8 episodes

The MTHR Project Podcast celebrates and amplifies the voices, ideas and actions that honor and protect every mother, everywhere. We explore the social, spiritual and economic lives of mothers and encourage new ways of honoring and protecting those who birth and nurture life in our communities. MTHR Project is hosted by MTHRhood activist and Nana Grants founder Erica Stephens. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

The MTHR Project Erica Stephens

    • Society & Culture

The MTHR Project Podcast celebrates and amplifies the voices, ideas and actions that honor and protect every mother, everywhere. We explore the social, spiritual and economic lives of mothers and encourage new ways of honoring and protecting those who birth and nurture life in our communities. MTHR Project is hosted by MTHRhood activist and Nana Grants founder Erica Stephens. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

    After her mother's death, Toni became "mom" to her younger siblings

    After her mother's death, Toni became "mom" to her younger siblings

    Toni is a gifted healer, massage therapist and Reiki practitioner. I’ve been a client of Toni’s for years, so you can imagine my surprise when she mentioned she'd once been a professional welder. The sudden loss of Toni’s young mother left Toni in charge of raising her siblings and changed the trajectory of her life forever. We are honored that Toni came to our studio to share her story.


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

    • 32 min
    After becoming a teenage mother, Jennifer quietly struggled with depression and suicidal thoughts.

    After becoming a teenage mother, Jennifer quietly struggled with depression and suicidal thoughts.

    Since the COVID 19 pandemic began reshaping our lives, there’s been a new openness to discussing mental health. Celebrities, athletes, artists and others in the public eye have opened up like never before, sharing their personal experiences with anxiety and depression and other mental health struggles. Two of the biggest sports stories of 2021 ignited conversations about mental health inspired by the profound, public experiences of Olympic gymnast Simone Biles and tennis champion Naomi Osaka.

    My guest today is Jennifer Sutton, an ultra-runner, single mother and a Sergeant with Douglas County Fire and EMS just outside of Atlanta. As a first responder, Jennifer’s job requires her to be strong, clear-headed and in-charge. Earlier this year she was named a first responder of the year during an incredibly challenging time for everyone in health care and emergency services. 

    Jennifer has also quietly struggled with depression for most of her life and overcame a difficult childhood. She became a mother while she was in high school, but went on to have two successful careers and raise a daughter who is now a sergeant in the US Army.


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

    • 35 min
    Transcending modern myths and archetypes of motherhood

    Transcending modern myths and archetypes of motherhood

    Kate Ferguson is an Atlanta-based licensed professional counselor who specializes in working with women, in particular those experiencing perinatal mood and anxiety disorders. Kate incorporates the idea of myths and archetypes in her work with women. In this episode, we talk about how media (especially social media and TV shows) shape our view of motherhood. While these "on-screen moms" can be entertaining, they often limit our perception of motherhood and create wildly unrealistic expectations for women. Kate also shares how her personal experience with mental health and motherhood helped her find her calling as a therapist.


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

    • 38 min
    How does she do it? Strength, resilience and an abundance of "Want to"

    How does she do it? Strength, resilience and an abundance of "Want to"

    I met our next guest, Sandra Mercer, at the end of 2019 when she applied for a Nana Grant to help with child care for her three little boys.

    Sandra was a 4.0 computer science student at West Georgia Technical College and a single mother. She worked as a computer science tutor and supported her family on an internship at Southwire, a manufacturing company in metro-Atlanta.

    Sandra graduated from the Nana Grants program earlier this year, but before she left us, I wanted to get her in the studio to share her story. Sandra has what her boss and professional mentor calls “want to.” When she wants something, she gets it. And her enthusiasm and drive are contagious. You can’t leave a conversation with Sandra without feeling a little of her “want to” has rubbed off on you.


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

    • 28 min
    "My goal is to positively influence these girls."

    "My goal is to positively influence these girls."

    Alexis grew up in foster care and became a single mother at a young age. Fresh out of Clark Atlanta University, she is using her degree in social work to make a direct and meaningful impact on young girls at a group home where she was once a resident. To learn more about nsoro Foundation, which provides access to a college education for youth aging out of foster care, visit https://nsoro.foundation. To learn more about Nana Grants, which provides child care funding for low-income single mothers in school, visit www.NanaGrants.org




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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

    • 33 min
    Brant and Brian's Unpaved Road to Happily-Ever-After

    Brant and Brian's Unpaved Road to Happily-Ever-After

    Brant Rawls-McQuillan always dreamed of having a family that included children. But he was also a gay man who came of age in the early-90s, when happily-every-after stories featuring two guys, two kids and white picket fence simply weren't part of our cultural narrative. To get there, they had to forge a path that wasn’t laid out in sitcoms, movies, and storybooks. Today Brant is a stay-at-home dad and self-described happy homemaker who learned the gift of nurturing from his mother and grandmother.

    Photo Collage: The Rawls-McQuillan Family, their "Dream Team" including gestational carriers, and Brant and Brian's First Babymoon


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mthrproject/support

    • 50 min

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