How Mother Loss Shapes a Daughter
(And What to Do With That Knowledge)
What you’re about to receive comes from 30+ years of dedicated research and thousands of conversations with motherless daughters from around the world.
Below, you’ll find two videos and a guide that walks you through five of the most common ways this loss shapes a daughter's life
The guide also comes with a workbook of reflective exercises and gentle prompts to help you explore the effects of this loss with fresh eyes.
Grab yourself a warm or cold beverage, carve out an hour, and let this time be a way of connecting with both your mother and the girl you were back then
Early Loss (watch this video if your lost your mother when you were in during childhood, adolescence, or young adulthood)
Recent Loss (watch this video if lost your mother within the last twoyears)
Download the companion workbook
Ready to Take This Further?
Now that you have a clearer picture of how your loss has shaped you, the patterns, the grief that resurfaces, the way it quietly shows up in your relationships and your sense of self, I want to share something I've seen again and again in my 30+ years of working with motherless daughters.
Understanding it is one thing.
Processing it with other daughters who are living the same story is another.
That's what Motherless Daughters Circles are for.
Three times a month, daughters from around the world gather on Zoom in a live, trauma-informed space where you can show up exactly as you are. No one here needs things explained. No one here is waiting for you to be "further along." The pace is entirely yours to set.
There are two circles: one for daughters who lost their mothers in early life, and one for those in the first two years of this loss. Both are built around the same belief:
Grief witnessed by daughters who share your history lands differently than anything else.
For a limited time, new members can join at 33% off their first month.
Use code SPECIAL39 at checkout.
Month-to-month. Cancel anytime.
You've been grieving without a witness long enough, sister.
Come pull up a chair and sit with us.