Postpartum Production

Kaitlin Solimine

TL;DR (i.e., give me the elevator pitch!) description: Being a producer of creative projects and a mother don’t need to be mutually exclusive pursuits—how can we as parents in early postpartum (and well beyond!) reframe and reclaim the work we do as creatives and caregivers, to be seen as productive, valued, and meaningful? Join novelist and host Kaitlin Solimine on this journey to reframing postpartum and caregiving as worthy of intellectual, philosophical, and socially-impactful pursuit. Long description: It’s hard to find the balance between being a mother and pursuing creative projects – especially during the 4th trimester. When Kaitlin Solimine, a published, award-winning author and mother of three young children, was lying in bed recovering from her third childbirth, she had an epiphany: this time that most have described as “lost” time, was rather extremely creatively informative for her (she wrote new sections of her novel and even launched this podcast from that bed!). Deep in the trenches of early postpartum herself, join Kaitlin and her creator-activist-mother guests, as they navigate the liminal space between mothering and creating. If you are a new parent in postpartum, had a creative pursuit before you became a mother, or simply seek inspiration from other artists who are creating during a transitional time, this is the podcast for you. These episodes will provide you with practical and philosophical suggestions on how to reframe your work in a space where parenting is not ordinarily considered meaningful productivity, generate new ideas on how to incorporate creativity into motherhood (and how parenting moments may inspire creative pursuits as well!), and explore other artists’ processes around creating during the transition to parenting young children. Although this podcast is not meant to be prescriptive, hearing these stories and learning about the tools other creatives use will hopefully inspire you to consider ways to integrate your artist and caregiver identities in meaningful, impactful ways. Why the term “production”? Google the term “postpartum” and you’ll be led to a plethora of websites about postpartum depression and anxiety. While these are important topics and experiences worthy of additional research and support, the postpartum period, when treated with support and curiosity, can be reframed as one of creative possibility and identity transformation. Rather than relinquishing new mothers to corners where they need to choose between creative work and caregiving, or where they feel completely lost when it comes to their creative identity, this podcast provides a third path for creative mothers who are seeking meaning and validation of the caregiving work they do on a daily basis. What is “productive” time when you’re a mother and a creative? How can public-facing creative projects, and the often hidden and devalued time of raising humans, be seen as “productive” pursuits within the current capitalist structure of American and Western society? Kaitlin herself has discovered that the postpartum period after birth offers an opportunity to pause and find new significance to exploring artistry while caregiving as an integral part of life. Notably, Kaitlin recorded the early episodes of her first season while in postpartum with her third child. Biweekly, Kaitlin talks with authors, poets, writers, painters, philosophers, and parenting experts about mothering, changing perceptions of motherhood/parenting, art, creativity, activism, family leave, childbirth, finding inspiration, changing identities, expansive change, caregiving roles, and more. read less
ArtsArts

Episodes

The Explosive Female Body: Artist Alexandra Carter’s Muse in Birth and Beyond
May 8 2024
The Explosive Female Body: Artist Alexandra Carter’s Muse in Birth and Beyond
“The bulk of my work comes out of this place of the explosive female body and really meditating on that and looking at that. The body has always been my deepest interest, and painting the figure, and that has been the case for many, many years.  And so when I started to think about family building and my reproductive health and my fertility, just even the inkling of those thoughts, the work started to become infused with these images of motherhood of the reproductive female body. Because it represents so much: there's so much richness there for me in terms of  how we talk about the female body, in terms of its messiness and its inability to be contained.” - Alexandra CarterWelcome back to Postpartum Production! We are thrilled to begin Season 3 of the podcast, and to be in community with you once again. Season 3 further examines the intersection of Birth and Creativity, and what better person to start the season than Alexandra Carter, an artist focused on fertility, maternity, and the monstrous feminine, and who, when we held this conversation, was just weeks from giving birth to her second child.Alexandra’s recent solo exhibitions include “Monstrous Mothers” at the Middle Room in Los Angeles, “Bumps and Grinds” at Rogers Gallery in Las Vegas, “A Sense of Heat in Her Brain” at Luna Aeneas Gallery in Los Angeles, “Berries for BowBow” at Radiant Space in Los Angeles and “Tether,” which was a duo show at Oolong Gallery in Solana Beach, California.In our first episode, Alexandra and Kaitlin discuss:Alexandra’s journey as an artist and how that has tandemed with her motherhood journeyHow she is preparing for her second birth, both as a human and as an artist, and how it compares to that of her highly-medicalized first pregnancyThe meaning of the “explosive female body,” a subject much of Alexandra’s work focuses onMore about Alexandra:Website: https://www.alexandra-carter.com/Instagram @alexandracarterstudio Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com  Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
Marginalia #2: How Not To Scratch the Soil
Feb 28 2024
Marginalia #2: How Not To Scratch the Soil
Hello, dear listener, and welcome back to Postpartum Production! We are thrilled to begin Season 3 of the podcast, and to be in community with you once again. Before we kick off Season 3, Kaitlin checks in to provide an update on the podcast, a peek into what we’ll be exploring together this season (more on that in a moment!), and some heartfelt reflections on the never-ending challenges of balancing creative work, caregiving, and commerce. How can we create art while paying the bills? How do we play the long game of sustainability, while also living in the present? How does one do it “all” and, as importantly, when? These are questions caregivers, creatives, and those of us just trying to make it work in a capitalist society wrestle with daily. While answers may not be simple, we at Postpartum Production hope to provide you with the tools, inspiration, and support you need as we continue this ongoing pursuit of meaning, impact, and value together as a community. So, what’s in store for Season 3? Get ready for fascinating, powerful conversations as we speak with artists across genres and mediums- painters, poets, comics, and creatives of all kinds- about the intersection of Birth and Creativity. We delve into the profound connection between the body, the birthing process and the artistic journey, exploring how the transformative experiences of birth inspire and shape creative expression. We can't wait to share these conversations with you.Lastly, we would love to hear from you: the questions you’re struggling to answer, the tough topics you feel deserve discussion and debate, or just simply what you are experiencing in this moment. Reach out to us any time via our Website, Instagram, or Substack. We appreciate your support and look forward to continuing our journey together this season.Referenced in today’s episode:An interview with Rick Rubin: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/jan/10/the-creative-act-a-way-of-being-by-rick-rubin-review-thoughts-of-the-bearded-beat-masterNew Yorker Article on mentorship and Early/Late blooming artists: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2008/10/20/late-bloomers-malcolm-gladwellFor regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcast Subscribe to our newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2E14 - The Poetics of Parenting: Poet and Educator Ben Berman's Take on Writing While Parenting
Oct 4 2023
S2E14 - The Poetics of Parenting: Poet and Educator Ben Berman's Take on Writing While Parenting
We are capping off our season of conversations with Ben Berman, the author of three books of poems and the new collection of humorous and literary essays, Writing While Parenting. Ben ​has ​won ​the ​Peace ​Corps ​Award ​for ​the ​Best ​Book ​of ​Poetry, ​has ​twice ​been ​shortlisted ​for ​the ​Massachusetts ​Book ​Awards, ​and ​has ​received ​awards ​from ​the ​Massachusetts ​Cultural ​Council, ​New ​England ​Poetry ​Club, ​and ​Somerville ​Arts ​Council. ​He's ​been ​teaching ​for ​25 ​years ​and ​currently ​teaches ​creative ​writing ​classes ​at ​Brookline ​High ​School. ​He ​lives ​in ​the ​Boston ​area ​with ​his ​wife ​and ​two ​daughters.Kaitlin’s conversation with Ben explores the intersection of creativity and parenting through the lens of his latest book, and how they can coexist.Ben and Kaitlin talk about:Why ​Ben ​felt compelled to write ​a ​book ​in ​and ​around ​the ​subject ​matter ​of ​writing ​while ​parenting.The idea that disorder can be a catalyst for creativity and how being a parent as well as working with kids has shifted Ben’s perspective on creativity.The challenge of balancing creative engagement with parenting responsibilities – how we can make our children a part of our creative journey instead of seeing them as obstacles.The delicate balance between being fully present in the moment as a parent and detaching to think about it from a creative perspective and how Ben merges the two aspects through his writing.The ​relationship ​between ​form ​and ​content, and how ​the ​structures ​that ​we ​create ​allow ​for ​freedom ​or ​inhibit ​it.More about Ben:Website: www.ben-berman.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ben.berman.7927/Pre-order Writing While Parenting here:https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9781773491110Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2E13: Mom Rage is a Weathervane—Minna Dubin on Maternal Anger and Structural Inequalities in American Society
Sep 20 2023
S2E13: Mom Rage is a Weathervane—Minna Dubin on Maternal Anger and Structural Inequalities in American Society
"I think about rage as containing information. I talk about anger as a weathervane pointing you towards the places that need attention and healing. So I think rage can be useful in that way of teaching you what needs to change in your life. And it might be that you need more support or you need to not be in charge of bedtime every night or whatever.Rage is also useful in giving you the energy to create change larger than just your little home." ~ Minna DubinWe are really excited to share with you this illuminating and enlightening conversation with Minna Dubin. Kaitlin and Minna had the great privilege to meet by way of the Artist Residency in Motherhood group, which she's mentioned on the podcast in the past.Minna is the author of the book, Mom Rage: The Everyday Crisis of Modern Motherhood, which is out from Seal Press the very week that this episode is released this September, 2023.Her writing has been featured in the New York Times, Salon, Parents, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Romper, The Forward, Hobart, MUTHA Magazine, and Literary Mama. As a leading feminist voice on mom rage, Minna has appeared on MSNBC, Good Morning America, The Tamron Hall Show, NBC10 Boston, and NPR.“Modern motherhood is a setup for anger.” ~ Minna DubinShe lives in Berkeley, California with her husband, her two children, and no pets, she clarifies because, as she says, enough is enough.Minna and Kaitlin talk about:How Minna came to writing, particularly how she came to the writing structure she uses in writing Mom Rage.The different facets of mom rage, and how rage can look different for each individual.The individual and the institution and how the interplay of both come to highlight where rage and power structures intersect.How Minna finds community now that she has a clear understanding of those power structures and how they impact her experience of motherhoodHow family structures in other cultures and parts of the world differ, and how the individual experiences of motherhood are impacted when you have these structures.Parenting neurodivergent children and how the lack of societal support structures for them interplays with mom rage.More about Minna:Website: www.minnadubin.comTwitter: www.twitter.com/minnadubinInstagram: www.instagram.com/minnadubinPre-order your copy of Mom Rage here: https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9781541601307Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack:
S2E12 - The Body as Genre: Amanda Montei's Touched Out Touches on Motherhood, Misogyny, Consent, Control, and More
Sep 6 2023
S2E12 - The Body as Genre: Amanda Montei's Touched Out Touches on Motherhood, Misogyny, Consent, Control, and More
“The way that we think about art, about care work or housework or maintenance labor is interconnected in the sense that these are spheres of society that are often deemed unproductive. Obviously, first and foremost, we need to resist that notion because it's the most important work that we do. I do think of writing as a kind of care work in that sense. It's like a tending. It's tending to our narratives and our cultural understandings of things. I think it's very easy, especially in the motherhood/parenting sphere, to get wrapped up in our demands and the policies that we need –and absolutely, we need all of that. But there's a reason that that's not happening. I think it's because we need a bigger shift of understanding. We need new language for articulating the way in which women's bodies are exploited and used from a young age through and beyond parenthood.” - Amanda MonteiWe’re so grateful to share this conversation with Amanda Montei whose book Touched Out: Motherhood, Misogyny, Consent, and Control lands on bookshelves on September 12th, 2023. Kaitlin and Amanda have had the pleasure of being connected through Amanda’s writing workshops and also through the Artist Residency in Motherhood community where they've staged their own collective residencies alongside other mother-writer-artists in the Bay Area.Amanda is also the author of Two Memoirs, published by Jaded Ibis Press, and a collection of prose, The Failure Age, as well as co-author of Dinner Poems. Her writing and criticism explore literary and cultural representations of gender, work, care, sexuality, feminism, creativity, and the body. If you're eager to connect with her, she also teaches creative writing at organizations such as Catapult, Corporeal Writing, Hugo House, Writing Workshops, and Write or Die.Amanda and Kaitlin talk about:Amanda’s trajectory as a writer, where it intersects with her postpartum experience, and how this postpartum experience impacted her creative work, including her latest book.Exploring the question of the representation of home and our bodies, particularly women's bodies in connection to the home.How writing, art, and care work can be a social justice practice, and how narrative can disrupt the false narratives that we unconsciously carry around.How Amanda is able to practice and sustain creativity as a practice of connection.More about Amanda:Website: https://www.amandamontei.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/amanda.montei/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amontei/Pre-order Amanda’s book Touched Out: Motherhood, Misogyny, Consent, and Control: https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9780807013274Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to
S2E11 - The Transformative Power of Poetry and Parenting: How Eugenia Leigh's Creative Process Rewrites the Page Itself
Aug 9 2023
S2E11 - The Transformative Power of Poetry and Parenting: How Eugenia Leigh's Creative Process Rewrites the Page Itself
“It's like all of the pressures of everything happening build up inside you, and if you don't write it down or put it somewhere— I just couldn't even handle it. I had no other coping mechanisms left. I came to poetry when I was younger as a coping mechanism, and I think I still do sometimes.Some poets like to pretend that it's a totally intellectual practice and that there's no therapeutic benefit for them. But for me, it did start out as a therapeutic practice, and I think I still turn to it in that way. In some ways, the pandemic helped me access that primal relationship I have with poetry where I went back to the original reason I go to poems.It's because I needed a place where I could tell the truth. I needed a place where I could process the most impossible things.”~ Eugenia LeighIn this episode, Kaitlin speaks with Eugenia Leigh. Eugenia is a Korean-American poet and the author of two poetry collections, Bianca from Four-Way Books released this year in March, and Blood, Sparrows, and Sparrows from Four-Way Books in 2014.Eugenia’s poetry received Poetry Magazine's Bess Hokin Prize and has appeared in numerous publications including The Atlantic, The Nation, Poetry, Ploughshares, and the Best of the Net anthology.Eugenia and Kaitlin talked about:Eugenia’s latest book, Bianca, and the whirlwind of launching and promoting it while balancing her roles as a mother and a wife.How she carves out spaces to write and nourish herself alongside all the other roles she juggles.Eugenia’s poetry writing processHow she came to find writing as a child…plus some beautiful excerpts read by Eugenia herself.More about Eugenia Leigh:Website: https://www.eugenialeigh.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eugenialeigh/Twitter: https://twitter.com/eugenialeighLinktr.ee: https://linktr.ee/eugenialeighPlease subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2E10 - Centering the Bodily Experience in Creative Practice: A Conversation with Writer and Teacher Molly Caro May
Jul 26 2023
S2E10 - Centering the Bodily Experience in Creative Practice: A Conversation with Writer and Teacher Molly Caro May
“I remember saying to my husband, I wish there was some sort of machine where I could attach a keyboard to my limbs and learn to type differently through my body so that the writing was a physical dance; instead of just my fingers dancing, it was my whole body dancing. I want to feel, not just sensations in my body, but feel my body in motion as I am writing. And so a lot of what I do is recording myself as I walk – writing with my voice – and feeling what it feels like to have it come from my pelvis and up my voice, not necessarily through my hand initially.” ~ Molly Caro MayWe’re excited to share this conversation with Molly Caro May. Molly is an author, a teacher, and a holder of space. For over 13 years, she's facilitated personal story workshops for more than hundreds of people across the globe. She is trained in somatic experience and focuses on where language, voice, and the animal body meet.Kaitlin first came to Molly's work ‘Body Full of Stars’ when she was postpartum with her second child. She then decided to read the book aloud to her then-six-year-old eldest daughter for bedtime, which, while unconventional, turned out to be a beautiful experience as you will discover in this episode.Molly and Kaitlin talk about:Finding equilibrium in times of transition.The somatic work in Molly’s creative spaces and what piqued her interest in fostering “...open, unscheduled, unplanned spaces for the creative birthing of anything that our world needs.”The journey of writing Body Full of Stars, including the experiences that influenced the book’s content, and how Molly’s relationship with the stories within it has evolved with her postpartum experience over the past decade.The ways in which her writing process has evolved over time, especially how the care work she does for her own body and for her loved ones have influenced this shift.How being mindful of our body movement can positively impact our writing process.More about Molly Caro May:Website: mollycaromay.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mollycaromay/Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2E9 - Alloparenting in the Modern Era: Re-envisioning Parenting and Human  Community with Dr Darcia Narvaez
Jul 12 2023
S2E9 - Alloparenting in the Modern Era: Re-envisioning Parenting and Human Community with Dr Darcia Narvaez
**This episode is brought to you in partnership with the With Her and Mind Awareness Campaign of Mindful Philanthropy. Learn how you can act ‘with her in mind’ by visiting www.withherinmind.org.**_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_"Throughout life, we need people who are responsive to us, who listen, who think we matter enough to be listened to and who support us. And we also need alloparents. So all these components are not just for mom to do, or mom and dad. It's a community support system.The community helps with the child raising, whether it's at birth (midwives and doulas), you have people who are there to welcome the baby, who are going to hold the baby, who are going to play with the baby and the children throughout their lives. So it's not just a family affair, it's a community affair." ~ Dr Darcia NarvaezIn this episode, Kaitlin is joined by Dr Darcia Narvaez, professor emerita of psychology and also the host of the EvolvedNest.org and president of kindredworld.org. She's a co-author of the forthcoming book, The Evolved Nest: Nature's Way of Raising Children and Creating Connected Communities, and the film Breaking the Cycle.Dr Darcia and Kaitlin talk about:The wonderful spectrum of research and writing Darcia has done throughout her career, why she does it, and how she came to work on the Evolved Nest and all of the other community-building projects associated with it.The evolved nest's nine (9) practises and how they relate to neuroscience, developmental clinical science, anthropology, and evolution.How to reconnect with and reclaim the practices and structures that our society has lost in order to return to - or at least get closer to - that evolved nest state.Darcia's forthcoming book, The Evolved Nest: Nature's Way of Raising Children and Creating Connected Communities, and why she and her co-author structured it in such a way as to speak to our animal nature.How epigenetics and the influence of our collective cultural traumas overlap, as well as how Dr Darcia's research seeks to address these issues.More about Dr Darcia:Website: darcianarvaez.comThe Evolved Nest website: evolvednest.org Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theevolvednest/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EvolvedNest/Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYFv1BZL-mjBJKz5L485EQgPlease subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website:
S2E8 - Where Working Motherhood and Maternal Activism Intersect: A Conversation with Raena Boston
Jun 28 2023
S2E8 - Where Working Motherhood and Maternal Activism Intersect: A Conversation with Raena Boston
This episode is sponsored by Needed, a leading women's health supplement brand. (You can save 20% off your first order of any vitamins or supplements at thisisneeded.com with code POSTPARTUMPRODUCTION.)ANDBetter Help, the world's largest therapy service 100% online. (Go to https://betterhelp.com/postpartumproduction for 10% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp and get matched with a therapist who will listen and help #sponsored)_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_“I think the biggest part of doing this work is realizing the blueprint in many ways is already there. We just need to organize people to know what to do. I think a lot of the Chamber of Mothers' mission is you don't have to go it alone. We could all join together and we don't have to know every single thing. We don't have to be perfect at it, but we could know enough to be dangerous.” ~ Raena BostonIn this episode, Kaitlin speaks with Raena Boston. An HR professional for a professional services firm by day, Raena has been described in her after-five role as a table-shaking, sailor-talkin’ truth-teller at her expanding corner of the internet called The Working Momtras. The Working Momtras is a community where she discusses all things motherhood, marriage, careers, and parenting.It was through that online community that Kaitlin found Raena’s inspiring activist content. In this conversation, they dig in about how we can be the parents to our children we wish we could be, while also maintaining creative careers and pushing forward with important activist agendas.Raena and Kaitlin talk about:How Raena came to consider herself a content creator and writer as a mother, and what these roles mean to her.Versions of success vis-à-vis motherhood and how her definition of success has changed.The Inspiration behind her writing work with The Working Momtras and her advocacy work with the Chamber of Mothers.What each one of us can do to support and advance advocacy work for better maternal care, paid leave, affordable childcare, and family support policiesMore about Raena BostonWebsite: www.theworkingmomtras.comInstagram: www.instagram.com/theworkingmomtrasLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/raena-boston-001/Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack:
S2E7 - Honoring the Body and Practice of Pregnancy: Birth and Postpartum with Chiropractor and Childbirth Educator Dr Elliot Berlin
Jun 14 2023
S2E7 - Honoring the Body and Practice of Pregnancy: Birth and Postpartum with Chiropractor and Childbirth Educator Dr Elliot Berlin
This episode is sponsored by Needed, a leading women's health supplement brand. (You can save 20% off your first order of any vitamins or supplements at thisisneeded.com with code POSTPARTUMPRODUCTION.)ANDBetter Help, the world's largest therapy service 100% online. (Go to https://betterhelp.com/postpartumproduction for 10% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp and get matched with a therapist who will listen and help #sponsored)_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_We’re excited to share with you a conversation with Dr Elliot Berlin. Elliot is an award-winning, prenatal chiropractor, childbirth educator, labor support bodyworker, and co-founder of Berlin Wellness Group in Los Angeles, California.His separate schooling in massage therapy bodywork and chiropractic formed the backbone of his innovative pre and postnatal wellness care techniques. Dr Berlin's Informed Pregnancy project aims to utilize multiple forms of media, including podcasts, YouTube series, documentaries, and online workshops to compile and deliver unbiased information about pregnancy and childbirth.Dr Berlin lives in Los Angeles with his wife, perinatal psychologist Dr Alyssa Berlin, and their four fantastic kids. Kaitlin and Dr Berlin first connected about six years ago after the birth of her first child when she was helping produce a childbirth documentary called These are my Hours.Dr Berlin and Kaitlin talk about:What sparked Dr Berlin’s interest in healthcare, and how he came to work so deeply in the birth worldHow his own birth as a breech baby, and his children’s births played a role in this journeyDr Berlin’s work with creative postpartum mothers and his observations on how these mothers’ relationship to their creative pursuits tends to shift after they become parents.How he balances the juggle between immersing himself in serving his clients and being present with his family.The Informed Pregnancy plus streaming service, Dr Berlin’s new project aimed at making birthing information media easily accessible and affordable.More about Dr Elliot Berlin:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/doctorberlin/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/doctorberlin Everything:
S2EP6 - Activism At Home: How Kimberly Seals Allers is Making Equitable Maternal Care Accessible to All
May 31 2023
S2EP6 - Activism At Home: How Kimberly Seals Allers is Making Equitable Maternal Care Accessible to All
“Having something that you keep for yourself can actually be the most revolutionary and important thing that you could do in your postpartum journey.” ~ Kimberly Seals AllersWe are thrilled to share with you this conversation with Kimberly Seals Allers, an award-winning journalist, five-time author, and founder of Irth. A leading voice on the racial and sociocultural complexities of birth, breastfeeding, and motherhood, Kimberly created the Irth app for brown and black parents to address bias and racism in maternity and infant care.Additionally, Kimberly is the host and creator of Birthright, a podcast that promotes positive black birth stories as a tool for birth justice and reverses the narrative of negative statistics that is often reported in mainstream media about black maternal health.During their conversation, Kimberly and Kaitlin discussed the events that sparked Kimberly's passion for maternal and infant health advocacy.Kimberly and Kaitlin talked about:The Irth App, how Kimberly came to create it and what it's doing.How they deal with resistance from health providers and what adjustments they make to their approach in the face of these challenges.The events that sparked Kimberly's passion for maternal and infant health advocacy.Her thoughts and experiences regarding the question “What would a valued motherhood experience look like today?”What it looks like to really show up in activism for all of these issues that devalue motherhood, including the absence of basic systems such as affordable childcare, paid leave, co-located childcare, etc.Kimberly’s take on productivity and how we can reframe it in the work that we do in balancing parenting/caregiving and creative practice, which is equally as undervalued as motherhood.More about Kimberly Seals AllersWebsite: https://kimberlysealsallers.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamksealsallers/Irth App: https://irthapp.com/Birthright Podcast: http://www.birthrightpodcast.com/Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2EP5 - Where Evolutionary Parenting Meets Modern Practice: A Conversation On Postpartum, Parenting Culture, And Creative Pursuits With Tracy Cassels
May 17 2023
S2EP5 - Where Evolutionary Parenting Meets Modern Practice: A Conversation On Postpartum, Parenting Culture, And Creative Pursuits With Tracy Cassels
“It's okay to struggle in a society that doesn't support you. It's okay to be like, this doesn't work and I have to get some stuff done. The question is then, how do you approach those changes that you have to make with your family in mind [...] while considering everyone? So it's also looking at your child and saying, Yep, this may not be ideal, it may not be what I want it to be, but how do I do it knowing what's most important to my child?”~ Tracy Cassels, PhDIn this episode, Kaitlin has a conversation with Tracy Cassels, PhD. Tracy is the director of Evolutionary Parenting, an online resource and community she founded in 2011 after the birth of her daughter, Maddie.Tracy is married to Brian, a mother to two young kids, and a stepmother to one older child. She lives in a small town in Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada. Kaitlin came to know her work when seeking more evidence-based resources in early parenting and has always appreciated the community she builds by way of her thoughtful approach.Tracy and Kaitlin talk about:Tracy’s pregnancy/birth journey and how it compelled her to build this entire universe and approach of evolutionary parenting.The impact that our societal, cultural, and structural constraints –lack of federally mandated family leave and the inability to pass a federal caregiver act in the United States– have on our well-being and approach to motherhood and caregiving, as well as society as a whole.What it looks like to concurrently build support for you and your baby in a system that isn't designed to do so, especially when you can't afford it.Practical tips on carving out time for our creative pursuits alongside the constraints that becoming a mother and /or carer throws at us.More about Tracy Cassels PhD:Website: https://evolutionaryparenting.com/about/ Podcast: https://soundcloud.com/user-563905685Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tracycasselsphd/Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram:@postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2EP4 - The Power of the Pause Talking to Dr Pooja Lakshmin About Real Self-Care, Boundaries, Postpartum, Creativity and the Patriarchy
May 3 2023
S2EP4 - The Power of the Pause Talking to Dr Pooja Lakshmin About Real Self-Care, Boundaries, Postpartum, Creativity and the Patriarchy
“I think of the boundary as in the pause. So your boundary is in the space between when someone asks you for something or offers something and you take your pause and then you can say yes, you can say no, or you can negotiate. So the boundary isn't the no, the boundary actually is the space. And then you decide how you're going to move. It's not a brick wall.” ~ Dr Pooja LakshminWe’re really excited to talk to Dr Pooja Lakshmin, a psychiatrist specialising in women's mental health, clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at the George Washington University School of Medicine, founder of Gemma, the digital community focused on women's mental health & equity, and a contributor to the New York Times.Pooja works with women struggling with burnout, despair, depression and anxiety in her clinical practice and has a wider focus on the intersection of mental health and gender.In this episode, Kaitlin and Pooja dug more deeply into how and why she helps women and marginalized groups heal from the tyranny of faux self-care while exposing the systems that have gotten us here.Pooja and Kaitlin talk about:How Pooja came to the conclusion that the personal relates to all the systems in which we live, and thus revolutionizing the work we do in terms of self-care.Using ‘boundaries’ or ‘taking a pause’ as a tool for real self-care; a healthy ecosystem where a mother or carer considers their needs as part of the equation when asking for or accepting help.Several ways in which faux self-care can be conceptualized as a coping mechanism, the capitalistic view of productivity or efficiency being one example.How Pooja’s work as a psychiatrist and her expertise in the “deeply personal space of the individual” is creating ripples of societal/systems changeMore about Dr Pooja LakshminWebsite: https://www.poojalakshmin.comGemma: https://www.gemmawomen.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/poojalakshmin/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pooja-lakshmin-md-a0343a129/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/poojalakshminGet your own copy of Real Self-Care: A Transformative Program for Redefining Wellness (Crystals, Cleanses, and Bubble Baths Not Included): https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9780593489727Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2EP3 - Parenting and Writing: Practicalities and Possibilities with KJ Dell'Antonia
Apr 19 2023
S2EP3 - Parenting and Writing: Practicalities and Possibilities with KJ Dell'Antonia
“The thing that has not changed for me is the need to protect the time that I need to achieve my creative goals. But the biggest barrier is [that] there's always more to do in that busy household. So you have to make a concerted effort to set aside that time.” ~ KJ Dell’AntoniaIn this episode, Kaitlin is joined by KJ Dell’Antonia, the New York Times best-selling author of The Chicken Sisters, In Her Boots, How to Be a Happier Parent, and the forthcoming Playing the Witch Card in a compelling conversation about the intersection of caregiving, creative practice, and capitalism production, and the impressive journey KJ has taken in navigating those roles.A former editor of the New York Times' Motherload blog, and cohost of The #AmWriting podcast, KJ lives in Lyme, New Hampshire, with her husband and four children, and she has to go outside every day or else she and her dogs will go slightly insane.KJ and Kaitlin talked about:How KJ navigates the practicalities of juggling caregiving and creative practice and how she writes about parenting without disrespecting her children's private lives.The challenges of parenting while pursuing creative goals and how to find a balance between the two. KJ's methodical approach to creativity and the importance of setting achievable goals.How to identify your own unique creative process and stay productive and happy with the work you do.The importance of finding dedicated thinking and working time for creative goals, despite the busyness of household life, and the need to protect that time.Finding balance in motherhood and creativity without compromising authenticity and finding real happiness.More about KJ Dell’Antonia:Website: https://kjdellantonia.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kjda/The #AmWriting podcast: https://amwriting.substack.com/Pre-order your copy of Playing the Witch Card: https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9780593713792Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2EP2 - Motherhood As Muse: Jazmina Barrera’s Linea Nigra Pushes Against Patriarchal Narrative Forms
Apr 5 2023
S2EP2 - Motherhood As Muse: Jazmina Barrera’s Linea Nigra Pushes Against Patriarchal Narrative Forms
This episode features Kaitlin speaking with author and essayist Jazmina Barrera. Born in Mexico City in 1988, Jazmina is the author of four books in Spanish, Cuerpo Extraño, Cuaderno de Faros, Linea Nigra and the children’s books, Los Nombres de los Animales and Punto de Cruz, a recipient of the Latin American Voices prize and a finalist in several awards.She’s the editor and co-founder of Ediciones Antílope and lives in Mexico City, which is where she was during this conversation.Jazmina and Kailtin talk about:Jazmina’s journey in writing her latest book, Linea Nigra, especially given the way in which it is so deeply interwoven with her personal experiences of pregnancy and birth.The sense and effect of immediacy that comes across in the book, how she wrestled with it during the editorial process, and how it was received by publishers and readers in relation to what is generally considered ‘legitimate’ literature.How her mother's art practice and grandmother's birth work informed the world in which she was living prior to having a child and how that transition has also supported her life as an artist.The concept of time in our society today, how motherhood disrupts it, and how Jazmina conceptualizes it in her works.Linking materiality with lived experiences.More about Jazmina Barrera:Instagram: (@jaztronomia) https://www.instagram.com/jaztronomia/ Twitter: (@jaztronomia) https://twitter.com/Jaztronomia Website: http://jazminabarrera.com/ Get your own copy of Linea Nigra: An Essay on Pregnancy and Earthquakes (English translation by Christina Macsweeney) - https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9781949641301For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
S2E1 -  Writing the Writer-Mother: Lessons from Biography and Life in Julie Phillips's work
Mar 22 2023
S2E1 - Writing the Writer-Mother: Lessons from Biography and Life in Julie Phillips's work
We'd love to highlight this episode’s sponsor, a product and company that's working to build technologies to assist caregivers in the early phases of postpartum and caregiving—the Bonoch Long Range Baby Monitor. The Bonoch Long Range Baby Monitor is perfect for larger houses and bigger families so you can effortlessly hear your children when they wake and ensure they're cared for.Follow this link to find out more about the impressive specifications of the Bonoch Long Range Baby Monitor and to receive a special 30% discount available only to our listeners._____________________________________________________“She said, ‘I don't think a hero can be a mother. I don't think a mother can be a hero.’ And I felt this terrible irritation and frustration that made me realize I want mothers to be heroes. I want them to be heroes, not in the slaying-the-dragon sense, but I just want them to be the heroes of their own stories.” ~ Julie PhillipsJoin Kaitlin as she chats with Julie Phillips, an American biographer & book critic, and the author of The Baby on the Fire Escape: Creativity, Motherhood, and the Mind-Baby Problem, which feels like the perfect topic to launch our second season. Julie's previous book, James Tiptree, Jr.: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon, received several honors including the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Hugo and Locus Awards, and the Washington State book award. She currently lives in Amsterdam with her partner and their two children.Kaitlin and Julie spoke about:Julie’s new book, The Baby on the Fire Escape.How we think about motherhood and intellectualism together, and also how we think about motherhood as an intellectual concept.What it means to Julie to be sitting at the intersection now of mothering older children and writing biographies of mother writers.The concept of maintenance work in relation to the political activism of women and caregivers.More about Julie Phillips:Website:https://www.julie-phillips.com/Instagram: @julievanphillips Facebook:@JuliePhillipsOrder your copy of Julie’s latest book here:  The Baby on the Fire Escape: Creativity, Motherhood, and the Mind-Baby ProblemFor regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram:@postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
Season 2 Preview: Embodying the Creative Caregiver, a Season of Hope and Doing the Work
Mar 8 2023
Season 2 Preview: Embodying the Creative Caregiver, a Season of Hope and Doing the Work
“I feel like I have the most internal struggle when I recognize that my work doesn't have value in a traditional sense and that my creative work and the work I do as a mother is not valued in this system. And trying to remind myself of the values of that, trying to say, Okay, I'm going to spend time today working on this literary fiction that I know will not pay our bills. Does it matter?” ~ Kaitlin SolimineI don't know, listeners. Does it matter? I'm really curious to hear how you engage with this struggle and how you define seasons. You can either shoot us an email at hello@postpartumproduction.com or write us a note on our Instagram page.—_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ —_ — _ —_—_ —_—In season 2 of the Postpartum Production podcast, we will be taking a little bit of a bird’s-eye view - sort of a step back - to examine some of the bigger picture questions that we dug into in the first season.So while there will be sprinklings of practitioners, writers, poets, artists, etc. who will join us primarily because they have a work that is coming out soon and it makes sense to talk to them while they're engaging with an audience more deeply at this particular time, we are really stepping back and talking to a range of what we see as experts on specific subject matters to examine this particular moment, and to just have a slightly different angle on things for a little bit. This mini-episode is a teaser to the season and includes a little bit of a preview of recordings we've already done to hopefully give you a sense for what's to come.Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram:@postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
[Bonus] One Moment in Time: A Special Dedication to Annabelle Kim
Jan 11 2023
[Bonus] One Moment in Time: A Special Dedication to Annabelle Kim
"What an immense privilege it is to be able to put words on paper."~ Annabelle KimThis episode is a special dedication to a dear writer-mother-friend, Annabelle Kim, who passed away in September of 2021 after a battle with stage 4 cancer.Annabelle, a mother of four, was a mechanical engineer, an inventor, and a novelist. She was the author of Tiger Pelt, published by Leaf Land Press, a small independent publisher. The novel tracks two individuals' intertwined lives through the Japanese occupation of Korea, World War II and the Korean War, and it was based in part on her father's life.Join Kaitlin as she shares a few pieces from Annabelle's writing that speak to what it means to be a woman and a writer and a caregiver who's navigating all of that and doing so with a refreshing and inspiring perspective.Related Resources: Tiger Pelt, Annabelle Kim: https://www.amazon.com/Tiger-Pelt-Annabelle-Kim/dp/0997609001Returning to Writing After a Stage Four Cancer Diagnosis, Annabelle Kim | Lit Hub:https://lithub.com/returning-to-writing-after-a-stage-four-cancer-diagnosis/Imagining the Unimaginable Truth (Q&A with Annabelle Kim) by Sonya Chung | Bloom: https://bloomsite.wordpress.com/2017/12/13/imagining-the-unimaginable-truth-qa-with-annabelle-kim/Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
Artist Mothers Under Capitalism: Constraint, Creativity, Perseverance, and Promise
Dec 21 2022
Artist Mothers Under Capitalism: Constraint, Creativity, Perseverance, and Promise
**This episode is sponsored by Full Spectrum Features, a nonprofit social justice organization that uses film to inspire dialogue and create impact. They’re a Chicago-based 501(c)(3) committed to driving equity in the independent film industry by producing, exhibiting, and supporting the work of women, BIPOC, and LGBTQ filmmakers.You can find out more about Full Spectrum Features and their support of artist caregivers in this episode and on their website at fullspectrumfeatures.com as well as their Instagram, Facebook and Twitter.**—-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------We’re excited to share with you this season finale compilation episode that draws together the voices and insights from this season. Together, we've examined how we wrestle with our conceptions of motherhood, the constraints of patriarchal structures on caregiving and art, and ways in which the fractured inevitability of early motherhood could perhaps provide new frameworks for creative production that work against existing norms and provide wholly new opportunities for expression, empowerment, and community.Timestamps:11:51 - Namrata Poddar, EP 1312:32 - Sara Petersen, EP 0813:09 - Heather Powell, EP 0714:08 - Nancy Reddy, EP 1215:02 - Amanda Montei, EP 1515:27 - Namrata Poddar15:45 - Nora Fiffer, EP 1116:57 - Sarah Chaves, EP 0118:18 - Nora Fiffer20:30 - Emily Pérez, EP 1221:27 - MM De Voe, EP 0922:04 - Dani Rowe, EP 0622:34 - Vanessa Hua, EP 0523:17 - Jackie Leonard, EP 0223:58 - Sarah Chaves24:57 - Vanessa Hua26:40 - Amanda Montei, EP 1526:57 - Minna Dubin, EP 1527:16 - Cindy DiTiberio, EP 1527:47 - Heather Powell28:30 - Sara Petersen 29:38 - Emily...