“This Jungian Life” Podcast: The Dark Side of Mothering

Mother and Child. West Mexico, 100 BC-AD 200. Earthenware, white slip with black and red paint. Walter Art Museum, Baltimore, MD. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Our colleague Puddi Kullberg, author of The Bad Mother, joins us to acknowledge motherhood’s shadow. Our culture idealizes motherhood, but mothers everywhere have experienced themselves as bad in varying ways and to various degrees.

Jung suggests that even truly harmful mothers can expiate their actions by becoming conscious of what they have done. If we can face even grievous mistakes, we can deepen into our ordinary, sometimes dark humanity. Confrontation with our negative mothering leads to experiencing emotions that were previously unrecognized or denied.

We can mitigate isolation by getting help. We can be known, our experience is understandable, and we can choose the life that lies before us now. We may also discover new capacity for compassion and presence — and moments of genuine joy. 

from Stewart, D., Marchiano, L., & Lee, J. (2021, August 26). Episode 160 The Dark Side of Mothering – This Jungian Life.

Discover more from Matthew M. Sholler, Psy.D.

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.