EPISODES
Gracefully Unraveled is a podcast for thoughtful Christian and spiritually curious moms who feel quietly lost in motherhood and wonder, “Who am I now?”. Here you’ll find honest, faith‑friendly conversations about the inner life of motherhood—identity, emotions, and the pressure to be a “good mom”—not more parenting hacks or hustle culture.
Each episode captures a lived moment from real mom life and turns it into a gentle, research‑backed reflection, bridging psychology and neuroscience with faith so you can actually see what’s happening inside you, not just push through it. We talk about losing yourself in motherhood, mom mental load and burnout, guilt, shame, anger, loneliness, spiritual dryness, and the default‑parent weight so many women carry.
If you’ve ever looked “fine” on the outside but felt disoriented on the inside, these conversations will give you language for your experience, permission to feel what you feel, and a kinder way to untangle ego from identity—without shame, force, or spiritual performance.
Listen and Follow @GracefullyUnraveledPodcast on the go: Apple, Amazon, Spotify, iHeart —or begin right here with episodes on identity loss, mental load, and faith in the messy middle of modern motherhood.
Episode 11: Authoritative Stewardship: Letting Go of Control Without Letting Go of Your Kids
Control feels like protection, but leaves you depleted—true stewardship means releasing ego's grip on perfect motherhood. Faith calls you to authoritative presence, not force.
Episode 09: When Mom Anger Hurts You: Ego, Triggers and the Mother–Child Relationship
Mom anger erupts unexpectedly, wounding kids and your heart—fueled by unprocessed reactivity. It's not you failing; it's ego overload.
Episode 08: What an Accidental Gaming Fast Taught Me About Escape, Numbing, and Motherhood
Kids ditched games unplanned—you felt "good mom" pride, then chaos exposed stressed presence. Screens aren't the villain; depletion is.
Episode 07: When Christmas Feels Heavy for Moms (Even If You Love the Magic)
Christmas expectations crush: perfect traditions amid mom guilt, exhaustion, spiritual dryness. What if heaviness signals deeper rest needs?