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Published: 16:29 BST, 21 August 2021 | Updated: 16:31 BST, 21 August 2021
She's reveling in her status as a new mother.
And Mandy Moore shared just a glimpse at her routine with a sweet morning selfie with her six-month-old son August on Saturday.
The 37-year-old actress looked effortlessly beautiful in the family snap after admitting she struggled with feelings of extreme 'isolation' being a first-time mother during the pandemic.
Just the two of us: Mandy Moore shared just a glimpse at her routine with a sweet morning selfie with her six-month-old son August on Saturday
Mandy showed off her messy bed head and wore a pair of gold glasses as she cuddled her son in her lap.
'Mom and goosey mornings,' she wrote across the image, which was shared to her Instagram stories in the early hours of the day.
Moore recently reflected on her struggles as a new mother during an Instagram Live discussion with licensed psychologist and perinatal mental health specialist Dr. Ashurina Ream.
She endured feelings of extreme 'isolation' being a first-time mother who was also learning how to parent during the pandemic.
Honest approach: Mandy Moore reflected on her struggles as a new mother during an Instagram Live discussion with licensed psychologist and perinatal mental health specialist Dr. Ashurina Ream
Moore simply stunned wearing a bright red Batsheva taffeta dress with delicate white flowers for the chat on social media.
'I had these preconceived notions of myself going into motherhood,' Mandy shared. 'Obviously, I knew it was going to be challenging, but I thought, "Oh, I maybe have this sort of naturally maternal side," whatever the heck that means.
'But I guess I just didn't really recognize the worries, the fears, the sense of responsibility that is so ever-present moving forward once you become a mom.'
The This Is Us star gave birth to son August in the peak of the coronavirus pandemic, which limited her exposure to other family's experiencing life with a newborn.
Difficult: The 37-year-old actress endured feelings of extreme 'isolation' being a first-time mother who was also learning how to parent during the pandemic
Bold: Moore simply stunned wearing a bright red Batsheva taffeta dress with delicate white flowers for the chat on social media
Mandy admitted: 'I guess when I imagined motherhood, I sort of imagined like, oh, you find community… and you go to Mommy-and-Me classes and baby classes.'
'And I'm sure that's a reality for some people in different parts of the country. But I don't know if it's something that I would feel necessarily the most comfortable with at this point in time, just considering what we're kind of living through.'
She was forced to reframe her 'expectations' of what it's like to be a mom and connect with others.
'The isolation is something that's really hit me that I wasn't necessarily expecting,' Mandy admitted.
Doing her best: The This Is Us star gave birth to son August in the peak of the coronavirus pandemic, which limited her exposure to other family's experiencing life with a newborn
'I think it coincided with the chaos and the energy of those early months and weeks starting to wane,' she said. 'Our time with sort of extra support was coming to an end. It was really scary, and it makes me emotional to think about now'
When her son Gus was just three-months-old, Mandy was 'hit with this wave of just not feeling good enough.'
'I think it coincided with the chaos and the energy of those early months and weeks starting to wane,' she said. 'Our time with sort of extra support was coming to an end. It was really scary, and it makes me emotional to think about now. I still feel like I'm in it, but I'm finding my footing.'
She added: 'I think as his needs really started to continue to change… I just felt this rush of like, "I'm not good enough for him." I don't know how to be his mom. I know how to feed him, but beyond that, am I suited for this?'
'I just felt so ineffective, and I would look at my husband who just seemed to have a supernatural ability to take care of Gus. Like, he could make him smile. He could make him laugh. He would get on the floor and roll around with him. And I just felt like whatever I did it just wasn't right, and I couldn't get him to sleep, and it made me feel horrible.'
Mandy admitted she's constantly 'learning' about herself and finding grace as a first-time mother.
'I know nothing, but I'm still here putting myself through the paces of just stopping and breathing through it,' she said. 'Recognizing that I'm best when I trust my own instincts, remembering that everything is a phase.'
'I just felt so ineffective, and I would look at my husband who just seemed to have a supernatural ability to take care of Gus. Like, he could make him smile. He could make him laugh,' she said of husband Taylor Goldsmith
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I’m a wife and mother with a small at-home business and a fairly normal life. One of my tasks is sharing carpool duties for my teenage son and his sports team buddies to and from practice and competitions. As it happens, my husband and I haven’t had sex for over two years due to various medical and psychological issues. My husband’s aware of the problem, but it’s been very stressful, and we need to make changes. The other day I picked up my son’s teammates, and I felt a surge of sexual attraction. I was horrified! I would rather cut off my limbs than cause harm to a minor—or cheat on my husband, for that matter. I want to quit carpool because these feelings make me ashamed and deeply uncomfortable. But then I’d have to come up with a plausible explanation that would still enable my son to be in the carpool. If I drive him solo, everyone will wonder what the problem is. Can you think of a solution here?
I agree that you need to quit the carpool , both for the sake of your own mental health and in the best interests of the kids. If they were capable of driving themselves, you’d have mentioned that as a possible solution, so my read here is that these kids are not in the 16-to-18 range. One potential pitfall I want to help you avoid is this: that you’ll feel like you can’t possibly tell anyone, not even a therapist, that you were attracted to teenagers; that the best thing you can do is keep this to yourself forever; and that in order to keep anyone from asking invasive questions, you have to keep driving the kids to practice and relying solely on your own willpower and self-loathing to get through the next couple of years. That is a recipe for disaster. Tell the other parents that, effective immediately, you’re no longer available to drive the kids to practice. Even if it’s inconvenient, the absolute worst thing that can happen in that scenario is that a couple of student athletes miss a few practices. No one is going to lose a job or die or fail to get into college. The kids will be fine, and the other parents will figure something out. You do not have to go into details about why. Don’t apologize more than once, and then just say it’s not possible for you to drive any longer.
The most important thing is not that you find a face-saving explanation for why you cannot drive the carpool again. The most important thing—after you make sure you’re not alone with the kids anymore—is that you find a therapist you can start talking to honestly about this right away. You haven’t done anything wrong. You didn’t choose to feel the way you did in the car, nor did you seek out any sexual gratification with your son’s friends. But if you continue to drive these boys, and if you continue to connect your attraction to them with your own frustrations about your marriage and to mentally wallow in shame, you will create a situation where doing something wrong will get easier and easier. The good news is that you’re a sane adult in full possession of her faculties, and you have the power to exit that situation right now.
My mother and I are not rich, but we make enough to put food on the table and a roof over our heads. My mom’s co-worker, “Deb,” has been struggling since her car died, so my mom offered to take her two daughters on a shopping trip at the local thrift store. My mom has a full-time job but makes minimum wage, and she couldn’t afford more than that. It’s perfectly nice stuff but pretty cheap—it’s where we buy all our clothes. I drove us there. The older girl didn’t say hello and never looked up from her phone. The younger one was excited and grateful. When we arrived, the older girl yelped in disappointment because she “thought we were going to the mall.” She never stopped sneering and commented loudly about how tacky and awful everything was. My mother was almost in tears. She’d told them she could spend $50 on each of them. The older girl grabbed a leather jacket that cost $40 and refused to put anything else back. My mother started to apologize to the little brat. I grabbed the clothes out of her hands and told her to go to the car. She started to protest. I told her to shut her mouth or I would shut it for her. We drove back in silence.
As soon as we pulled up, the older girl started “crying.” I told my mother to wait in the car. Deb started to defend her daughter and how “dare” I treat her baby that way. I told Deb her daughter was an ungrateful brat and her parenting was a disgrace. She took advantage of my mother’s good heart, and she’d better make herself right with the Lord. The younger girl piped up that her sister had been “very mean.” I told Deb to never ask my mother for a favor again. Later, my mother scolded me and told me I shouldn’t have acted like that. She was only a “little girl.” I replied that if I’d acted like that at 4, I wouldn’t have been able to sit down for a day. This girl was 14. Deb isn’t talking to her. My mother is in her 60s and has too good a heart. She will drain herself dry for a stranger and then apologize for not having more. I am frustrated. My mother has been taken advantage of in the past, and that is why she lives with me. My own sons never would dare act like this girl. I don’t know what else I could have done.
Please do whatever you have to do to make sure that you never again behave like that, because right now you cannot be trusted to act like a responsible adult. Frankly, I’m worried about your mother, who has to live with you and whom you apparently tell to “wait in the car” like she’s a child herself so you can scream at one of her co-workers for objecting after you scream at her teenage daughter.
Your own description of your behavior, even at your most self-justifying (because it’s clear you believe yourself to have acted sanely) is absolutely unhinged. Yes, a teenager you don’t know was rude to your 60-year-old mother. You and your mother could have stuck to your budget, ignored her rudeness, and reminded yourselves that she’s a down-on-her-luck teenager who might very well feel embarrassed to be taken on a charity run to the thrift store with two near-strangers. This girl was not going to make off with your mother’s wallet or start hitting her up for leather jacket money on a weekly basis. Your mother was not in immediate danger, and if you truly wanted to help her through an embarrassing moment, you could have discreetly asked your mother what she needed from you in that moment. Instead, you grabbed clothes out of the girl’s hands and threatened to hurt her in front of a store full of people. I don’t think she was “crying” when she got home—I think she was genuinely terrified of you. To follow up physically threatening a 14-year-old girl in public by telling her mother that she’s a “disgrace” who stands in danger of hell is just certifiably, catastrophically dangerous judgment. You need to start seeing a therapist who specializes in anger management immediately. Make it your No. 1 priority, and start living your life in such a way that you never feel the need to justify your decision to threaten children for being impolite.
If your parents would have beaten you so viciously that you couldn’t sit down for being rude when you were 4, I am truly sorry. Adults should not hit children, regardless of how disrespectful they have been. We don’t encourage adults to solve problems with their co-workers or friends or partners by hitting them, so it stands to reason that we shouldn’t try to solve problems with our children by hitting them, just because they’re too small and vulnerable to fight back. Your relish for wallowing in your own anger and threatening people you barely know is unacceptable. You need to immediately and radically change the orientation of your heart.
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I am a bisexual woman in a good relationship with a cis man, and I am comfortably out with my friends. But I wonder how much I need to put myself on the line for the cause. My mother is homophobic. Though I try to engage her in constructive conversations regarding sexuality, even by posing “hypotheticals” about myself, I have never come out to her. I know my mom loves me, but I expect coming out to her to be uncomfortable and hurtful. Do you think coming out to her could potentially help with a perspective shift? Would it just be opening an unnecessary can of worms since I’m in a straight relationship right now? Am I a “bad” bisexual for not using my privilege to push these difficult conversations in my own sphere? I do feel guilty about this, but I am admittedly scared to rock the boat.
I truly don’t know if it will help . There are a lot of parents who eventually come around to accepting their queer kids, even parents who have formerly dedicated their lives to homophobia. But there are also a lot of parents who stay just as committed to homophobia until the day they die, no matter how many of their kids come out. It might feel depressingly freeing to just acknowledge that whether you’re out to her or not, your mother’s homophobia is already preventing you from having a close, trusting, emotionally safe relationship with her. So in that regard, you may not have much to lose by disclosing your bisexuality to her. But coming out isn’t something you owe the greater LGBTQ community. It’s something you should do if you feel it would unburden or help you, not out of a sense of guilt that you’re not doing enough for other people.
I have no interest in adjudicating whether you a
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-9914697/Mandy-Moore-shares-sweet-morning-selfie-six-month-old-son-August.html
https://slate.com/human-interest/2019/12/dear-prudence-sexual-attraction-son-teenage-friends-carpool.html
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