Hi, I'm Kendra

I’ve been married to a neurosurgeon since 2003. I’ve lived every season of medicine, from residency with four young children to attending life and I know firsthand that external stability doesn’t automatically create internal peace. I spent years waiting to feel better. When that didn’t happen on its own, I started untangling who I had become inside survival mode. Now, as a Professional Certified Coach, I help physician spouses do the same.

Episode 49: The Truth About Motherhood, Identity, and Loneliness in a Medical Marriage

Mother’s Day can feel like the one day a year the world finally sees you. It can also feel like the loneliest Sunday of the year. Sometimes both, in the same afternoon.

Today we’re talking about the real experience of motherhood inside a physician marriage, the sacred parts and the hard parts, and why honoring both at once is not a contradiction.

In this episode, we talk about:

  • The four-word question (“What do you do?”) and why the hardest version of it isn’t the one asked at a dinner party — it’s the one you ask yourself at 11pm when the house is quiet
  • The specific loneliness of raising children in a physician marriage: not single-mom loneliness, not the loneliness of a struggling marriage, but something in between that doesn’t have a clean name and is therefore hard to even justify feeling
  • The career divergence that quietly widens every year his expertise deepening, his earning potential growing, yours narrowing or on hold, and why noticing that gap doesn’t make you ungrateful
  • The difference between “I am a mother” as peace and “I am a mother” as resignation, and why you deserve to know which one you’re actually living in
  • Why survival mode doesn’t make you a bad mother it just puts a kind of glass between you and your life, so you can see it and be present for it without fully inhabiting it

You’ll hear:

  • Kendra’s honest reflection on reading “I Am a Mother” by Jane Clayson Johnson wanting to feel settled in that answer, and instead feeling pride layered over a quiet fear of disappearing
  • The resentment-guilt cycle described exactly as it lives in the body: the resentment that feels honest, and the guilt that feels like punishment for having it
  • Why what looks like anger at your husband is often grief, grief for a version of yourself that didn’t happen, or hasn’t happened yet
  • The specific joy Kendra describes finding not in planned moments or documented milestones, but in ordinary afternoons in the car when her kids are just talking and she gets to hear who they actually are

This episode is especially for you if:

  • You have spent years showing up for everyone in your household and cannot quite explain why you still feel so alone, because you are not technically alone
  • You find yourself quietly grieving a professional identity or intellectual life that got set aside during this season, and then feeling ashamed of the grief like noticing it makes you a bad wife
  • Mother’s Day brings up something complicated, pride and exhaustion and love and a wish that the recognition didn’t have to wait for one Sunday in May

Links & resources mentioned:
Download our free guide, Life After Survival Mode here

Stay connected:
Follow us on Instagram: @supportingphysicianspouses | @kendra_itgetsbetternow
Learn more about coaching: www.itgetsbetternow.com

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Life After Survival Mode

A private reflection guide for physician spouses who thought it would feel better by now.

HI, I’M KENDRA

I’ve been married to a neurosurgeon since 2003. I’ve lived every season of medicine, from residency with four young children to attending life,  and I know firsthand that external stability doesn’t automatically create internal peace. I spent years waiting to feel better. When that didn’t happen on its own, I started untangling who I had become inside survival mode. Now, as a Professional Certified Coach, I help physician spouses do the same.

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