The Black Mother Wound Podcast

EP 090: Was My Mama Depressed?


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Strength was never meant to cost you your humanity.

 

Being “strong” often starts as a response to what was missing. Growing up with a mother who was struggling, especially in silence, can teach you to take care of yourself before you’re ready. For many Black women, this means learning early that your needs come second, vulnerability doesn’t feel safe, and independence becomes the default. What begins as survival slowly turns into identity, where carrying everything alone feels normal.

 

Over time, this way of living becomes familiar. You keep going, you show up, you handle things, even when you’re exhausted. The world praises how much you can carry, but rarely sees what it costs you. Without realizing it, the same coping patterns you witnessed can become your own, leaving little room for rest, support, or softness.

 

Change begins when you realize that not everything you carry is yours. Some patterns were learned, others were passed down. Healing looks like making different choices, letting people in, setting boundaries, and giving yourself compassion. Support and community are not weaknesses, they are necessary.

 

In this episode, I sit down with Christin Haynes to talk about what it means to grow up as a daughter of depression and how the “strong Black woman” role is formed. We talk about how coping patterns are passed down, how identity is shaped, and why community is so important for healing. This conversation puts words to experiences many have felt and offers a starting point for doing things differently.

 

“Remixing your idea as to what a strong Black woman is a setup for depression every single time.” – Christin Haynes

 

Topics Covered:

00:00 — Episode Snippet
00:36 — Welcome to the Black Mother Wound Podcast
01:29 — Introducing Christin Haynes and her research
03:18 — Studying the mother-daughter relationship through lived experience
07:42 — Legacy work across generations
12:08 — Unnamed maternal depression creates early independence
14:58 — How survival shaped religion and self-worth

18:16 — Depressive behaviors passed down through modeling

19:40 — Realizing learned coping no longer works

21:10 — The role of “other mothers” and community

26:44 — “Strong Black woman” as a setup for depression

30:17 — Say it out loud, break the shame

32:00 — Lack of vulnerability
33:53 — Understanding your mother brings healing

35:46 — It was never about you

37:10 — Overachieving can be a coping mechanism

40:12 — Skills build value, not just credentials

42:09 — “No one is coming” mindset starts early

43:45 — The mother wound shapes all relationships

46:16 — Boundaries and compassion in healing

51:12 — Don't stop trying in a place that's healthy

53:43 — Grace comes after doing your own healing

56:42 — You can’t change your mother, only yourself

57:58 — Connect with Christin Haynes

59:04 —  Your story has the power to heal generations

 

Key Takeaways:

“You can't have an accurate view of religion when you don't have an accurate view of yourself as a person.”

“When you grow up with a mother who’s perceivably depressed… you become a strong Black girl.”

“Community is a buffer and a protective factor for depression in Black women.”

“You didn’t have the space and the humanity to be low… even if you are low, you gotta put your makeup on, lay your wig, and walk out and brave the world, but on the inside, you’re dying.”

“You don’t have to have every credential… you need to learn how to be in a community.”

“If you think stacking your plate is going to make you more valuable, instead of stacking your skills, that’s the problem.”

“You can’t be a good friend or be in community without understanding your relationship with your mother.”

“Black women are going up the rough side of the mountain with no shoes on, holding their world on their back… and the worlds of the women before them.”

“You have to know your boundaries and adjust your expectations of what this relationship can be.”

“Your boundaries shape how far you go, but compassion is what keeps you open.”

“You can’t change your mama, but you can change how you show up.”

“Grace and compassion come naturally once you give them to yourself.”

 

About the Guest

Christin Haynes is a doctoral candidate in Family Science and Human Development at Montclair State University, with a research focus on the intergenerational passing of Strong Black Woman beliefs and maternal mental health. She holds a BS in Psychology and an MSW from Florida A&M University and has worked closely with vulnerable Black families. Christin is also the host of the Black Family Scholar podcast, where she explores the culture of silence within Black families and Black women’s mental health, and she creates digital resources that center the historical experiences of Black families in American society.

 

Connect with Christin Haynes

Website: https://daughtersofdepression.com/

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@daughtersofdepression2691

 

DISCLAIMER: I am not a licensed psychologist, medical doctor, or health care professional and my services do not replace the care of psychologists, doctors or other healthcare professionals. All opinions expressed here are my own. If you feel you are in any danger of harming yourself please call 911. I am not providing health care, medical or nutritional therapy services, or attempting to diagnose, treat, prevent or cure any physical, mental or emotional issue, disease or condition. All opinions are my own and based on my personal lived experience.

 

Connect on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blackmotherwound 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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