Mom’s Who Hate Everything

The Year I Disappeared: How I Lost (and Found) My Identity in Marriage

43 min · 21 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio The Year I Disappeared: How I Lost (and Found) My Identity in Marriage

Descripción

Have you looked in the mirror and realized you don't recognize the woman looking back? Whether it's through divorce, motherhood, or a marriage that slowly eroded your soul, we’ve all had 'The Year we Disappeared.' This is the story of losing my identity to someone else's expectations and the messy, terrifying, beautiful process of finding it again. If you feel like you're fading into the background of your own life, this is your wake-up call.

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episode Why Didn't You Just Leave? Because We Were Taught Abuse Was Normal. artwork

Why Didn't You Just Leave? Because We Were Taught Abuse Was Normal.

"Why didn't you just leave sooner?" It’s the question every woman hears after walking away from a toxic relationship, as if dismantling an entire life is as casual as a Thursday afternoon errand. In this episode of Moms Who Hate Everything, we’re digging into the uncomfortable truth: women aren’t "blind" to red flags—we’re conditioned to paint them white. From the playground lessons of "he’s mean because he likes you" to the "boys will be boys" excuses that follow us into adulthood, society trains girls to be emotional detectives and unpaid therapists for men who won’t even unpack the dishwasher. We’re discussing: • The Playground to Partnership Pipeline: How childhood conditioning teaches us to view disrespect as affection. • The "Rehabilitation Project": Why we find "potential" in condemned buildings (and men). • The "Professional Explainer": When healthy communication turns into begging for basic human decency. • The Wake-Up Moment: That random Tuesday when you realize you’re fighting for a version of him that doesn’t exist. • The Post-Trauma "Normal": Why healthy love feels suspicious after years of chaos. Leaving isn't a failure—it’s the ultimate "it-girl" move. It’s the moment you stop abandoning yourself to keep someone else. Grab your iced coffee (or your Alani Nu), put on your leopard print glasses, and let’s set the blueprint on fire.

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