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Lived Experience Archives - Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies: the Montana Coalition

Mother Love is Now the LIFTS Podcast!

By Uncategorized

By Emily Freeman, Podcast Host and HMHB Storytelling Coordinator

New Season, New Name! 

For the past five years, the Mother Love Podcast has been sharing stories of parenting and caregiving in Montana, illuminating the challenges and triumphs of the 0-3 years. In conversation with providers, families, advocates, and more, our podcast aims to illuminate both the challenges and celebrations of pregnancy and parenting, and to provide a space to learn, listen, and uplift Montanans across our vast state. 

Starting this fall, Mother Love is getting a new name: the LIFTS Podcast. You can expect the same great content, but with a show title that fits neatly in line with some of other other projects: the LIFTS online resource guide, and LIFTS magazine. LIFTS stands for Linking Infants and Families to Supports, and it’s one of the things that we do best at HMHB. Additionally, we wanted the name of the podcast to acknowledge the full range of people who support and navigate the perinatal journey: including dads, grandparents, foster parents, and more. 

Exciting Episodes and Voices Coming Your Way

While our name is new, our mission hasn’t changed: to share honest conversations, highlight voices of lived experience, and bring attention to perinatal mental health and family well-being in Montana. We invite you to follow along as we launch new episodes starting in October, featuring a variety of voices and perspectives from around the state. In conversation with Maureen Ward of DPHHS, and Tracie Kiesel from Buckle Up Montana, we’ll learn about Montana’s new carseat law, which brings our state in line with federal safety guidelines. We’ll chat with Suzanne Bendick, of Roots Family Collaborative, about the power of live storytelling to provide a space for connection and healing. And we’ll hear from Mindy Petranek, one of the writers featured in our 2025 LIFTS magazine, about the process of sharing her experience on the page. 

Tune In and Join the Conversation

We hope you’ll tune in and join us for the upcoming season of The Lifts Podcast, which you can find on our website, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts. And if you’ve got a great idea for a guest, let us know! You’re welcome to email us at stories@hmhb-mt.org.

Honoring Stories. Elevating Care.

By Maternal Mental Health

By Emily Freeman, HMHB Storytelling Coordinator

Photos by Kim Giannone

May is Maternal Mental Health Month.

Maternal Mental Health Month can be a good time to remember that motherhood doesn’t always feel – on the inside – quite the same way it appears on the outside. All manner of challenges and stressors may lurk behind the smiling family portrait posted on social media. That perfect mom you see at pre-school pick-up? She may be holding back deep grief over a lost pregnancy, or shame about needing help with a problem she can’t yet put words to, the solution to which she can’t yet identify. 

Perinatal mental health challenges can vary widely. While some issues may require robust support from trained professionals and systems, others can be helped along through person-to-person, community-based care, which we can all be a part of. This can be as simple as smiling at a struggling mom to make her feel seen, and not like her crying baby is a burden; it can be a few small words spoken to a stranger in line at the grocery store: You’re doing great. It can be a weekly moms meetup at the park that begins as a group of strangers, and soon becomes a place to connect, to vent, to heal. These points of human connection are so important. 

Real Stories from Montana Moms

At HMHB, Maternal Mental Health Month provides us with an opportunity to highlight some of the lived experiences that mothers across the state have been bold and generous enough to share. In last year’s issue of LIFTS magazine, Shayla Horner wrote about the support and medical advice she received for her bipolar disorder, allowing her to become the strong and stable mom her daughters deserve. Kelsie Christensen wrote about the encouragement she received from a local moms group which helped her manage her anxiety in the early months of motherhood. On the Mother Love podcast, Rachael Watters shared her harrowing journey through postpartum psychosis, and how she continues to grow and heal.

Insights from Perinatal Mental Health Experts

In addition to these invaluable stories from moms, we’re honored to be able to share the lived experience of our trusted network experts and providers working with, and for, moms and families during this season of life. In the 2023 edition of LIFTS, Dr. Ariela Frieder offered her wisdom and expertise as a perinatal psychiatrist, including a perinatal mood and anxiety disorder checklist for moms, and resources to guide them towards getting the help they might need.

Recent guests on the Mother Love podcast have included Amy Lowney, a labor and delivery nurse who pivoted to postpartum doula work to better address the mental and emotional needs of moms after they left the hospital. Last year, we spoke with perinatal mental health expert Diana Barnes, an episode which not only addressed the way that maternal mental health can have unintended legal consequences, but provided an opportunity for listeners to hear mothers across two generations in conversation about their own experiences with postpartum mood disorders.  

Explore the LIFTS Resource Guide

Maternal Mental Health is a good time to share and bookmark our LIFTS online resource guide. LIFTS offers a searchable, and frequently updated, database of resources around the state, with categories such as Mental Health Providers, Family Support and Education, Cultural Connections, and more. It’s a great resource to share with parents, or with providers who interface with, and support, families during this season of life. 

In June, we’re hosting the 8th annual Perinatal Mental Health Conference, a chance for providers from across the state to come together to share, strategize, and enjoy the camaraderie of a vast network of those who work collectively to improve and sustain the health of moms in our state. We’re looking forward to learning together, and pooling the knowledge that each of us will bring from our different pocket of this vast and diversely resourced state. You can get a taste of the conference by viewing Dr. Samantha Greenberg’s “Perinatal Mental Health 101” session from last year’s conference. If you’d like to join us this year, you can find more information and register here.