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Can You Be a Mom, Work Full-Time, and Train for an Ironman? with Dr. Iris Nafshi
Episode 132
Published 8 hours ago
Description
In this episode of The Athletes Compass Podcast, Dr. Iris Nafshi joins the team to discuss her research on “Iron Moms,” endurance athletes who train for Ironman while navigating motherhood, work, family expectations, and guilt. Drawing from her PhD dissertation, Beyond Grit and Guilt, Iris explains that athletic identity does not compete with maternal identity; it can expand it. The conversation explores how moms persist through complex schedules, emotional pressure, limited support, and societal expectations by reframing guilt, building systems, practicing self-compassion, and embracing the mindset that “something is better than nothing.”
Key Takeaways
- Athletic identity and maternal identity do not have to be separate or competing roles.
- “Balance” may be the wrong word; integration and seasons of focus are more realistic.
- Mom guilt often comes from societal expectations that mothers should be endlessly selfless.
- Many Iron Moms reframe training as role modeling strength, commitment, and self-respect for their children.
- Grit helps athletes start, but it is not enough to sustain long-term training through real life.
- Iris adds self-compassion to the HERO framework — hope, efficacy, resilience, and optimism — creating “SHIRO.”
- Support systems matter. As Iris says, nobody does Ironman alone.
- Flexibility is essential: shortening a workout, moving it, or doing something imperfectly is often better than skipping entirely.
- “Something is better than nothing” becomes a powerful mindset for training, work, creativity, and life.
- Children are watching, and they often notice the dreams parents pursue — and the ones they give up.