Matrescence Unfiltered

The Career Penalty (Part 1): Egg Counts, Bank Accounts, and a System That's Failing You

48 min · 13. mai 2026
episode The Career Penalty (Part 1): Egg Counts, Bank Accounts, and a System That's Failing You cover

Beskrivelse

Bianca spent 15 years engineering her career around the possibility of becoming a mother. Getting to CMO level before she could even think about it. Checking her AMH results. Sitting in an egg freezing clinic surrounded by career women in their late 30s. Doing the maths on when, where, and whether it was safe. Women working full time earn 83p for every pound men earn. Men's wages rise by 8 to 14% when they become fathers. Same life event. Opposite career outcome. Five years after a first child, a mother's earnings drop by an average of 42%. And fewer than one in five mothers return to full-time work in the first three years. This is the career penalty. And you feel it in every decision you make before a baby even exists. Rose is mid-research and what she's finding is specific: the patterns around redundancy and settlement agreements, and the moment women realise they've been managed out rather than supported through. She's mapping when it happens, how it's framed, and who it's happening to. If you've ever sat at your desk pregnant, working harder than you've ever worked, knowing exactly why, this one is for you. Part two is coming soon and it's a power story.

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Alle episoder

10 Episoder

episode The Maternity Advisor: A Welcome Step, a Missing Framework, and What Comes After the Hospital Door cover

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Bianca recorded this episode two weeks after giving birth. On the same day, as it happens, that the UK appointed its first ever National Maternity Advisor. It is a meaningful step. Michelle Welsh MP will work with families, the NHS, and ministers to push for safer, more compassionate care. It happened because women like Louise Thompson and Theo Clarke refused to stop pushing. But the announcement said nothing about what happens after the hospital door closes. The identity shift of matrescence did not feature. The neurological rewiring did not feature. The return to a workplace with no framework for what just happened to you did not feature. Bianca is living all of it in real time. And the research backs her up: the brain changes of matrescence are not temporary. They are lasting adaptations. The support infrastructure for them does not exist. This episode is for anyone who has felt the drop-off. From the moment the hospital door closed behind them to the moment they were expected to function as if nothing fundamental had changed.

I går37 min
episode The Day Three Drop: The Hormonal Crash No One Prepares You For, Day Seven Reporting Live cover

The Day Three Drop: The Hormonal Crash No One Prepares You For, Day Seven Reporting Live

This is the episode about what happens when the greatest love of your life arrives in the same 72-hour window as the biggest hormonal crash your body can survive. Day three: she started crying and didn't stop. Sobbing on the sofa at midnight, leaking milk, howling into a pillow so she wouldn't wake the baby. By day four it shifted into anxiety. Day five, the crying came back. She describes feeling like a stranger to herself at the exact moment she needed to be most capable. Rose brings the science. Your placenta has been acting as a second endocrine organ for nine months. When it leaves, your hormonal system crashes to baseline in 48 hours. No wind down. Just gone. Eight in ten women go through this. The midwife calls it "being a bit teary." This episode calls it what it is. If you're in it, about to be in it, or love someone who is: you are not losing your mind. This is the beginning of the fourth trimester. You deserve more than "it'll pass."

27. mai 202637 min
episode The Career Opportunity (Part 2): Portfolio Careers, Boring Businesses, and Betting on Yourself cover

The Career Opportunity (Part 2): Portfolio Careers, Boring Businesses, and Betting on Yourself

Last episode we laid out the career penalty. The stats, the systemic failures, the cost of becoming a mother in a workplace that wasn't built for you. This episode we flip it. What if being pushed out of the linear path isn't the end of the story? What if it's the beginning of a bigger one? We get into the science behind why motherhood is actually a leadership accelerator, the power of portfolio careers, and why monetising your own expertise might be the smartest move you make. We talk practical steps. Consulting, fractional work, buying a business, building income streams alongside your job. Plus how to network in a way that actually works when you're exhausted, pregnant, or juggling a thousand things at once. This isn't a consolation prize. It's a capability shift. And the women who are getting creative right now aren't opting out. They're building something harder to dismantle.

20. mai 202637 min
episode The Career Penalty (Part 1): Egg Counts, Bank Accounts, and a System That's Failing You cover

The Career Penalty (Part 1): Egg Counts, Bank Accounts, and a System That's Failing You

Bianca spent 15 years engineering her career around the possibility of becoming a mother. Getting to CMO level before she could even think about it. Checking her AMH results. Sitting in an egg freezing clinic surrounded by career women in their late 30s. Doing the maths on when, where, and whether it was safe. Women working full time earn 83p for every pound men earn. Men's wages rise by 8 to 14% when they become fathers. Same life event. Opposite career outcome. Five years after a first child, a mother's earnings drop by an average of 42%. And fewer than one in five mothers return to full-time work in the first three years. This is the career penalty. And you feel it in every decision you make before a baby even exists. Rose is mid-research and what she's finding is specific: the patterns around redundancy and settlement agreements, and the moment women realise they've been managed out rather than supported through. She's mapping when it happens, how it's framed, and who it's happening to. If you've ever sat at your desk pregnant, working harder than you've ever worked, knowing exactly why, this one is for you. Part two is coming soon and it's a power story.

13. mai 202648 min
episode The Leave Myth: Planning, Surrendering, and What's Actually Coming cover

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You’ve planned everything. The hires, the handover, the keeping-in-touch days. And still, somehow, nothing feels settled. This episode goes inside the pre-leave period - the weeks when you're still delivering, still performing, still in it - while quietly carrying the weight of everything that's about to change. Bianca shares what it feels like to prepare to step away from the only version of yourself you've ever known. The surrender that feels entirely unnatural. The grief of watching your partner's career accelerate while yours pauses. Rose brings the research: why the brain's heightened threat response during this period isn't anxiety, it's neurology. What the data shows about the coping strategies women use to protect their professional image - and what they say about it years later. And why the line manager, not HR, is the single biggest factor in whether this experience breaks you or holds you. If you've ever stood on the edge of the biggest transition of your life and thought, I have no idea who I'm going to be on the other side, this one’s for you.

6. mai 202641 min