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When Life Demands More of You: Anna’s Story of Stretching, Surrendering, and Surprising Herself

Some episodes feel fun and light. This one feels sacred.

Today on Get Mom Ready, Meredith and Holly sit down with our dear friend and co-host Anna—her first full episode back after a couple months away navigating her daughter Emmie’s fourth heart surgery.

And I can’t overstate this: her honesty, clarity, and resilience left both of us speechless (and a little teary).

This episode is a conversation about what happens when life demands more of you than you ever thought you had.

It’s about adrenaline and advocacy, fear and fortitude, and the very real stretch of motherhood that doesn’t happen in curated moments—but in hospital chairs, sleepless nights, and the tiny victories of a 3-year-old taking her medicine.

It’s also about growth. Not the Instagram kind. The kind you only recognize when you look back and realize:

“Wow. I handled that differently than the last time. I’m not the same person anymore.”

Below are a few of the biggest themes from Anna’s story—offered gently, because if you’re in a season of crisis, transition, or simply feeling stretched thin…this episode will meet you there.

1. Seasons Give Us Permission to Be Different

One of the most powerful things Anna said was this:

“I can cognitively know it’s a season, but I don’t always give myself permission to live like it is.”

Same, girl. Same.

This time, she let herself do the season she was in:
— Eat protein bars at midnight instead of real meals
— Sleep upright in a hospital chair
— Let the house go
— Let her normal rhythms go
— Let her expectations go
— Let herself be held instead of holding everything together

And in doing so, she found a grace and groundedness she didn’t even know she was capable of.

What would shift for you if you stopped fighting your season…and started cooperating with it?

2. You Don’t Know Your Capacity Until Life Pulls It Out of You

This may be the quote of the year:

“Our boundaries aren’t stretched and pushed—and we don’t grow—until our circumstances demand it.”

Anna didn’t set out to be a superhuman.
She didn’t choose this level of endurance.
She didn’t wake up with a plan for how to stay connected, calm, and present through medical trauma.

But when the moment required it, something in her rose.

Not perfectly.
Not without tears.
Not without frustration.
Not without breakdowns in bathroom stalls and whispered prayers for strength.

But she rose.

There is a kind of strength inside mothers that only emerges in fire. And it doesn’t arrive with fanfare. It arrives because it has to.

3. Parenting Requires Curiosity, Not Control

A moment that stopped us in our tracks:
Emmie refusing her medication—refusing it so consistently that the hospital wouldn’t discharge her.

Every mom listening felt that tension:
The stakes are high. You’re exhausted. Your patience is fried. You just want your baby to please take the medicine so you can go home.

But instead of forcing or panicking, Anna—along with her support team—got curious.

What would motivate her?
How does her little mind work?
What matters to her right now?

When they realized the strongest motivator was separation from Mom, everything shifted.
And later, when she learned “taking medicine = staying home,” the reasoning clicked.

What a beautiful reminder:

Kids aren’t giving us a hard time. They’re having a hard time.
And parenting is less about control, more about creativity and connection.

4. You Can Do Hard Things, But You Don’t Have To Do Them Alone

Anna talked about the difference between this surgery and the last one.

Last time:
— Phillip had shingles
— He couldn’t stay in the room
— He lost his job
— She felt isolated, overwhelmed, and underwater

This time:
— He was able to be present
— He brought his science mind to medication decisions
— They operated as a team
— They supported, relieved, and uplifted each other

And somewhere in the mix—of prayer, personal growth, and simply time—something healed between them.

Not magically.
Not in a straight line.
But enough to carry them through one of the hardest seasons of their lives with unity and tenderness.

This episode is a reminder that marriage in crisis doesn’t have to collapse. Sometimes, it becomes the lifeboat.

5. Growth Isn’t Perfection—It’s Progress

One thing we deeply appreciate about Anna: she made it clear she wasn’t a saint in that hospital room.

She broke down.
She got frustrated.
She lost her temper.
She complained.
She was human.

But she saw her growth.
She noticed the difference in her mindset.
She noticed the new strength inside herself.
She noticed the gentleness she extended to her own heart.
She noticed she was becoming someone more rooted, more resilient, more aware.

Progress, not perfection.
Always.

(We’re putting that on a mug. Or a sweatshirt. Or Anna’s forehead. TBD.)

If You’re a Medical Mom—or a Mom in Crisis—You Are Not Alone

If this episode stirred something tender in you, please know:

You don’t have to walk your hard season alone.

Anna has created incredibly thoughtful resources for medical moms, available for free right here on GetMomReady.com.
Meredith has her wellness guide.
Hannah has grounding and mindset tools.
Holly has her working-mom and household-systems resources.

You can find all of it here:

GetMomReady.com
Everything is free. No paywall, no hoops.

Scroll a bit—articles and videos mix together on Substack—but everything is there waiting for you.

Get Mom Ready is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Listen to the Full Episode

You’ll hear:

• The moment Emmie understood “medicine = home”
• How Anna managed her mental health while being literally unable to leave her daughter’s side
• How she and Phillip strengthened their marriage through trauma
• The surprising joy she found in being a temporary stay-at-home mom
• Why seasons matter—and how to live inside yours with more grace
• And yes, the story behind the infamous “beef water” protein powder

Sponsor Love

A huge thank-you to our sponsor Pediped — use code MOMREADY for 20% off your first order of high-quality children’s shoes.

If this episode touched you, please share it with a friend who needs to feel less alone today.

Thanks for reading Get Mom Ready! This post is public so feel free to share it.

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We’ll see you next week, mama.
You’re doing so much better than you think.

💛
Holly, Meredith & Anna

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