The Shadow Side of Mothering  - Rebelle Society 2019

Many years ago at the height of my struggles as a Mother to my 4 children I found myself  visualising the Goddess Medusa* snakes coming out of my head, a crazed look in my eyes and if  you ask my children, a slightly scary disposition. I would use humour at these times, often laughing  and sharing with others that when I was struggling as a mother, I was channeling Medusa. 

Though I made light of these times I did not understand where this innate comparison with  Medusa had come from. Medusa not reflecting the cultural image of the natural, all giving Mother  yet somehow there seemed to be a relevance in her image when I was challenged by  motherhood. At the time I remember feeling suffocated by this ideal Mother image, struggling to  be the mother my children needed, the all sacrificing mother our culture places on a pedestal. At  the time I had no idea I was actually acting from the energy of the Internalised Death Mother  Archetype. This Archetype is as scary as it sounds and the reason I am sharing this story is  because as womxn and mothers we need to start to dispel the ideal of what mother is. 

Medusa, originally a beautiful gorgon, was seduced by the God Poisedon in Athen’s temple. Upon  hearing what had happened in her temple Athena, the Goddess of war and power cursed Medusa  to a hideous form with a stare that would turn any person who looked at her into stone. This myth is  referred to in the Death Mother Archetype, what Marion Woodman ‘calls one of the most significant  archetypes of this time’.

The Death Mother believes that her child was born to serve her. A child raised by a Death Mother  shapes themselves to fit in with the mother to make themselves more amenable and pleas-able to  the Mother, who is very critical, unpredictable and invested in building a co-dependant  relationship with the child. As the child grows with the Death Mother they eventually internalise  this energy which will rise up as the voice that criticises or puts the individual down as they grow  into adulthood, eventually becoming the Internalised Death Mother. 

The Death Mother is a mother (and can also be a father) who wishes for her child to be different, a  part of that child to die or even the child die themselves. Death Mother energy is often an  inherited energy that comes from your own MotherLine, FatherLine and from a culture that  idealises what mother is, creating deep wounds and traumatising the mother as she journeys  Motherhood. We live in a Death Mother culture, where there are particular expectations, a forced  and commercialised ideal and image of what mother is. A total lack of services and support for  womxn and their children and under a patriarchal system that preaches productivity over  connection and compassion, it is little wonder that women are struggling to mother in a way that  is honest, open and authentic. Mothering has become a bankable commercial venture, with new  ways of parenting, the latest toy, premium pram and designer outfit for both mothers and babies  that feeds and perpetuates this image of the ideal mother. 

Though what I see in this Death Mother culture is that more and more womxn and mothers are  feeling isolated and unsupported, the demand on the family unit is so high that family units are fractured and failing. Children with mental health issues are on the rise and the Death Mother  energy is very well and thriving in our global community. 

I believe that the Death Mother energy is the most corrosive part of what I see as the Mother  Wound. It diminishes creativity and vitality, creating a fear around change and concretising this  fear within the body. If Death Mother energy is not confronted and identified within then this  inherited legacy is projected onto others around the person who has the Internalised Death  Mother energy, including colleagues, friends and partners. This subtle but very frightening energy  is identified as a trauma response, freezing within when you are confronted with your Internalised  Death Mother, Death Mother herself or Death Mother energy, much like the look of Medusa who  kills her victims by looking into their eyes. 

Death Mother energy can be healed but it is a long and committed pathway of identifying Death  Mother energy in your life and cultivating compassion around its debilitating effects. 

For me identifying my Internalised Death Mother happened some 25 years ago though I hadn’t  heard of the name then and through the work of healing my own Mother Wound for close to 20 years has brought me to see the Death Mother not just as debilitating but as a shadow part of  what it is to be a mother. The whole idea that as mothers we need to be perfect is why Death  Mother energy is on the rise, why womxn compete against each other, why the patriarchy still 

holds power, why we are struggling as womxn and mothers to feel seen and heard. For us to fully  heal from our Mother Wound we must embrace Death Mother, not turn from her and pretend she  and our shadow does not exist. Death Mother is in all of us from time to time through personal  and cultural influences, it is not something we talk about but it is an integral part of who we are as  womxn and mothers. To be fully connected women and mothers we must learn to walk in both  the shadow and light. Until we claim the not spoken about parts of mothering we will always be  invested and suffocated by a Death Mother culture and Death Mother energy that tells us to be  less or more but not who we are as ourselves. 

We need places and spaces where we can be open and honest about mothering, and particularly  the stuff we feel too guilty or ashamed to talk about. Death Mother lives in shame and secrecy  and the best way to deal with her is to bring her out into the light so we can cultivate self compassion and self-love. Be more connected mothers and womxn and feel the riches and joy of  what it is to be a whole mother and when our Medusa comes out to play we can meet her with  openness and love. 

* No children were hurt while my Medusa was out

Love Briony Montgomery

Briony Victoria

Founder of The Somatherapy Collective, which is focused on therapeutic non-invasive approach that honours the wisdom of the body and supports women in reconnecting with their innate capacity for healing and self-regulation.

https://www.thesomatherapycollective.com
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