Between the Chaos and Calm: In the Middle of Motherhood

With Gloria and Jenna

Grab a coffee and lean in with two mom friends as they process the mess, the magic, and everything in between that comes with motherhood.

  1. 16. Empowering Independence in our Kids This Summer—Without the Executive Function Overload: with Blanca Velazquez-Martin, MA, LPC and Founder of Whole Child Home

    Jun 8

    16. Empowering Independence in our Kids This Summer—Without the Executive Function Overload: with Blanca Velazquez-Martin, MA, LPC and Founder of Whole Child Home

    Why is summer parenting burnout so common, and why does more free time for children sometimes backfire? Shouldn't summer be an easy season? Often, summer brings a lot with it: changes in routine, shifting expectations, and new demands that can be challenging for a child's still-developing executive function skills—and, at times, for our own as well. It is sometimes dubbed a season of "executive function overload" for this reason. What does this really mean, and how can we support our children through it? We chatted with Parent Coach Blanca Velazquez-Martin, Founder of Whole Child Home and Whole Child Therapy, licensed professional counselor, and certified Positive Discipline educator. A mother herself, she brings wisdom, expertise, and lived experience. Lean in with a coffee or beverage of choice and enjoy this thoughtful conversation to help you approach summer break with awareness, care and intention. Connect with Blanca: Blanca offers personalized parent consultations, school events and workshops for parent and educator communities, as well as online courses covering Starting School and Montessori Parenting. You can also follow her on Instagram @whole.child.home. Show Notes: We are two moms who met on Instagram years ago and quickly bonded over our love of the Montessori philosophy applied to parenting and over nerdy child development research. We decided to take the leap by finally taking our chats out of our DMs and inviting you to listen along as we chat about all things motherhood. Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned SAHM and now Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠ Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    48 min
  2. 15. Have We Overcomplicated Play by Fixating on "Independent Play?" Co-Host and Play Mentor Jenna Adds Nuance

    May 25

    15. Have We Overcomplicated Play by Fixating on "Independent Play?" Co-Host and Play Mentor Jenna Adds Nuance

    In the past decade, "Independent Play" has become a buzzword on social media, where parents of young children can't scroll their feeds for more than a few minutes without being hit by tips, downloads, and toy recommendations promising to help their littles finally play more without so much parent involvement. After years working as a writer, editor and content creator on parenting and play, including a season at the child development and play company Lovevery, Inc. and the parenting support app Joy Parenting Club, co-host Jenna started to notice a gap between influencer tips and qualified expert tips when it came to play time. The internet started broadly telling parents to do less — advice that can be helpful for those who lean overly involved. But there’s also a large group of parents who lean permissive/uninvolved and need a different nudge: one that encourages them to engage more thoughtfully. In this episode, Jenna adds a ton of nuance and reassurance around how independent play is great, but there's also just play – which takes so many forms and won't always be "solo" in order to be child-led. Further, where the goal is purposeful play to aid our children's early development, research supports something called "guided play," which is not total "free play," nor is it top-down explicit instruction. It's a middle ground, where your child is still leading their play, but you stay close to offer some context, vocabulary, knowledge when the moment calls for it. We do have a role in play, and as always, it's nuanced. Show Notes We are two moms who met on Instagram years ago and quickly bonded over our love of the Montessori philosophy applied to parenting and over nerdy child development research. We decided to take the leap by finally taking our chats out of our DMs and inviting you to listen along as we chat about all things motherhood. Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned SAHM and now Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠ Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    49 min
  3. 14: Are Moms Okay? Tackling Motherhood Burnout with Mom Therapist Allie McQuaid, LCPC, PMH-C

    May 11

    14: Are Moms Okay? Tackling Motherhood Burnout with Mom Therapist Allie McQuaid, LCPC, PMH-C

    In this episode, we zoom out to look at the state of modern-day mommin’. As millennial moms, we are showing up, but we’re also notoriously stretched thin to the point that the U.S. Surgeon General issued a warning in 2024 about record levels of burnout. Whew! Get ready for a candid, deeply relatable conversation with Allison (Allie) McQuaid, a Maryland-based therapist and perinatal mental health specialist certified through Postpartum Support International. With over a decade of experience supporting children and families—and years focused specifically on moms—Allie (@millennialmomtherapist) helps us unpack the stressors. One major thorn: the pressure to parent intensively—a notable shift from even our parents’ generation. While “helicopter parenting” defined much of our childhood, today’s expectation feels different: less “be careful,” and more “be perfectly attuned 24/7.” It’s not just the mental load—it’s the emotional load, too. Decompress your Mother's Day weekend with this mom chat and walk away with some helpful mindset shifts. Beyond Allie's Instagram page, you can connect with her locally through her private practice Tree House Therapy LLC. Be sure to check out her Summer Camp for Moms retreat coming up in July 2026! Show Notes We are two moms who met on Instagram years ago and quickly bonded over our love of the Montessori philosophy applied to parenting and over nerdy child development research. We decided to take the leap by finally taking our chats out of our DMs and inviting you to listen along as we chat about all things motherhood. Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned SAHM and now Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠ Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    44 min
  4. 13. What Parents Need to Know About Today’s Literacy Crisis — Co-Host and Literacy Expert Gloria Breaks It Down

    Apr 27

    13. What Parents Need to Know About Today’s Literacy Crisis — Co-Host and Literacy Expert Gloria Breaks It Down

    Parents today face conflicting pressures around early literacy for their children. On one side is the “just let them play until age seven” perspective; on the other, the push to “download this app to teach your two-year-old to read quickly.” Between these extremes, there’s far more to consider and thoughtfully discuss. One universal truth: there are foundational literacy skills that are important from birth and that expand in relevance between the ages of 3-5. All children will move through mastering these skills on their own timeline, but introducing these foundations in developmentally-appropriate ways is critical. By the time children enter elementary, they will need these foundations to joyfully and confidently transition from learning to read to then reading to learn. The United States has been grappling with a literacy crisis for decades. Roughly 21% of adults are illiterate, and more than half read below a sixth-grade level. Strong literacy and comprehension skills aren’t just academic—they’re essential for everyday independence and wellbeing. Tasks like signing a lease, understanding prescription instructions, filing taxes, or navigating legal documents all require advanced reading and critical thinking. So where do we go from here? If we want to move the needle, it starts with taking a closer look at our education system and at home, to build environments that truly support literacy from the ground up, and, in a way that can break generational cycles. Plan your next commute, walk, or errand with this episode, where co-host and literacy expert Gloria shares insights drawn from her experience in public classrooms, homeschooling, and tutoring. Grounded in both practice and research, Gloria holds a Bachelor’s degree in Early Childhood and Elementary Education and a Master’s degree in Literacy Education. You can find the statistics mentioned in this episode here, as well as the research studies mentioned in this episode both here, here, and here. We are two moms who met on Instagram years ago and quickly bonded over our love of the Montessori philosophy applied to parenting and over nerdy child development research. We decided to take the leap by finally taking our chats out of our DMs and inviting you to listen along as we chat about all things motherhood. Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned SAHM and now Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠ Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    53 min
  5. 12. Water Safety Without Panic: Swim Lessons, Floaties & What Parents Really Need to Know: With Ashley Yates, British Swim School Franchise Owner

    Apr 13

    12. Water Safety Without Panic: Swim Lessons, Floaties & What Parents Really Need to Know: With Ashley Yates, British Swim School Franchise Owner

    “Just toss ’em in the water; they’ll figure it out!” This approach doesn’t work for every child, and it can create a panic response—a precursor to drowning. On the other end of the spectrum, habitually putting your little ones in a life jacket or arm floaties when visiting pools builds muscle memory around a vertical position, which is the drowning position. In this episode, we shed light on how drowning happens, what layers of protection are critical if floaties aren’t the best tool, and how to navigate the wide range of swim programs to find the right fit for your child and lifestyle. We also address a hard truth for those with particularly water-anxious children: avoiding the whole swim experience can make it much, much worse. Grab your coffee or beverage of choice and lean in as we interview water safety educator and British Swim School of Cypress Spring owner, Ashley Yates, who is also a mom of two. You’ll leave the conversation feeling less stressed, more informed, and better equipped for the warm-weather months—with more enjoyment and safety best practices in mind. Learn more about the British Swim School program here, find a location near you here, and follow Ashley's North Houston school on Instagram here. Show Notes: We are two moms who met on Instagram years ago and quickly bonded over our love of the Montessori philosophy applied to parenting and over nerdy child development research. We decided to take the leap by finally taking our chats out of our DMs and inviting you to listen along as we chat about all things motherhood. Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned work-from-home and now Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠ Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    53 min
  6. 11. How We Prep Our Big Kids for Drop-Off Play Dates

    Mar 30

    11. How We Prep Our Big Kids for Drop-Off Play Dates

    In this episode, we normalize the worries and bloopers that can weigh on our minds as parents when we transition from “sittervising” our children’s playdates to that first drop-off. It’s a milestone that’s rarely talked about, yet can feel surprisingly big those first few times—whether you’re the hosting home or the one entrusting your child to someone else for a few hours. We candidly chat through: When we started noticing signs of readinessThe questions we prioritize when vetting for safetyThe conversations and social courtesies we encourage our children to practice when visiting someone else’s homeBecause here’s the thing: big kids can bring big energy. They’re still learning, still growing, and need space to stretch their independence—but within limits and guidance that help their “social play era” run smoothly. This is a must-listen if your child is 5+ and you’re right on the cusp of this next stage—when kids start widening their horizons and craving more peer play in non–adult-led settings. Show Notes: We are two moms who met on Instagram years ago and quickly bonded over our love of the Montessori philosophy applied to parenting and over nerdy child development research. We decided to take the leap by finally taking our chats out of our DMs and inviting you to listen along as we chat about all things motherhood. Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned work-from-home and now Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠ Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    39 min
  7. 10. What the “Play Before 7 Is Enough" Messaging Leaves Out with Educator Melanny Dominguez

    Mar 16

    10. What the “Play Before 7 Is Enough" Messaging Leaves Out with Educator Melanny Dominguez

    “Play is purposeful, but play alone is not an equalizer. Equity requires intentional access to language and math experiences,” writes educator Melanny Dominguez in a recent post that went viral on her mentorship page, @MelsMontessori. Melanny is a Montessori homeschool educator, a former traditional classroom teacher, and a bilingual mother of two. After a decade in conventional education, she shifted toward a developmentally grounded Montessori approach that prioritizes strong early foundations, concrete learning, and respect for how children naturally develop. Through her content and consulting work, she helps families move beyond social media trends to build intentional learning environments rooted in research and child development. In this episode, we invite her to the table for a deeper, more nuanced conversation challenging a commonly oversimplified — and often false — dichotomy parents are fed about the early years: that you either prioritize academics or you prioritize play- as if supporting cognitive development and honoring the simple joys of childhood are mutually exclusive. We unpack why this isn’t actually an either-or; both are foundational in the early years. Play builds critical cognitive, social, and emotional architecture. Explicit instruction (sometimes offered through *guided play) can strengthen language, numeracy, and knowledge acquisition. The two are not adversaries. And both are joyful! At the same time, we examine the layer of privilege embedded in the phrase “just play until 7.” That messaging leaves significant room for misinterpretation and often overlooks the resources, time, environment, and adult expertise required to make play developmentally facilitative, literacy-rich, and nature-based. When offered as blanket advice, "just play," risks widening existing gaps in disadvantaged communities. Grab your coffee or beverage of choice and lean in with an open mind for this one! *Guided play as supported by research blends child-led exploration with intentional adult scaffolding to support academic, cognitive, and socio-emotional development. This approach can feel drowned out by the noise of today's "free play," and "independent play" trends on social media in which messaging largely encourages parents to lean back and just remove themselves (which has a time and a place and brings its own benefits to child development, but when overemphasized, leaves out for parents when "leaning in" is valuable – ahem, when there is a learning goal!) About the Co-Hosts Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned work-from-home mom and now Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠ Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    47 min
  8. 9: Real Talk on Family Dinners: Navigating Mealtime Manners and Restaurant Outings with Kids

    Mar 2

    9: Real Talk on Family Dinners: Navigating Mealtime Manners and Restaurant Outings with Kids

    In this episode, we share our honest motherhood reflections on mealtime wins and woes with our children over the years. We talk about the challenges and highlights while sharing in laughter and reprieve as our kids move more into middle childhood. We’re starting to see little wins come through: stronger tolerance for waiting at a restaurantmore confidence ordering independently efficiency around helping to prepare and clean up together at homeand the tangible benefits of the ritual itself—packed with quality time and backed by research as a simple way to build resilience and support healthier physical, mental and emotional wellbeing. Don’t under-estimate family meals, whether at home or out and about! Whether it’s breakfast, lunch or dinner that your crew can prioritize, this simple ritual is an incredible opportunity to connect, bond, and build healthy habits. It doesn’t have to happen perfectly every day; every family’s capacity and circumstances look different, so make it make sense for you! Show Notes We are two moms who met on Instagram years ago and quickly bonded over our love of the Montessori philosophy applied to parenting and over nerdy child development research. We decided to take the leap by taking our chats out of DMs and inviting you to listen along as we chat about all things motherhood. Gloria is a former 1st grade public school teacher turned work-from-home and Montessori homeschooling mom to her 6 and 4.5 year old. She mentors parents on Montessori homeschooling online and has created multiple masterclasses for parents and educators on how to teach children to read at a foundational level. You can find more about her mentorship program by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠ ⁠and more about her masterclasses and other printables she has created for homeschoolers by ⁠⁠clicking here⁠. ⁠You can find her on Instagram ⁠@MontessoriMamaLife⁠. Jenna is a mom of three, communications strategist and child development writer. With a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a specialization in sociology, she began her career in newsrooms and nonprofits before discovering her true calling in education. She partners with Montessori school teams to strengthen their outreach, refine family communications, and foster deeper connections between parents and educators. You can follow her musings on Instagram ⁠@holdingspacemontessori. ⁠

    31 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

Grab a coffee and lean in with two mom friends as they process the mess, the magic, and everything in between that comes with motherhood.

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