Before I had my daughter, I knew that motherhood would change things. I knew it would change the amount of time I had available for myself in the day. I knew it would change my body.

I knew it would change the trajectory of my career . But I didn't realize how deeply it would change me. New motherhood involves a seismic shift, not just physically, but in your hormones, in your day-to-day activities, in the way you think, and in the trajectory of your life.

I have been feeling around for a metaphor to describe this process. The closest I've been able to land on is kintsugi : the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with gold. The pot may have been broken apart and rebuilt — it may even look and act almost the same as it did before — but it is forever changed, now imbued with precious metal.

There is a word for this unraveling and remaking: matrescence. First coined by anthropologist Dana Raphael in the 1970s, matrescence is a period of transformation, much like adolescence, that takes place during early motherhood. "The scope of the changes encompasses multiple domains — bio, psycho, social, political, spiritual — and can be likened to the developmental push of adolescence," explains clinical psychologist Aurélie Athan, PhD.

While matrescence is being spoken about more in spaces for new mothers, there is scant discussion outside of these spaces. For those considering motherhood, and for those surrounding and supporting new mothers, more education is needed on wha.