Going Through It Mailchimp
-
- Society & Culture
-
Going Through It is a podcast about how hard it can be to figure out when to quit and when to keep going. On season four, Ashley C. Ford talks to 13 noteworthy people about how they decided whether or not to have children – all while navigating that question for herself.
-
Nora McInerny Couldn’t Have Planned This
When author and podcast host Nora McInerny found herself forming a blended family with a new partner not long after the death of her first husband, she had to leave behind any plans she thought she had.
-
Jenifer Lewis Gains – and Gives – Wisdom
As a young actor in Hollywood, Jenifer Lewis never planned on starting a family. But since then she’s played some of the most influential mother roles on TV and in movies. Along the way she’s found many different ways to mother.
-
Sasha Velour Wants to Be a Drag Sibling, Not a Drag Mother
In many ways, Drag Superstar Sasha Velour’s Drag Mothers were her grandmas, who encouraged her exploration of drag at a young age. The lessons she learned from them inform her approach to mentoring other drag queens today.
-
Elle Duncan Thought She Failed
ESPN host Elle Duncan planned her two pregnancies meticulously, just like she planned her career as a sports anchor. But, health complications with her second child forced her to confront the inescapable uncertainty of parenting.
-
Amy Blackstone is Comfortable Knowing She Can’t Have It All
When the desire to have kids never kicked in, sociologist Dr. Amy Blackstone thought there was something wrong with her. When she turned to her profession for answers, she learned that “maternal instinct” is largely a myth.
-
Negin Farsad Felt a Sense of Duty to her Family
Comedian Negin Farsad’s parents never pressured her to have kids. But when her dad told a story about her own birth that she’d never heard before, she felt a surprising sense of duty to continue her family’s line in America.
Customer Reviews
Tracy Clayton is a podcasting legend!
Tracy Clayton is a podcasting legend! Thank you to Pineapple for getting more Tracy-content out there in 2020. The lineup for this season was wall to wall legends, willing to be vulnerable to help others get through it. Loved it.
Well crafted, relatable gem
I love this show. It is well produced, witty without being pretentious, smart but not cerebral, full of heart but skilled storytelling from interviewees and editors alike. Host Ann Friedman asks intelligent questions that evoke the going-through-it details and nuances out of her guests, respectful of the rawness of their experiences. Finally a show of intelligent women interviewed by an intelligent woman for intelligent women to relate to. I look forward to each episode.