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How Motherhood Changed the Way I Communicate

How motherhood transformed my leadership and taught me that emotional presence is the most powerful tool in any room.

Asmara Silverman
Asmara Silverman
Learning and Engagement Program Manager, People Experience
Philo
How Motherhood Changed the Way I Communicate

Before I became a mother, I thought I was a strong communicator. I was efficient and rarely at a loss for words. But when my daughter arrived, she introduced me to a kind of communication I hadn't encountered in any leadership training or professional development course—one that required me to be fully present, emotionally honest, and intentional with every word. And when I returned to work just five months after she was born, I brought those lessons with me whether I was ready to or not. Now, with a 10-month-old at home, I can say with certainty: she has made me better at my job in ways I never anticipated.

The most unexpected gift motherhood gave me was the ability to stay calm under pressure. When you've spent your mornings soothing a baby through teething pain, running on broken sleep, and still walked into a 9 a.m. meeting ready to lead—a high-stakes leadership conversation starts to feel manageable. I learned that a steady, warm tone doesn't signal weakness—it signals confidence. It invites people in rather than putting them on the defensive. I began bringing that same groundedness into difficult workplace moments, and I noticed something remarkable: when I lowered my voice instead of raising it, people leaned in. Calm became my most powerful professional tool.

Motherhood also taught me that showing emotion is not a liability—it is a bridge. Returning to work at five months postpartum, while still very much in the thick of new motherhood, forced me to be ruthlessly intentional—about my time, my energy, and especially my words. People don't follow titles; they follow people they believe in and feel seen by. By allowing empathy and directness to coexist—saying clearly what I needed while also acknowledging what others were carrying—I became a more effective advocate for my team, my ideas, and myself. Motherhood didn't soften my voice; it gave it more weight.

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