

What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood | Parenting Tips From Funny Moms
Margaret Ables and Amy Wilson
When you're a parent, every day brings a "fresh hell" to deal with. In other words, there's always something. Think of us as your funny mom friends who are here to remind you: you're not alone, and it won't always be this hard.We're Amy Wilson and Margaret Ables, both busy moms of three kids, but with completely different parenting styles. Margaret is a laid-back to the max; Amy never met a spreadsheet or an organizational system she didn't like.In each episode of "What Fresh Hell" we offer lots of laughs, but also practical advice, parenting strategies, and tips to empower you in your role as a mom. We explore self-help techniques, as well as ways to prioritize your own needs, combat stress, and despite the invisible workload we all deal with, find joy amidst the chaos of motherhood.If you've ever wondered "why is my kid..." then one of us has probably been there, and we're here to tell you what we've learned along the way.We unpack the behaviors and developmental stages of toddlers, tweens, and teenagers, providing insights into their actions and equipping you with effective parenting strategies.We offer our best parenting tips and skills we've learned. We debate the techniques and studies that are everywhere for parents these days, and get to the bottom of what works best to raise happy, healthy, fairly well-behaved kids, while fostering a positive parent-child relationship.If you're the default parent in your household, whether you're a busy mom juggling multiple pickups and dropoffs, or a first-time parent seeking guidance, this podcast is your trusted resource. Join our community of supportive mom friends laughing in the face of motherhood! whatfreshhellpodcast.com
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 13, 2026 • 39min
Fresh Take: Jamilah Lemieux, BLACK. SINGLE. MOTHER.
Jamilah Lemieux, cultural critic and author of Black. Single. Mother, reflects on writing about single motherhood as a healing act. She unpacks stigma rooted in history, reveals personal family reckonings, and discusses choosing and designing a life of intentional parenting. Conversations touch on vulnerability, community care, and advocating for shared custody.

Mar 11, 2026 • 45min
Parenting Panics Through the Ages
A brisk tour of moral panics from Socrates fearing writing to comic book burnings, Satanic scares, and music lyric outrage. They trace repeating patterns in how new media trigger parental alarm and political amplification. Contemporary worries about screens and AI are placed alongside historical examples while urging perspective and sensible limits.

Mar 9, 2026 • 55min
DEEP DIVE: Dr. Lisa Damour on Helping Kids Manage Anxiety
Dr. Lisa Damour, clinical psychologist and author focused on adolescent development, discusses kids’ anxiety with clear, practical framing. She explains why anxiety often hides in behavior. Short segments cover why avoidance backfires, the glitter jar metaphor, age‑tailored coping steps, and four pillars for teens. Listeners get concise, reassuring guidance on noticing and navigating childhood anxiety.

Mar 6, 2026 • 42min
Fresh Take: Susan Sutton, The Ember Project
Susan Sutton, founder of The Ember Project and a former teen mom who built a nonprofit to support young parents. She talks about stigma around teen motherhood, how small grants and mentorship bridge survival to stability, the importance of reliable childcare and shared accountability, and why $500 can mean the difference between dropping out and graduating.

Mar 4, 2026 • 40min
When *You're* the One Who's Dysregulated
We talk a lot about how to manage kids when they are being impossible. But it's supposed to be the terrible twos, not the terrible forty-somethings. What do we do when we're the one in the family who's dysregulated?
In this episode, we discuss:
How to know if you're emotionally dysregulated
Why parents (especially moms) are particularly vulnerable
How dysregulation can show up both as anger and as shutdown
The connection between rumination, shame, and reactivity
How emotional dysregulation can become contagious in a household—and how calm can be contagious, too
Practical ways to reset when you feel triggered
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Cleveland Clinic: Emotional Dysregulation
Our Fresh Take with Erin Cox
Elif B. Koş Yalvaç et. al for Journal of Affective Disorders: Emotional dysregulation in adults: The influence of rumination and negative secondary appraisals of emotion
H.W. Koenigsberg for Journal of Personality Disorders: Affective instability: toward an integration of neuroscience and psychological perspectives
Rachel Schepke for PsyPost: Young children are more irritable when their mother has emotion regulation difficulties
Dominique Cave-Freeman, Vincent O. Mancini, et al for Journal of Personality and Individual Differences: Maternal Emotion Regulation and Early Childhood Irritability: The Role of Child Directed Emotion Regulation Strategies
Couples Therapy, Inc: Navigating a Marriage with an Emotionally Dysregulated Spouse
Rick Hanson et. al: Mother Nurture: A Mother's Guide to Health in Body, Mind, and Intimate Relationships
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, self-help for moms, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, parental stress, kids stress, emotional dysregulation in parents, parenting under stress, overwhelmed mom, reactive parenting, mom anger, yelling at kids, parental burnout, depleted mother syndrome, parenting anxiety, co-regulation, emotional regulation skills, parenting triggers, rumination and resentment, family emotional climate, repairing after yelling, parenting stress management, mom mental health, default parent stress, generational patterns parenting, managing big emotions as a parent Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Mar 2, 2026 • 36min
DEEP DIVE: Gabrielle Blair, THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT
Gabrielle Blair, founder of DesignMom and author focused on modern family life, shares refreshingly practical takes on parenting. She dismantles the myth of a single path to success. Short tips cover using your home to shape family culture, easing pressure as kids age, and making small changes that boost connection and reduce stress.

Feb 27, 2026 • 42min
Fresh Take: Catherine Price, THE AMAZING GENERATION
How do we get kids to *want* to put their phones down? This week we're talking to bestselling author Catherine Price about her latest book, The Amazing Generation: Your Guide to Fun and Freedom in a Screen-Filled World, co-written with social psychologist Jonathan Haidt.
Instead of focusing on parental controls and screen-time battles, The Amazing Generation speaks directly to kids, inviting them to question the promises of Big Tech and reclaim real friendship, real freedom, and real fun.
We discuss:
Why empowering kids works better than scaring them
How smartphones and social media shape adolescent brain development
The growing youth rebellion against addictive tech
How to shift from conflict to collaboration when it comes to screens
Here's where you can find Catherine and her work:
www.catherineprice.com
https://catherineprice.substack.com
@catherinepriceofficial on IG and LinkedIn
www.amazinggeneration.com
Buy THE AMAZING GENERATION: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9798217111916
What Fresh Hell is co-hosted by Amy Wilson and Margaret Ables.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
What Fresh Hell podcast, mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, The Amazing Generation book, Catherine Price interview, Jonathan Haidt Anxious Generation, screen time for kids, social media and teens, tech addiction in children, smartphone brain development, how to break up with your phone, defend mode discover mode, empowering kids about technology, youth rebellion against big tech, parenting in a digital world, AI and teenagers, family screen time solutions, helping kids quit social media, real life vs social media, attention economy and kids, middle school smartphone advice, raising kids without smartphones, tech literacy for families Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Feb 25, 2026 • 44min
Do Siblings Need to Get Along?
Do siblings really need to get along as children to have healthy relationships as adults? We challenge one of parenting’s most deeply held assumptions: that sibling closeness is the ultimate goal.
We explain why sibling rivalry is developmentally normal and how fighting can actually be a sign of connection—not failure. Finally, we talk about what parents can influence—and what they can’t—when it comes to sibling bonds.
If your worried because your kids currently fight nonstop—or currently barely speak—this episode will help you reframe what’s normal, what’s healthy, and what truly matters in the long run.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Our Fresh Take with Susan Dominus, author of THE FAMILY DYNAMIC
Our episode Sibling Rivalry
Our Fresh Take with Dawn Huebner on Sibling Rivalry (And What Parents Usually Do Wrong)
Kevin Henkes: JULIUS, THE BABY OF THE WORLD
Stephen P. Bank and Michael D. Kahn: THE SIBLING BOND
Rachel Nuwer for Scientific American: How Childhood Relationships Affect Your Adult Attachment Style, according to Large New Study
Keely A. Dugan et. al for The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology: A prospective longitudinal study of the associations between childhood and adolescent interpersonal experiences and adult attachment orientations
Dr. Ammara Khalid for RIA Social Services: On Sibling Relationships: Attachment and Birth Order
Leijten, P. et. al for Journal of Family Psychotherapy: Parenting programs to improve sibling interactions: a meta-analysis.
Sign up for What Fresh Hell Plus on Supporting Cast to get all episodes ad-free, plus monthly bonus episodes. Supporting Cast works right where you already listen! Go to whatfreshhell.supportingcast.fm to subscribe in two taps for just $4.99 a month, or $39.99 a year.
What Fresh Hell is co-hosted by Amy Wilson and Margaret Ables.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
What Fresh Hell podcast, mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, sibling relationships, sibling rivalry, do siblings need to get along, sibling conflict, parenting siblings, raising siblings, siblings fighting, sibling bond, how to handle sibling rivalry, is sibling fighting normal, why siblings fight, how to help siblings get along, parenting tips for sibling conflict, sibling dynamics psychology, sibling relationship in adulthood, how siblings shape identity, family conflict parenting, should siblings be close, is it bad if siblings don’t get along, how to stop sibling fighting, what is normal sibling rivalry, kids arguing all the time, brothers and sisters fighting, parenting guilt siblings Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Feb 23, 2026 • 46min
DEEP DIVE: Jenny Anderson and Rebecca Winthrop, "The Disengaged Teen"
Based on a recent listener question about how to start to let go as our kids get older, this "Deep Dive" series highlights some of our past interview episodes on the topic.
Are teenagers destined to be "over" everything? Jenny Anderson and Rebecca Winthrop, authors of THE DISENGAGED TEEN, explain what's behind what they call the "teen disengagement crisis" and how parents can act.
Jenny Anderson is an award-winning journalist, author, and speaker with more than 25 years of experience. Rebecca Winthrop is the director of the Center for Universal Education at Brookings and an adjunct professor at Georgetown University.
Jenny, Rebecca, and Margaret discuss:
The four different modes of learning that teens tend to engage in
What academic disengagement in a teen really signals about them
How parents can help their kids get more excited about learning
Here's where you can find Jenny and Rebecca:
www.jennywestanderson.org
www.rebeccawinthrop.com
www.thedisengagedteen.com
@jennyandersonwrites and @drrebeccawinthrop on IG
#DisengagedTeen #LearnBetterLiveBetter
Buy THE DISENGAGED TEEN: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593727072
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
What Fresh Hell is co-hosted by Margaret Ables and Amy Wilson.
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, parental stress, kids stress, decluttering, meal prepping, time management, teen disengagement, disengaged teen, high school boredom, Jenny Anderson, Rebecca Winthrop, The Disengaged Teen, teen motivation, student engagement, education psychology, parenting teens, academic burnout, learning styles, four modes of learning, school stress, teen mental health, re-engaging teens, motivation in teens, parenting strategies, education reform, adolescent development, emotional learning, growth mindset, student success, learning motivation Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Feb 20, 2026 • 44min
Fresh Take: Dr. Allison Alford, GOOD DAUGHTERING
Amy and Margaret talk with Dr. Allison Alford, communication scholar and author of the new book Good Daughtering: The Work You’ve Always Done, the Credit You’ve Never Gotten, and How to Finally Feel Like Enough.
Dr. Alford explains the concept of daughtering—the emotional, logistical, and mental labor adult daughters perform to assist their parents and to hold families together. Drawing on more than a decade of qualitative research, she explains how this work is often unrecognized and uncounted.
We discuss kin-keeping, invisible labor, and the pressures women face to be “good daughters.” Dr. Alford explains how cultural expectations, gender norms, and family systems reinforce this burden—and why naming it is the first step toward change. You are already doing more than you think—and you deserve credit for it.
Here's where you can find Allison:
www.daughtering101.com
@daughtering101 on FB, IG, and TikTok
Buy GOOD DAUGHTERING: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780063436428
Read Sensemaking in Organizations: Reflections on Karl Weick and Social Theory
What Fresh Hell is co-hosted by Amy Wilson and Margaret Ables.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
What Fresh Hell podcast, mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, daughtering, invisible labor, emotional labor, kin keeping, adult daughters, family roles, mental load, caregiving expectations, good daughter, women’s identity, boundaries, communication in families, motherhood podcast, Fresh Hell podcast, Allison Alford, Good Daughtering book Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices


