763 episódios

When you're a parent, every day brings a "fresh hell" to deal with. In other words, there's always something. Think of us as your funny mom friends who are here to remind you: you're not alone, and it won't always be this hard.
We're Amy and Margaret, both busy moms of three kids, but with completely different parenting styles. Margaret is a laid-back to the max; Amy never met a spreadsheet or an organizational system she didn't like.
In each episode of "What Fresh Hell" we offer lots of laughs, but also practical advice, parenting strategies, and tips to empower you in your role as a mom. We explore self-help techniques, as well as ways to prioritize your own needs, combat stress, and despite the invisible workload we all deal with, find joy amidst the chaos of motherhood.
If you've ever wondered "why is my kid..." then one of us has probably been there, and we're here to tell you what we've learned along the way.
We unpack the behaviors and developmental stages of toddlers, tweens, and teenagers, providing insights into their actions and equipping you with effective parenting strategies.
We offer our best parenting tips and skills we've learned. We debate the techniques and studies that are everywhere for parents these days, and get to the bottom of what works best to raise happy, healthy, fairly well-behaved kids, while fostering a positive parent-child relationship.
If you're the default parent in your household, whether you're a busy mom juggling multiple pickups and dropoffs, or a first-time parent seeking guidance, this podcast is your trusted resource. Join our community of supportive mom friends laughing in the face of motherhood!  
whatfreshhellpodcast.com

What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood | Parenting Tips From Funny Moms Margaret Ables and Amy Wilson

    • Crianças e família
    • 5,0 • 1 avaliação

When you're a parent, every day brings a "fresh hell" to deal with. In other words, there's always something. Think of us as your funny mom friends who are here to remind you: you're not alone, and it won't always be this hard.
We're Amy and Margaret, both busy moms of three kids, but with completely different parenting styles. Margaret is a laid-back to the max; Amy never met a spreadsheet or an organizational system she didn't like.
In each episode of "What Fresh Hell" we offer lots of laughs, but also practical advice, parenting strategies, and tips to empower you in your role as a mom. We explore self-help techniques, as well as ways to prioritize your own needs, combat stress, and despite the invisible workload we all deal with, find joy amidst the chaos of motherhood.
If you've ever wondered "why is my kid..." then one of us has probably been there, and we're here to tell you what we've learned along the way.
We unpack the behaviors and developmental stages of toddlers, tweens, and teenagers, providing insights into their actions and equipping you with effective parenting strategies.
We offer our best parenting tips and skills we've learned. We debate the techniques and studies that are everywhere for parents these days, and get to the bottom of what works best to raise happy, healthy, fairly well-behaved kids, while fostering a positive parent-child relationship.
If you're the default parent in your household, whether you're a busy mom juggling multiple pickups and dropoffs, or a first-time parent seeking guidance, this podcast is your trusted resource. Join our community of supportive mom friends laughing in the face of motherhood!  
whatfreshhellpodcast.com

    Do We Share Too Much About Our Kids Online?

    Do We Share Too Much About Our Kids Online?

    We all know what extreme "oversharenting" is when we see it. It's the gray areas that get harder. When we post about our kid's adventures in potty training, are we supposed to think twice?
    What will happen when our kids are old enough to want to curate their own internet presence?
    How concerned should we be about the privacy we may have given away without thinking?
    Amy and Margaret discuss:

    the digital footprint and the "right to be forgotten"

    what to check in your privacy settings

    when to start asking kids for permission before you post

    the benefits we gain from sharing about our families online


    Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:

    Zoya Garg, Elmer Gomez and Luciana Yael Petrzela for the NY Times: "If You Didn't 'Sharent,' Did You Even Parent?"


    Sean Coughlan for the BBC: "'Sharenting' puts young at risk of online fraud"


    Fortesa Latifi for Cosmopolitan: "What’s the Price of a Childhood Turned Into Content?"


    Fortesa Latifi for Cosmopolitan: "'We’re Never Doing This Again': What It Took for These Parenting Influencers to Pull Their Kids Offline"


    Paula Cocozza for The Guardian: "‘I was so embarrassed I cried’: do parents share too much online?"


    Amy Webb for Slate: "We Post Nothing About Our Daughter Online"


    Jennifer Valentino-DeVries and Michael H. Keller for the NY Times: "A Marketplace of Girl Influencers Managed by Moms and Stalked by Men"


    Megan Francis: When Your “Worst-Mom Moment” Becomes A Viral Meme (And How The “Surfboard Kid” Became A Man)



    We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
    https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
    mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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    • 44 min
    DEEP DIVE: It's Not "Nagging"

    DEEP DIVE: It's Not "Nagging"

    This month, we're doing a deep dive series into the division of household labor—why it's often unbalanced, and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
    Want to see a mother get mad? Tell her she's "nagging" you after she's been obligated to repeat an entirely reasonable request several times over. And just why is "nagging" a word that's almost exclusively applied to women?
    We need the other members of our households to show up and do their share. As the default parents, we own the lists. So do we stop caring whether others like how we ask and remind? Do we enforce a back-to-one where we're not forced to ask repeatedly in the first place?
    In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss:

    The sexism and etymology of the word "nag"

    What Amy says are the three types of "nagging," and why we should separate them out

    What to say when our repeated asking is framed as annoying to other people (guess to whom it's also annoying, too?)


    Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:

    Jessica Zhang on LinkedIn: "What's In a Nag?"


    Episode from If Books Could Kill podcast: "Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus"


    McClelland, T., & Sliwa, P: "Gendered affordance perception and unequal domestic labour."


    Our episode with Lynyetta Willis on "Stable Misery"


    Our episode with Eve Rodsky on "Changing the Invisible Workload"


    Anne Helen Petersen's newsletter Culture Study



    We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
    https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
    mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 41 min
    Fresh Take: Diane Boden, "Minimalist Moms"

    Fresh Take: Diane Boden, "Minimalist Moms"

    Is it even possible to declutter your home for more than one minute at a time when you've got kids? Diane Boden, host of the Minimalist Moms podcast, offers parenting tips for cutting down on possessions in a manageable way.
    Diane Boden is the host of the Minimalist Moms Podcast and author of Minimalist Moms: Living and Parenting with Simplicity. She lives in Ohio with her husband and three kids.
    Diane, Margaret, and Amy discuss:

    What minimalism can mean for different people

    Simple steps for starting the decluttering process—and some more radical strategies too

    How to reconcile different set points for clutter between parenting partners

    How to deal with family members who love giving gifts


    Here's where you can find Diane:

    minimalistmomspodcast.com

    @minimalistmomspodcast on all socials

    Buy MINIMALIST MOMS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781642505092


    Listen to the Minimalist Moms podcast


    We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
    https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
    mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, minimalism, decluttering
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 35 min
    How Involved Should We Be with Our Kids' Schools?

    How Involved Should We Be with Our Kids' Schools?

    How do we help our kids succeed in school without becoming the dreaded "snowplow" parents? Here are some parenting tips for advocating for your child at school when necessary, while also empowering our kids to navigate their own learning.
    Amy and Margaret discuss:

    How school environments have changed in the last few decades

    Best practices for helping kids of different ages manage homework

    How to start a productive conversation with your child's educators about concerns you may have


    Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:

     Jenny Anderson for TIME Magazine: "Many American Parents Have No Idea How Their Kids Are Doing in School"


    Carrie Bauer, et. al, for Slate: Help Me Help My Kid


    Libby Stanford for Education Week: "Does Parent Involvement Really Help Students? Here’s What the Research Says"


    U.S. Department of Education: "Raise the Bar: Resources for Parents and Families"


    Cara Goodwin for KQED's Mind/Shift: "How important is homework, and how much should parents help?"



    See our interview with Jennifer Breheny Wallace - author of Never Enough: When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic — and What We Can Do About It



    We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
    https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
    mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, academic achievement, school achievement, homework
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 47 min
    DEEP DIVE: Matthew Fray on Strengthening Our Relationships

    DEEP DIVE: Matthew Fray on Strengthening Our Relationships

    This month, we're doing a deep dive series into the division of household labor—why it's often unbalanced, and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
    Matthew Fray is a relationship coach who leans on the lessons of his failed marriage to help others avoid making the same mistakes that he did. He's a 43-year-old single father who is best known for his viral blog post "She Divorced Me Because I Left Dishes by the Sink." Fray is the author of the new book "This is How Your Marriage Ends: A Hopeful Approach to Saving Relationships." Matthew gives us wonderful, poignant insights into how to validate our partners, find out their true needs, and re-establish trust when we've lost it.
    In this episode, Matthew, Margaret, and Amy discuss:

    Why we may not realize we're betraying our partner's trust

    Matthew's hierarchy of needs in relationships

    Why couples always have the same fight


    Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:

    Maslow's hierarchy of needs

    Matthew's recent article in The Atlantic

    Our episode with Eve Rodsky on changing the invisible workload


    Here's where you can find Matthew:

    matthewfray.com

    Buy Matthew's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780063072251


    FB: @matthewfrayMBTTTR

    IG: @frayrelationships

    Twitter: @MBTTTR


    We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
    https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
    mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, emotional labor, marriage, partnerships, divorce
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 41 min
    Fresh Take: Amy Shoenthal on "The Setback Cycle"

    Fresh Take: Amy Shoenthal on "The Setback Cycle"

    If setbacks are so common, especially in the trenches of motherhood, how can we learn useful lessons from them? Amy Shoenthal, author of the new book THE SETBACK CYCLE, offers a framework for navigating setbacks and becoming stronger because of them.
    Amy Shoenthal is a journalist, marketing consultant and a contributor to Forbes Women and Harvard Business Review.
    Shoenthal and Margaret discuss:

    Why our brains learn more from setbacks than successes and why people who have setbacks are better at problem solving

    Shoenthal's four-phase framework for navigating setbacks

    The "motherhood penalty" that women in the workforce experience


    Here's where you can find Amy Shoenthal:

    www.thesetbackcycle.com

    @amysho on Instagram and Twitter

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/amyshoenthal/

    Buy THE SETBACK CYCLE: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9798888451687



    We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
    https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
    mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, setback, resilience
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 36 min

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