I Chose my C-Section Date
Go ahead and have feelings about that.
I chose my C-section date. Yep. Declined the induction, thank you very much.
In Episode 1 of Tell Me I’m a Good Mom, I get into all of it. The gestational diabetes that changed everything. The decision to schedule a C-section that I made with full agency and zero apology. And the part I never saw coming: high blood pressure at my 38-week checkup that sent me into the OR right away, days before my scheduled date, completely by surprise. But here is the thing. The C-section was not the scariest part. The scariest moment of this entire experience happened the day after Nelle was born, when I thought it was all over and I was finally safe. It resulted in 15 doctors and nurses sprinting into my room.
Episode 1 is where I tell the whole story.
🎧 Listen on Spotify: here OR
📺 Watch on YouTube: here
I went into my pregnancy as the most relaxed person in the room. No birth plan. No spreadsheet. No Pinterest board of affirmations. Just me, going with the flow, trusting my body, the whole thing.
And then gestational diabetes showed up and laughed in my face.
Suddenly I had a plan. Four insulin shots a day, a scheduled delivery date, and a decision that I knew people would have opinions about. I looked at my health history, sat with my doctor, and made the call that felt right for me and for Nelle. I felt relief the moment it was on the calendar. And I am not sorry about that.
People will tell you a scheduled C-section is the easy way out. They think it’s the lazy woman’s delivery plan.
I am ten weeks postpartum and I can tell you with complete honesty that it is not easier. It is just a different kind of hard. And I will be honest with you, there are parts of it I have some regrets about. Things I wish I had known. Things I wish someone had told me before I made that choice, not to change my mind, but to actually prepare me for what was coming.
Episode 1 is live right now. I recorded half of it pregnant and half of it after, because I wanted you to hear both versions in real time.
🎧 Listen on Spotify: here OR
📺 Watch on YouTube: here
The Good Mom Group Chat
When I put a form on Instagram last week asking moms to share their stories with me, over 400 women responded overnight. I have been sitting with these responses for days and I am honestly still emotional about it. The honesty, the vulnerability, the willingness to share the hardest parts of something so personal with a stranger on the internet. It means everything to me and it is exactly why I made this show.
I want to share three of those stories with you today because they belong in this conversation.
Hayley Edwards had a textbook pregnancy. Easy, uncomplicated, exactly what you hope for. Her daughter arrived safely after 13 hours of labor and one hour of pushing. And then postpartum arrived, and nothing was what she expected. The complications were hers, not her baby’s, and the mental health impact of that gap, the one between “everything went fine” and “I am not okay,” is something she is still sitting with. I think about how many women are living inside that exact gap right now, quietly, convinced they have no right to struggle because the birth went well. You do. You absolutely do.
One woman, who asked to remain anonymous, had an emergency C-section she never saw coming. She had never had surgery before. She was a fitness girlie. And then they cut her open and her body was never the same. She writes: “It is something I am still healing from and it is a weird dynamic because I would do it over again.” I find that last part so honest and so human. Holding gratitude and grief at the same time is one of the hardest things motherhood asks of us. She is doing it. And she is not alone.
Christina Beres has been through things that most people will never fully understand unless they have lived them. IVF. A postpartum medical emergency. Peripartum cardiomyopathy. A daughter born at 28 weeks who spent 70 days in the NICU. She says she is still working through her own trauma and that she wants to share so other moms do not feel alone. Christina, I hear you. What you carried, and what you are still carrying, is extraordinary. The fact that you want to turn that into something that helps other women is exactly the kind of courage this show exists to celebrate.
Three different stories. Three different versions of “I thought I was ready.” All of them carrying something the world never thought to ask about.
This is exactly the kind of conversation Tell Me I’m a Good Mom exists to have. And I want yours in it too.
If you have a story you want to share, whether it is for a future episode, a community piece, or just because you need someone to hear it, I want to read it. Fill out the form here. Nothing has to be perfect. Nothing has to be resolved. I just want the truth.
And if you have not listened to Episode 1 yet, this is your sign.
🎧 Listen on Spotify: here OR
📺 Watch on YouTube: here
You Are Doing a Good Job. I mean it.
Lo x

I’m really excited to be a part of this community. My son will be 13 soon and each stage of life for us both is never as planned! Happy to learn and share! ❤️
My kids are 10 and 6 now, but your birth plan and story are validating the choices and experiences I had so many years ago 💙🩷