
Maiden Mother Matriarch with Louise Perry What if mothers are happy, actually | Maiden Mother Matriarch Episode 175
Dec 7, 2025
Wendy Wang, a demographer at the Institute for Family Studies, and Jenet Erickson, an associate professor at Brigham Young University, explore the nuanced relationship between motherhood and happiness. They argue that married mothers often report higher levels of happiness, attributing this to the benefits of physical touch and deeper community connections. Discussion includes the contrasting experiences of married versus cohabiting women and the profound sense of purpose that children provide. The episode challenges common perceptions about maternal dissatisfaction, revealing a more complex reality.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Marriage Correlates With Higher Well-Being
- Married people of both genders report greater happiness than unmarried peers across many measures.
- Wendy Wang and Jenet Erickson link this to touch, meaning, community connection, and lower loneliness.
Children Drive A Stronger Sense Of Purpose
- Children, not marriage alone, strongly predict a clear sense of meaning and purpose for many women.
- Married mothers report substantially higher meaning than married childless women in the study.
A Friend Found Purpose After Motherhood
- Louise Perry relates a friend who had pre-childhood depression and later always felt purposeful after becoming a mother.
- The friend said even exhaustion never brought back the previous 'what's the point of today?' feeling.






