking I'd be sent home again
because I was only three centimeters dilated and then within half an hour she was out and like I hadn't even told like I don't think I'd even told my family I
was um in labor so suddenly like I text them all a baby photo and they were like what wow she was
a week early as well um and then I went home and I had like this bulge I'd say um and I was
frantically googling it and the way I do and I was texting all my friends that had c-sections and they're like oh yeah yeah it's normal to have a little bulge that's fine I was
like okay and I remember them it was four days afterwards the midwife was due to come
and um I was like I better check because you know it feels a bit tight and sore
and then I went and had a shower and it just completely split open um and I didn't I think
I just looked at I mean if you're eating please look
I remember look yeah I looked down just a tiny bit and I thought it was just pus coming out
and then my body just went into shock and I was like standing naked in the shower just shaking
and I apparently had like just this really tiny little voice and luckily my husband was right we
lived in a flat at the time he was in the kitchen which was really near the shower and he said he could just just hear there was this urgency in my voice
I was like Stephen please help um and then he just said Melissa don't look and I was like just
standing like hold he's like just don't look and I was just standing like on um against the shower
with my head with my hands up just shaking um it wasn't painful or anything but yeah like
my insides I think well he doesn't talk about it which't painful or anything but yeah like my insides for him I think well he
doesn't talk about it which is probably not healthy but yeah my insides would come out basically
um and so what poor thing I'm so sorry well I mean I'm fine I know you're fine that's quite
like I can talk about it in a really like I don't feel like it was me it's like I'm
like telling a story of a film I've seen or something. And then a paramedic came within.
I think they made my husband stay on the line.
Like when it's serious, they make you stay on the line.
And he came within eight minutes.
But then it was a Friday night.
So the ambulance took really long to come.
And nobody had ever seen anything like it.
They didn't know what to do.
They were just like, just try and, yeah.
And luckily I hadn't sat down or luckily wasn't yeah
luckily I wasn't wearing clothes so it didn't touch anything because yeah I was standing up
but they he just and it was one of those bath showers so I couldn't easily get out of it
um but he just like wrapped me wrapped me with this um clinical gauze stuff and then yeah and
then I just remember coming in and I just remember being really worried about my daughter she was only four days old and I my milk had just come in I was breastfeeding
and I just kept saying to the ambulance but what about my baby but he um my husband just grabbed
everything from the hospital bag that had just been unpacked and we all came to the ambulance
together and yeah I was just lying on this bed for three hours while they called this emergency
bowel surgeon on a Friday night out of his bed or whatever,
and at midnight they finally operated.
I think they needed, like, a specialist bowel surgeon
and an obstetrician because nobody had seen anything like it
and they weren't sure and had to investigate.
There was nothing wrong.
But, yeah, it was just so surreal.
It wasn't that painful at the time. If I just remember my husband didn't know what to do because my daughter was breastfed
and he didn't have any milk and she started crying and he was like wandering around the hospital in
the dark with a newborn and no one like people like what where's the mother why are you so I
think he was quite traumatized by the whole experience and luckily someone like I think the surgery took a couple of hours and someone called him and then they were
like you're fine I was like great um and it was obviously a long recovery because I had two
surgeries in four days um but yeah I healed I healed amazingly and I don't I think because
and that's why I investigated kind of the psychological aspects of it,
because the event wasn't linked to my daughter's well-being,
and I didn't perceive myself to be like at risk.
I kind of thought, oh, this is really, really bad.
But I didn't link it with the birth, so I didn't have like a psychological effect of it because, you know, they offered me counselling.
And I was like, actually, because because she's fine I've been fine um like it would have been a different story if
like they literally made me sign the document saying you might have to have to need a stoma
you know if we can't fix you which is when you have um you know a poo bag I think they're called
and there's a lot more awareness of it you can imagine like being told that before you go into
surgery so it yeah it was it's very
traumatic and it definitely affected it um going into a c-section the second time but because I
told the doctors what happened they gave me like extra care and I had like a top surgeon doing the
second c-section and so I wasn't worried it would happen again it was more like oh I don't want to
be cut open again really yeah well I think
it's very much part of your scientific approach to then research that why is it that I seem to
be able to talk about this now but actually that whole chapter about um this you know the trauma
that can be associated with birth and I think I actually think there's a whole thing in that
just on its own because I know so many
women that have had really quite significant health implications, and it's just a little
bit swept under the carpet and maybe not really spoken about that much. It sounds like your level
of care was very good, and it's brilliant that they took all that on board when you were having
your second baby. But I feel for some people that maybe their, any complications are a little bit more commonplace.
It's not really spoken about in the same way
and they're just sort of left like, well, your baby's here.
And you get, you know, especially women who had babies
in the last couple of years,
they just had their six weeks checked on the phone.
Like, are you okay?
And, you know, we don't really have that thing
of keeping an eye on new mums
in the way that maybe, you know, you would have, if if they'd had any and if they'd operationed all these things that
happened in any other way other than childbirth quite extraordinary yes it's it's awful really
because it's huge it's like even if you have a what you call a standard vaginal delivery like
there can be so many painful experiences or when no one tells you what's going on and
um and that's that's a huge trigger for you know stress and anxiety and lasting effects years later
um and just an awareness of what might happen I think like I like you I signed up to those
classes and um I did hypnobirthing of course because you know it was trendy I thought that
sounded great it sounded great and actually it did help me with the breathing when I was in the ambulance I was like and and when I
was having contractions I was in a taxi to the hospital and um I just apparently just closed my
eyes it was really painful but it didn't help with the pain which is what I said it would
but it meant I could just be calm but I don't know if that's very helpful but I think yeah
the expectation of like um the fact
that you know everyone does it so you'll be fine I mean lots of women died in childbirth before
medical intervention so it's really it's like a huge dangerous undertaking and recognizing that
before during and after is just it's so important for the well-being but I think um a lot of people
that have like post-traumatic stress disorder
they say they felt like diminished as like everything's about the child not about the mom
and it's it can be really challenging to then come to terms with that and feel like you want
to be looked after as well but you don't you know the baby comes first and I mean even like even
though I was well looked after I didn't go back to the same hospital um they almost admitted they
kind of admitted it was a mistake like essentially they just didn't sew up the right bit and so it
just like there's three layers when you have a c-section that they sew up and the first layer
had come apart or was it the second anyway one layer had come apart but they couldn't really
tell because once it's gone it's gone um but they did they did really want to find the right answers
but then every step of the process there was like sent to the wrong person for the feedback and then
the doctor wasn't there and it was just it's just such a mess and i think you know like it's obviously
the nhs is under huge um it's it's not an easy problem to solve because the infrastructure is
really it's a lot of strain yeah and Yeah, and the people there are so amazing
and they really care.
But then it's, I think,
the fact that women are just left to it.
But I think it comes down to the expectations as well.
It's like, remember those tapes I was listening to?
It's like, your body was made,
your body knows what to do,
your body was made for it.
My body didn't know what to do.
My body didn't know the baby was breached.
I had no idea what, like, water's breaking would look like it didn't look like in
the movies for one like it didn't it just like trickled out initially and you know over the next
few hours it just kept water kept coming out there wasn't like this big splash um and I I didn't want
to know too much about labor before going in it because of the hip birthing I was like I don't
want to hear any horror stories just want to keep it positive but actually I think it would have helped knowing a bit of the
the truth because then um when it happens you might feel more you know ready to deal with it
I don't know how you felt when you if you said your first was very premature yeah I missed out
on labor I never had labor with any of mine because i had the first two um two months early
and i was had something called pre-eclampsia both times and i for a little while was completely
fascinated by labor i used to watch all of one born every minute and just think could i have
done this could i have coped with that how would i have fared um and i think you know all the
pregnancy books were so caught up with you know the final chapter is
labor and birth you know that's like the big the big ending isn't it and you know I basically just
missed the last couple of chapters and I just felt really unfinished like I'd missed some really
significant punctuation and like you my body definitely didn't I thought I was I mean I was
quite glad when I had diagnosis because I thought I was, I mean, I was quite glad when I had diagnosis
because I thought I was maybe just really rubbish at being pregnant.
I looked bad. I felt bad.
It's hard.
Yeah, especially with the first.
I felt like I got a bit better at it and a bit more confident, funnily enough,
with pregnancy and with what I was capable of.
But that first one, I got really puffy.
I got lots of headaches.
Just felt a bit meh, which I now know part of it
was the preeclampsia but at the time I just thought oh I always wanted to be a mum and
and I'm actually really not very good at this this doesn't this isn't my thing so yeah I did
find that really um a bit of a disappointing start really in terms of that um and then you
know you worry a bit about well has the stress
of what I've been through I was dealing with quite a lot of stress with with work and a personal
situation while I was pregnant and I was like well this was that bad for my baby and then you know
how does that affect everything too so it's yeah it's probably part of the reason why again why I
love having these conversations because I think at the time I can make sense of a lot more a lot of it a lot more better now than I could could back then so you know sort of
reaching back to yourself really and giving yourself a bit of a hand up but your book
introduced me to a couple of new terms my favourite of which is matrescence so for people
who don't know can you tell us what that is? matrescence is the birth of a mother so we focus on um childbirth as you know new child coming into the world which is
obviously what actually happens but a mother is born as well right like on your first child's
birthday that was also the time then you became a mother for the first time obviously starts a lot
earlier in pregnancy um but it's the recognition
that you are suddenly you know this new person in one way as well for better for worse like you're
no longer the first time you have a child you're no longer the just the Melissa who who is an
independent person you are suddenly someone is dependent on you and recognizing that that is
a new beginning i think is really
important because it's you can then recognize the challenges that come with it um and it i think it
again ties into the things about mental um well-being and recognizing the huge change because
when you recognize it rather than oh well you know you know half some some you know half the
world's population might become mothers or are mothers or have the potential to be um so why is
why am I any different actually it's you know like you're suddenly birthing a new human in this
world so recognizing as extraordinary that your experiences are valid I think really helps you
come to terms with it um and I think that that definitely did for me as well yeah no I think I agree with you like I said your books articulated things I didn't really know
I was feeling but like put it all in one place like aha yeah of course it's a really big deal
in every every direction and the other term I'd never I'd heard a little bit about it but I didn't
know about it properly and I'm probably going to say it wrong but is it microchimerism yes microchimerism oh there we go i knew i'd say it wrong so say it again
microchimerism right microchimerism right i put the emphasis on one word and i said the wrong
vowel sound as well i love i love this it's difficult it's complicated so chimera is like
from greek mythology so something that's two two creatures um i love this finding because it like there's this research
that shows that anyone who has been pregnant whether or not the pregnancy comes to term
has bits of their child's dna in their blood body brain for life so they did these brain scans of
these women in their 80s and they could um recognize fetal male fetal dna in their brains
so they um because because the male carries the xy you can recognize that you can recognize the
woman's one and it's what's even cooler is it's bi-directional so you um would have your first
child's fetal dna floating all your body, even your breast milk,
it kind of goes to sky for you. Um, women who've had C-sections, they can find it in the scarring. So it might help with healing. And then your second child might have some of the DNA of your
first child because it kind of transcends. Um, and they don't really know why it happens,
but they think it could be all these linked to all these positive things like helping um they
they they said you know women who had it had less instances of alzheimer's it could help with
um prevent certain types of cancer but in other areas it caused it not caused but it was found
more prevalent in certain cancers so there could be like they scientists call it like a tug of war
in your body and you can kind of imagine why this is. Pregnancy is such a huge undertaking.
It's like your baby is taking all your resources on your body
and it can be massively damaging.
So there's these like positive bits of DNA
that are giving you a helping hand in one sense,
but they could be toxic on another sense.
But it's just, to me, it was like, oh, wow, okay.
So there's a part of my baby's DNA that lives in me forever.
And I found that really kind of quite poetic.
It is.
I mean, do they know how that might actually change you?
They don't.
They think there's loads of different hypotheses.
So it might influence your psychological well-being.
It might be beneficial for breast milk, for healing properties.
It might help against cancer cancer it might contribute to
some cancers different ones they found links with different ones so there's and it goes into all
different parts of your body um at different stages so it's such an emerging area of research
um and there's quite you know small group of scientists that look into it and it's really
hard to find out what actually happens because they couldn't you know they couldn't find out
that it was it transcended the blood brain barrier until they did these brain scans of women who
died so it's quite it's absolutely extraordinary as an idea i must have quite a fair bit
five different male dna's so i do so we're all like just this mix of beings which is i i just
think that that was like like the kind of creative in me is like wow that's so just
brings it all full circle.
And, you know, we're all a mix of everything,
influences from day to day, from nature and nurture.
Yeah.
And I just, I love it.
Yeah.
And like the sort of complexity of nature
and what it's capable of doing
and how it operates, like endlessly fascinating.
And I wonder, you were always scientific
from when you were small.
There's always been something that's interested you you I've always been fascinated by the way people
and humans behave and why we do what we do and kind of the reasons behind that so I studied
psychology um then I wanted you know I've always wanted to be a writer so I've had these kind of
two competing creative notions and I was like oh I could just go into journalism um but then I
started in news and news was really depressing.
Like it's really good at teaching you very quickly to broadcast or to write really important things and to get the facts right.
But, you know, you move on from story to story.
You're telling kind of really grim things happening.
And so I was like, I need to get into features.
And so I was just really quite lucky that at the time
there was a science reporter bursary at the
BBC so I was already in the BBC at this point and I because I'd done a psychology degree and I'd had
a few years experience I was eligible to apply and I just researched so much that when the time
the interview came around I really really knew my stuff even stuff like some kind of astrophysics
bits I'd been watching you watching lots of Brian Cox documentaries.
So it gave me a really well-rounded way of talking about lots of things that I didn't know much about before.
And that's what they wanted.
I thought I was faking it, like so many women do.
I was like, oh, but they don't know I'm just a fraud.
Actually, you're not expected to be an expert in physics and biology.
You're expected to be able to tell it in a compelling way
so that people understand.
And that is what I'd shown I could do and then it's just such an amazing experience where I was thrust into writing for the web reporting on tv reporting on radio and I was
like this is where I want to stay you know you get access to the top the world's top scientists
you can ask them any question you want you can just like you know simply you don't want to ask
too complex questions and then you you tell the stories in a way people understand and i just got addicted to it i think
but i've always gravitated to stuff about like human behavior and why we do what we do and how
we think why we think whether we do and how that shapes us i've always been um that's kind of my
passion points yeah that is like endlessly interesting basically um there's
there's so much to keep exploring and as you say like being able to access talking to all
these experts and just getting it all together and pulling together the story that is that is
really interesting um and how do you find it because um you've got quite a big family in the
Netherlands how do you find it being here are there I imagine your childhood would might have
been a bit
different to the one that your kids are having very different yeah I grew up on this tiny um
quite idyllic island called Tessel which is off the north coast of Holland um for the first six
years and then moved to Scotland um so I've been away from the Netherlands for a long long time so
I'm quite used to it and I you know English is now my better language and I'm you
know I write for a living um so it would be difficult to like I feel I feel like a child
when I'm in the Netherlands in some way in terms of my language um but I still it's so close and
so quick to get there both my brothers live there now all my cousins and it's just really nice to be
able to go there a couple of times a year see See, I still feel really at home there because I still feel that that's like a big part of my identity.
But, you know, now I have a British husband and British kids.
So I don't see myself going back there anytime soon.
But I like that it's close enough that I can still feel this great connection.
And I'm trying to teach my know, teach my kids Dutch,
that they have this ability to connect when they're older.
And they love it now.
You know, my eldest is always like, she tells people at school,
oh, do you know that I speak Dutch?
She'll say, and like, she's really proud of it.
And I've told her it's like, you know, her secret weapon.
So I think kind of being able to continue that,
even if I'm not there, is really important.
Yeah, that's lovely.
I always think raising your kids by the mobile is an incredible gift to give them.
Absolutely amazing.
I would love to have another language under my belt.
It's lovely.
So if you moved home when you were six,
do you think that's quite a significant thing to uproot and start again somewhere else?
I think when you do it that young, it's kind of an opportunity and an adventure.
So I remember
being really excited about it um because you're you're young enough that you haven't built up
like those really kind of strong connections like in a way a teenager might um and I just
remember being like thinking it was like really fun that I was going to this new place and learning
a new language um and it also like it meant that I've got this like really
idyllic view of what my childhood was like even though you know I mean childhood is magical in
many ways but I remember those six years really well because when there's a division you kind of
have better memories of it because you have a way to define this the before and after and then
because my parents stayed friends with the kids that I grew up with I still know them so one of my um good friends Frauke she um had a baby six days after me her mom is my godmother
we literally grew up together um and so we've like gotten even though we don't see each other
that often we've gotten closer because we you know we were going through motherhood at the exact same
time and we grew up together so it's like another kind of really poetic poetic connection and then there's you know another
group of three sisters who I grew up with and I know their kids now and we still keep in contact
we have like a whatsapp group where we chat so it's like a really special part of growing up and
I think because um I still felt connected to the Netherlands in some way I'm still friends with them which is like quite it's quite rare to be friends with people you've
literally known from birth yeah that's lovely no you're right I don't think there's many people
that do know people that long or if you do it's maybe someone you might like see once in a while
but you know to keep it so present is really it's really lovely um well going back to your book
what and your or your research what would be do you think a really
helpful thing that people could do or to help mothers i know you're not on the campaigning
side but it must have made you think what would be helpful for sure um well i think so i wrote a
chapter about motherhood guilt and i think that's one of the lasting things that i think we can have
lots of take-homes from so guilt is kind of steeped into the idea of what motherhood is we feel guilty when
we're working too much we don't see our kids enough we feel guilty when we put our careers
on hold because we're like oh should I be working should my kids see me working should I be
contributing to the family or like we feel guilty so every set everything we do if we give them
sweets we feel bad if they're
watching too much screen time and it's kind of like it's such a pervasive intrinsic feeling that
I think is also tied to motherhood in a really unhealthy way um and actually when I was researching
it and speaking to these academics about it I realized that I just it made me stop or understand
why it was happening in a way that made me be able
to let go and like one of the biggest things is child care as well people feel really bad about
sending their kids to child care because there's this like idea that a mother's care is best but
that's absolutely not true like motherhood parental burnout is more prevalent among stay-at-home
mothers than working mothers and the reason why is, is because we have these ideas
of what we should be doing all the time,
the kind of perfectionism.
And you can't do that for 12 hours a day
and have a life and do the admin and the housework
and depending on how much help you have, of course.
And so it's easier to like very quickly
be at the end of your stress levels
if you're home all day.
I always like liken it to a
curve when I'm when I see my kids for an hour in the morning my love level is like really high
um at the end of the day after spending 12 hours with them obviously the love's still there but my
ability to like put up with the whining and the patience is really really low and so the graph of
like your happiness and stress levels goes like declines throughout the
day when you're with kids all day um if your kids are like mine anyway whereas when I'm at work my
mood kind of stays similar I don't have the same highs I'm not like I love you guys in the same way
you know to my colleagues that'd be a bit weird um but it you don't have those ups and downs of
emotions because there's not somebody constantly tugging at you and calling your name and asking you like you know like it's it's as you know it's like literally every second
you're being asked to do something or being um requested or being moaned at and the snacks and
it's it can feel quite relentless and then that's why I don't feel guilty about selling the child
care because I know they're actually having a better experience there than the me that they'd get because it's just impossible to be like perfect all day long.
So I think that's massively helped. And I think letting go of some of that guilt, obviously, the childcare has to be high quality and we're lucky that in the UK a lot of child child care is really good it's well regulated the same is not true for the US sadly but it's and it helps me be a better mother as
well because I know that I'm better for working and putting myself first and then obviously you
know lots of people have to work so it's not a choice people have as well so then the guilt
feels even more difficult so I think that's my main my main take-home is it's okay to put yourself first and it's okay to feel guilty just understand that
it's like ingrained into motherhood rather than something that any that you're doing wrong yeah I
think that's so true that's such a massive thing that mum guilt and as you say I mean I suppose
there must have been times when you're writing a book and thinking oh I feel a bit bad now I've
got to go and they're, what am I doing?
I'm literally writing about my other guilt.
Yeah.
Well, I did feel bad because, like, you know,
I was like, I'm not taking him to any of these baby classes.
But then I also realized that those classes are usually for the parents,
not the kids, because a three-month-old doesn't need stimulation.
Like, that's another thing I think that does have important take-homes.
Like, we're obsessed with, like, enrichment for our children and giving them stimulating activities like giving them the black and white toys and you know making sure that
they're learning at every step of the way that's just giving us more stress and our kids don't
need it and it's setting them up for this like hyper overachievement um society where we put
emphasis on all the wrong skills like like a heightened focus on academia actually is a huge reason for anxiety in children and it's
not healthy it's not the best way to learn and so um like I I don't and it's quite a Dutch thing as
well like I don't sit down and play with my kids that often because I want them to be able to be
independent and learn to play themselves like obviously I get involved if they ask or if they
need help but I'd rather and also I'm really busy I'm like you know cooking for them or doing something so I don't have the time
but actually constantly micromanaging their free time and their activities is doing them a disservice
yeah it's really good for them to be bored and to like come up with their own solutions
so that's another like huge take home that helped me feel less guilty and gave me more time to then
focus on like the book and
um yeah the the things that I think are actually important for kids that's so true everything you
just said I think some of that come by having lots of kids I've sort of by default I cannot be all
things or people like you just literally have to say that I'm doing this you have to go and sort
something and um I think as well sometimes because people are tending to have their children
later than they used to they're in a different bracket of their lives where sometimes they put
all these investments into their kids expecting certain outcomes to happen as a result of it so
i think sometimes that kind of giving them as you say lots of enrichment things and filling out
their world.
There's an expectation there, isn't there, that you're going to be great at tennis
and you're going to be really good at chess
and you're going to have all these extra things you can do
that are really across the board.
But actually, when you listen to your kids and they say,
I'm not really enjoying that, but I really like this,
and just focus on the bits that come from them,
then I think, generally speaking, there's less pressure on you,
but also you'll probably flourish easier
because you're not pushing that boulder all the time.
But then this is a conversation
I have lots of times with Richard
so they're kind of,
I'm quite chilled about all that
but then sometimes I do feel like
should I be doing more?
But think about where the pressure's coming from.
Like why are you sending,
like whose decision was it to send to gymnastics?
Was it because the mom down the road
did and you're like oh I should be doing that because there's a long waiting list or they should
be learning swimming an hour they need to get better at maths like it's usually outside pressures
that are like that think that you're already behind in some invisible race um and then yeah
I think and I fall into the same traps and we can't help it we're a product of our society
um but just knowing that it's like okay well maybe that's not best for
my kid that's you know sending them to ballet at three isn't it's great for letting off some steam
but if you're then having to like leave work early and rush about in rush hour and ship them from
activity to the next like that's not doing yourself any favors and yeah they might enjoy it but equally
they'll love running around outside as well. Yeah, definitely.
And finally, how has everything you've been doing changed?
Has it affected your relationship with your mum,
given that her diaries were so much a part of it?
I would say I definitely am much more aware of how challenging it would have been for her
because she had three kids
and my brother and I were like 14 months no 16 months apart and apparently like she couldn't leave us alone
together he would push me off like tables he was like really jealous when I was born it was like
testing boundaries it wasn't you know maliciously intended and so I think I appreciate how stressful
that was and the level that I used to kind of think it was funny hearing these stories now I'm
like okay wow and then also she had a really um I think my brother came out blue and
couldn't breathe and I think he was was he breached anyway she had a really traumatic birth and again
it was just it seemed like a really distant story and now I'm like wow okay that was a really
important moment for you um I've definitely I definitely listened to a lot of her advice on certain things, but she's also of,
I don't know if it's a generational thing, but like things like, oh, you were all potty trained
18 months and you shouldn't like the little tiny pieces of well-meant advice. I am quite good at
just taking and leaving and being like, well, you did that. That's fine. But I'm not going to do it
that way. She also might be misremembering a lot. that. I think so, yeah, she said I never had tantrums.
Although apparently I did sleep through from 12 weeks,
so I have no idea how that happened.
But there's actual published evidence to show that Dutch kids sleep better
than other kids around the world.
Really?
And it's to do with kind of like a much more relaxing environment
that's built on like routine, not routine as in militant,
like I'm going to make you do things at the right time time but just it's built into kind of society that certain things
happen at certain times and it gives this really natural natural structure so maybe that that part
you know but then you know i didn't really learn from that because my kids didn't sleep
no i think you get what you're given with that actually i mean my kids will get different sleep
personalities on yeah if you were to stand
on a table next to your brother now would he still try and push you off he would not no exactly we
we're really close he's got two young kids as well and we we talk about parenting a lot now
oh that's nice it's funny isn't it how it all turns yeah it's full circle exactly and I was
you know we were at loggerheads all the time but it was really nice having like a close companion
growing up as well yeah best of times worst of times it's always the way with all the busy household stuff
thank you so much melissa this is so much and i'll definitely be letting everybody know about
your book and all your documentary stuff because it's completely fascinating yeah
i think everybody's gonna love it well thanks for having me it's been great ah so brilliant wasn't that i mean i just thought there were so many things
that were interesting about what melissa said and i realized i didn't warn you about the shower
description of what happened to her but i did put it in the blurb so hopefully you saw that
already and you're not cross with me that you listened to that without any warning
but I do think
I love Melissa's perspective on things
and I find it an endlessly fascinating topic anyway
as you know
about all the changes in how it can affect people
so I love talking to her
and I could have talked to her for a lot longer
and there's an extra bit of
that's quite a nice serendipity.
After Melissa and I stopped our chat, she went off to work,
where she works alongside one of my oldest friends.
It's a girl called Becca Lawrence, who also works at BBC.
And yeah, the BBC building's huge, so when I meet people who work at the BBC building,
in Wood Lane, I've stopped saying, oh, do you know my friend Becca?
Because there's like 600 people who work there and actually she did know her and does
know her and they work alongside each other so that was nice for me I've known Becca since I was 11
so that's really cute uh yeah I I think Melissa is definitely somebody to watch in terms of
really interesting scientific um documentary making and book writing.
I think there's a lot of scope with what she's uncovering,
and it's really interesting seeing her join up all the dots of all the studies.
And, yeah, I can't wait to see what she does next.
And in the meantime, I want to thank as well Claire Jones and Richard Jones,
so husband Richard and producer Claire,
because due to the boating trip, I was really last minute about getting over notes for the podcast.
So thank you to both of them for doing a very quick turnaround job on a Friday, which is also a bank holiday.
So much appreciated to them. I tried to be a bit organized, but recently I've been really relaxed about it.
And maybe they're not feeling quite as relaxed. I don't know.
Thank you to them both.
But mainly, of course, thank you to you for lending me your ears.
And please do continue to leave comments
because I read everything that you put after the podcast.
And if you've ever got anyone you'd like me to speak to
or someone you think I should know about,
then please, please, please do send me their way
because, as I've said before,
a lot of the people I end up speaking to
are people that have been recommended to me and it's good for me to to think outside of my my own perspective
on life so I've loved meeting some really interesting people that have been suggested
to me it's been great and what else happens today well I've still got to go and pack for the festival
and uh the sun is shining right now so I hope it holds I've done two festivals already
first one rained, second one sun
and it will come as no surprise to you
it's much nicer playing to people in sunglasses
than kugels
anyway
I hope you've had a nice bank holiday week
weekend
if that was happening to you in the UK
and if it wasn't then I just hope you had a nice weekend
and I will see you had a nice weekend.
And I will see you same time next week with more lovely chit-chats.
But in the meantime, take care of yourselves.
Lots of love. See you soon. Thank you.