Nothing can prepare you for the monumental shifts that come with motherhood and more often than not women are forced to reconcile these changes on their own. How are you different and how are you the same as you were before kids? How do you navigate work, motherhood, relationships, and life in a way that leaves you feeling fulfilled? Which needs can be met through motherhood and which needs must be met through the continued development of self?
In this group you'll connect with other moms and explore the impact work and motherhood have had on your identities while rediscovering and redefining your own sense of self.
In this workshop you will:
Discuss the conflicting stories and narratives we have been taught and told about work and motherhood.
Explore the different components that make us who we are and identify potential areas for attention or growth.
Understand your personal relationship with work, motherhood, and self.
Make sense of the often complex career and identity shifts that happen in the midst of motherhood.
Expand your vision of who you really are and all you can be!
This workshop is for:
Women at any stage of motherhood who are navigating work transitions, career pauses, or identity shifts.
Anyone feeling burnt out, overwhelmed, or seeking more balance in life, work, and motherhood.
Mothers who are considering a transition from staying home back to work or from working to staying home.
Cost: $45 (10% off for Metta Yoga members applies automatically at checkout)
FOLLOW THE STEPS TO BOOK:
Step 1) Purchase the credit for this event:
Step 2) Reserve your spot for this event on our class schedule (Do not forget this step!):
About the facilitator:
Tiffany Madvig is a writer, speaker, and identity coach who believes that being a mother requires being honest with ourselves about which needs can be met through motherhood and which needs must be met through the continued development of self. She pushes at the edges of societal expectations and challenges the narrative that motherhood is meant to be selfless work, guiding women back to themselves through her work and through her words.