Mama of the Wild Crew Podcast

Embracing the Planned-ish Life: Sleep Routines, Budget Planning and Twin Life with Alexandra Marziello

Alexis Schmoker Season 1 Episode 15

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Alexandra's journey from corporate finance executive to twin boy mom reveals the beautiful paradox at the heart of motherhood—our desire for structure colliding with the gloriously unpredictable nature of raising children. Trading spreadsheets for sleep schedules wasn't part of her original career plan, but it's become her most meaningful adventure.

After 13 years climbing the corporate ladder, Alexandra recently made the leap to stay-at-home motherhood, bringing her type-A organizing skills along for the ride. What she discovered was a profound truth that resonates with moms everywhere—the best laid plans often falter in the face of toddler tantrums, sleepless nights, and the everyday chaos of raising twins. This realization birthed both her Instagram community @backtohomebase and her aptly named podcast "Planned-ish."

Throughout our conversation, Alexandra shares the raw reality of her postpartum experience—the overwhelming emotions, the pressure to be perfect, and the anxiety that would build as 4pm approached, signaling another potentially sleepless night ahead. Her vulnerability creates space for listeners to acknowledge their own struggles without judgment, reminding us that behind every seemingly perfect Instagram mom is someone fighting their own battles.

What makes Alexandra's approach so refreshing is her balance of practical solutions with genuine grace. From meal planning and budgeting, to sleepless nights and tantrums, she embodies the "planned-ish" philosophy—create structure where you can but surrender control where you must.

Whether you're struggling with sleep schedules that make no sense, feeling overwhelmed by the mental load of motherhood, or simply needing permission to laugh at the beautiful mess of it all, Alexandra's wisdom offers that rare combination of practical help and soul-deep encouragement. The journey of motherhood wasn't meant to be perfect—it was meant to be real, with all its tears, triumphs, and moments of surprising grace.


💕Follow Alexandra on IG ⬇️

https://www.instagram.com/backtwohomebase?igsh=YzV4NnptdGI3ajhs


💕Listen to the Planned-ish Podcast here 

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/planned-ish/id1815551724

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XO, Alexis Schmoker

Mama of the Wild Crew



📸: A heartfelt thank you to Jordan Allen of Cr00ked Teeth Photography for capturing this stunning cover photo.

Alexis Schmoker:

Welcome to Mama of the Wild Crew podcast, the podcast where we embrace the messy, wild, beautiful journey of motherhood together. I'm your host, alexa Schmoker, mama of two beautiful kiddos, wife, nurse and lover of Jesus. Motherhood is full of hard moments, unexpected chaos and those days where you just really don't have it all together. But in the midst of it all, there is so much joy. On this podcast, we're diving into the real, honest conversations about motherhood the challenges, the triumphs and everything in between. We'll hear the stories of incredible moms from all walks of life, share wisdom, laughter and let's be real probably a few tears, and we're going to discover how to embrace the joy in this chaos. So, whether you're rocking a baby to sleep, folding that never-ending pile of laundry or sneaking away for a quiet moment with your coffee, welcome, mama. You're not alone here. Hit, subscribe and join me on this wild adventure of motherhood. I can't wait to do this journey with you.

Alexis Schmoker:

Hey there, wild Crew Mamas, and welcome back to another episode of Mama of the Wild Crew Podcast, hosted by yours truly, alexa Schmoker. Today I'm sitting down with someone who brings both structure and soul to this wild ride of motherhood. Alexandra is a former corporate finance leader who traded boardrooms for bedtime routines and in this process she found her calling as a stay-at-home mom and a passionate planner. She's the heart behind at Back to Home Base and a brand new podcast dropping tomorrow, may 28th, so by the time you're listening to this, it's probably already out. So go listen to Plandish, where she keeps it real with routines, resets and the glorious mess of mom life. She is a twin boy mama, a type A queen with grace, and today she's here to help us breathe a little easier. So grab your coffee or your laundry basket and welcome Alexandra to Mama of the Wild Crew podcast and y'all. She's currently on vacation at a beautiful spot, so thank you for taking the time to join us.

Alexandra:

Hi Alexis, thank you so much for having me. This is to join us. Hi Alexis, thank you so much for having me. I'm so happy to be here. This is very exciting. But I'm Alexandra. I am a 21-month-old boy mom, so we're still in the toddler phase right now and it's getting crazy, but I am in a finance degree.

Alexandra:

I graduated college in North Carolina that's actually where I grew up and then I always wanted to move to Florida. So I, right after I graduated, I moved down here and within I want to say a week, I went to a concert and met my husband there and we connected and I found out, oh my gosh, he lives in Florida. And then the rest was kind of history. And we've been in Florida for the almost 10 years now. We've been married for almost eight years and it's been awesome. We've been in the whole Tampa area for a while.

Alexandra:

And then there are twin boys who are Brody and Tate. They are hilarious little beings, like the. Curiosity has always been there to have kids, but you never really realize until you get them. Curiosity has always been there to have kids, but you never really realize until you get them. But it's funny because I'm from so many sets of twins. I'm not a twin, but my cousins are twins, my aunts are twins, and the same thing on my husband's side. So it's just wild to see these little personalities come out, and thank goodness they look different, because that would have also been so hard when you're fresh out of pregnancy and putting them to bed at three o'clock in the morning. But yeah, we are just living our life and I was in corporate finance for about 13 years and literally a month and a half ago, just made the choice to become a stay-at-home mom. So this is where we're at right now.

Alexis Schmoker:

Oh, that's so exciting. That's so funny too, because my husband's an identical twin. Oh, really yes, and they do not have twins in their family. So every one of us like he, so he's got four brothers. So all the sisters are always like whenever someone gets pregnant, we're like how many, how many's in there? So far, no twins, so no. And then my best friend has, um, twin girls. Oh, we got some twins out here too. It's so fun. But yeah, my, my husband and his brother are identical, and so his dad has called them AJ, like for their entire life. Adam and Jordan. He just calls them both AJ, like like even even now, you know AJ, I'm like that works. But oh, how fun. I cannot imagine. It's so crazy. I wonder how it is like having twins first, or like having a single and then twins, cause I guess you don't know any different.

Alexandra:

I know that's the thing. We talk about this all the time Like if we would have had one and then the other. I think it would. I feel like it would be easier to have one kid and then go into twins, because if you had twins first like for my husband and I were like we're done, we can't do another kid yes, so those moms who have twins and then have way more kids afterwards.

Alexis Schmoker:

Oh yeah, both the people I know, like my best friend her twins are the youngest and then my mother-in-law her twins are the youngest Like I can't imagine doing it the opposite, but people do it, I know, you know, godspeed. So leading in, you know, as moms, we tend to be our own worst critics and we can be absolutely killing it. And one little mom fail, you know, just humbles us. It keeps us real.

Alexis Schmoker:

Even yesterday, so today's, the day after Memorial day, we went to the lake and I don't know what I was thinking. I packed everyone like swimsuits and like summer dresses and stuff. We were on our way there and we had to stop to go to the bathroom and we got everyone out and I'm like it is literally freezing outside, it's so cold and I brought no warm clothes. So we had to go to Walmart and buy everyone like sweatpants and sweatshirts and there's like hardly any warm clothes out at Walmart. So I found some you know, good looking outfits on the clearance rack. But I literally had everything like packed and set out the night before, organized, like I wrote my labels on everything. I was just like I thought I was really killing it and we did not use a single thing that I packed Everything we used we bought at Walmart before. So anyway, alexandra hit us with a recent mom fail.

Alexandra:

Oh gosh, this was when Tate was Tate, our one twin. He is not a good sleeper, like he'll sleep through the night, but he doesn't nap sometimes as well. But we had a period of time where he was like up crying, and like up multiple times throughout the night and then I was coarse because he had a wet diaper or something. So I was going in and I was exhausted and I was changing his diaper and his onesie and I forgot to put a diaper back on him and I put him to bed and the next morning everything was soaked. I have done that.

Alexis Schmoker:

You are not alone in that. I have done that too, and I've got a bad sleeper too. So we'll dive into that later, but I feel you on that. Oh my gosh, it is tough. Sleeping is whenever you're not getting it. It's rough.

Alexandra:

Yes, Even if it's a short amount of time, I'm like I can't, I can't, I was not built for that.

Alexis Schmoker:

No, I worked night shift at first, whenever I first got out of college, and then I did a few years on day shift and then I started a new job and had to go back to night shift like at the beginning of it and I could not survive. I was only on night shift for like three months and it almost killed me. I don't know how people do it.

Alexandra:

Yeah.

Alexis Schmoker:

Like I have high blood pressure. I can't, I've literally can't do it, but I made it off and I survived. Okay, so you said that you had been in corporate finance, and so let's rewind to that moment where everything kind of changed for you, from the corporate hustle to that full-time mama mode. What was going through your heart when you made the leap?

Alexandra:

When I was originally thinking about it like that wasn't a very sudden decision for me, it was kind of like a gradual buildup. So for years I was in corporate finance. I wanted to be like high up. I was financial, I worked as, like you know, staff senior manager director and I was on track to make BP and that's what I really wanted to do. And kids was like a thought of curiosity, but it wasn't like an actual like, let's do this right now.

Alexandra:

So climbing corporate ladder, working late hours, I thought that was my life. And then, you know, got pregnant and everything. And then we were so excited. And then, after maternity leave, I came back and I was like, okay, I'm going to do this, I'm still going to work. But then something completely shifted in me and I all of a sudden I was like I feel like I need to be here for these boys and I'm not going to get this time back.

Alexandra:

And after my husband and I talked about it and we went through all like I'm a very type A, like financial person. So we went through all of the budget how's everything going to work? And we decided to make the leap. But I thought too I was like, oh my God, this is going to be amazing. I'm going to be an amazing mom. I'm going to do this. We're going to be having routines organized, but you know, with twins and kids, that's not always the case.

Alexandra:

So I um, there was a lot of tantrums, there was crazy times Like there's no break, and everything. So you're a full mom and then you think like, oh shoot, you can get off at like five o'clock or whatever, but no, you're working dinner, you're doing laundry. And then, yes, it was helpful, and my husband finally got off work. He like kind of took over so I could have my little like off time per se and I could. I wanted to go read a book or something, but that's honestly, kind of when I started back to home, base Cause I really wanted to share my personal, real, unfiltered, organized chaos of like twin motherhood, and it wasn't about having a perfectly curated thing, I just wanted to show like the real tools, hacks and, honestly, a sense of community for other moms going through this phase or if people have already been through it. So it's kind of no reason.

Alexis Schmoker:

No, I love that and your page is so great, we'll dive into it later too. But I love no reason planned out how we think we want to do it and then you know things just happen and it never goes exactly as planned. So just rolling with the punches of that can be difficult sometimes. There's always tantrums. I think like I've just learned to at least accept the tantrums, because I got into like a phase for a little bit when Crew Pearl was younger and we would go out and every time we would load back up she would just lose it, I mean just utter lose it, and it made me not want to go out and do things because I would just like get anxious building up to that tantrum of leaving and yes, and so I think once I just kind of like accepted it, it almost made it better all around, because I feel like I kind of would build it up too and then she could sense from me like so yeah, it's never, it's never perfect, but it's fun, okay, so I am so glad you're here because most of the listeners already know this, but I am probably like the world's worst sleep mom. My, my daughter just never slept and, by the grace of God, wilder does sleep better.

Alexis Schmoker:

But we're kind of getting back, I'm afraid, into like a little bit of a cycle that we did with Crew, just because he's getting bigger, so he has more opinions and you know he slept so great as a newborn. But we're going to have to really buckle down, coming up soon because our just like nap times on vibes does not work. It's not a sustainable thing. But I can assure you it has nothing to do with my like amazing mothering skills why he's a great sleeper this time, because I've done nothing different and I need to. So sleep schedules just like overwhelm me to my core. And when I found your Instagram like I said, back to home base I felt seen. You checked all the boxes. You created refreshing and calming, practical spaces for moms, just to balance all the things you know, from the sleep schedules to the meal planning, to the budgeting, to the humor. So what inspired you to start sharing just these planning tips and routines online?

Alexandra:

I know you kind of dove into it a little bit, but oh sleeping with twins is starting off as like horrible, because the whole thing is I don't want I never wanted one twin to have a completely different schedule from the other Cause. Then I'm up 24 seven, so I'm like we are locking this in the minute we can. But, um, I was Googling so much like how to get twins to sleep through the night and I was going on Instagram for things and I really again maybe it was just I wasn't looking in the right place or right keywords for this but I really wanted to create something that was kind of like a housing for a couple things that I personally needed at the time. It was kind of like a housing for a couple of things that I personally needed at the time. So, yeah, I kept researching and then finally, actually I ended up finding Taking Care of Babies, which a lot of people has heard. She was amazing on kind of going through like where they should be at three months, four months, and I started with that to kind of be my guideline of everything and kind of work and shift be very fluid per se with everything.

Alexandra:

So, yeah, that's when I started sharing all those sleep schedules and then the meal planning and everything too, because that's also a huge thing in our household.

Alexandra:

I was so tired of my husband saying, what's for dinner, what do we want to do? And I'm like you know what, where I'm setting one day a week we're going to sit down, we're going to figure this out and not spend a lot of time on it and then just put it out there. And then also, too, with babies and toddlers that are starting to get into the phase of starting from going to solids and trying out more meals, like what is some toddler friendly meals that you can do, cause that was also something I was so tired of making two separate meals every night and I'm like this is not happening. We're going to start combining everything. But yeah, yeah, that was. I really wanted to create all those tools and I wanted to give moms the permission almost to ditch the pressure of perfection when leaning into, like, what works for their own family. So giving options, giving just an idea, some guidelines and balance to surviving their day to day chaos to day chaos.

Alexis Schmoker:

Yeah, I love that. And I, how you said, like your husband, what's for dinner you're decision to out by that time. That's how I'm like I cannot make another decision, and I know that that sounds so minuscule, but I'm like I have just been decisioning all day. I can't decision any longer, um, and I still go to work. So I can't even imagine like just being home all the time, cause I would like go to work and then I would still have the kids for a little bit after work, and then he'd get home and be like what's for dinner? I'm like I can't, I cannot make another decision.

Alexis Schmoker:

So I think that's awesome that you sit down, cause even though it does take maybe a little bit of time on the front end, it just like makes everything smoother and then you don't have even just like that tension between you two, like you just already know what the plan is. Nothing's right. And then, like you said too, with having food for the kids, you're not making multiple meals, and I mean going from working full time to being a stay at home mom. Like you said, that comes with financial change. Creating that budget and being able to know, like, where your budget sets is also just a necessity that you just have to make with that change. I mean, everyone sacrifices in places, and so I think that's awesome too. That way you guys can we have like an admin day night meeting. We have our admin meeting. I'm like where's our budget? What does our week look like?

Alexis Schmoker:

And of course, but it just helps with communication, because whenever you guys are both just on the go 24-7, it's so hard to do those touch points. So that's something that's helped us is like kind of doing like that admin meeting once a week and just going over everything, so we're both on the same page and then if things change, then we change it from there.

Alexandra:

We're so big on that. If you're the skylight calendar, I implement all of our meals into there. Everyone's appointments like to dues and it is so easy because my husband can just go click, I can go click and just see what's going on and it's right there in front of us.

Alexis Schmoker:

That's so nice. I need to get one of those. I keep seeing them and they look really nice. We do like calendar on our phones, but I think something like that would be even better, because sometimes one of us will forget to like put it on the phone and stuff, or it doesn't sync or whatever it may be. So I do love that. Okay. So your new podcast, plandish, is such a cute, fun name. I love that. Okay. So tell listeners what they can expect and how it reflects your own motherhood journey.

Alexandra:

When I started thinking about even doing a podcast, like I wanted to do one forever, cause I just I love to talk and my husband listens to podcasts all the time. I'm like I could do this. I mean, yes, it's all sports stuff that he listens to but I'm like I can do one for my own little niche. So I wanted the name to kind of reflect the reality almost of my motherhood journey I mean my entire life, like if I could. It's planned like ish, like there's fluidity in there. So I have these grand ideas of routines and schedules and meal prepping and then I get hit with toddlers acting up and last minute like things we got to change up. So Planned is just like the perfect blend of chaos and that inevitability that comes with being a mom.

Alexandra:

But this podcast is giving moms almost real tools to help them get through their lives without the pressure of being perfect. I know that that's like a huge thing nowadays there's like all we're trying to lift the pressure off of moms. We're trying to not have it be like the old days where moms have to do everything. Everything has to be perfect. So I kind of dive into, you know, sleep, struggling, meal planning, budgeting, hacks and navigating the myself almost and talking about myself of how my journey was. But there's a lot of laughs in there and I have to do. I have to laugh in this because it is a crazy wild ride of motherhood and if you don't laugh you're probably crying Sometimes you're laughing and crying at the same time.

Alexandra:

But you can expect a lot of humor in my episodes. Advice I'm trying to pull in like a little community and post to like threads and Instagram and get like real mom opinions on things. So I'm going to be answering some of those questions in there. But it's really just about finding balance and embracing chaos and getting through the day in one piece. And it's quick, 15, 20 minute little episodes to listen to because everyone knows you don't always have that much time. But, um, I'm just gonna be that mom friend you can listen to and share what's working and what's not and take what you need from it. But some real talk, real routines and a little bit of ish just a little ish we're all, and where can everyone find this?

Alexandra:

is it going to be on like apple podcast and so, apple, spotify I'm trying to almost like get all the platforms just to hit all bases. Um, whoever wants to wants to listen, but every wednesday try drop in the morning, okay, um, and then stay tuned on threads and Instagram for little questions, cause I see if I can feature some people on there.

Alexis Schmoker:

Oh, so fun. Okay, and so guys follow along at back to home base on Instagram. And then do you have an Instagram for plan dish or are you going to run it?

Alexandra:

I did like lock the name down, so I'm kind of just going to almost wing to see where this little plan goes, just for fun, yeah it's planned-ish, we'll figure it out.

Alexis Schmoker:

Okay, so let's talk postpartum, because I've gone through some postpartum stuff too and we've like, since doing this podcast and talking to moms like I feel, like everyone does Everyone has some sort of postpartum story and it hits you hard and that early motherhood you shared, felt lonely at times. So how did that season shape who you are today, both as a mom and a woman? And what would you say now to the mama who feels overwhelmed, maybe even isolated or like she's just not doing?

Alexandra:

enough. So postpartum was such a different beast for me. Like you hear about it all the time and I even heard about like my-grandmother's having it, but it was never really diagnosed back then as postpartum. People just thought it was depression, what they called it, but I was like, eh, no problem. But the minute I got home I know those were baby blues.

Alexandra:

And then you start crying every night because you're just so overwhelmed with everything. But then it kept going and you just you go through the day and then it's like four o'clock would hit and you get anxiety for the nights, the sleepless nights. Trying to be the good, the best mom, you also have a million and one different opinions coming at you, like I don't know. All the grandparents are telling you how they did it 30 years ago and it's like that's really not relevant anymore and it's so overwhelming. But you want to be the best mom, you want to be the perfect career woman, you want to be the best friend and it was just so much that I would get into these I was describing like a almost like a dark hole where you're being sucked in and you're trying to tread water and the tears are coming. But you have these moments and then all of a sudden, you're crying and it's done. And then you're like, okay, I got this, let's move on. We can do this and it would happen day after day, but I've realized that and I've learned that this season has made me a stronger, more resilient mom. It was during a time that I realized I needed to give myself way more grace and stop having that pressure.

Alexandra:

No one tells you that you're going to go through a mental load and emotional transformation when you become a mom. I mean, you hear about it, but you really don't know how much it is and everyone is different. I've had friends that have just it's lasted a month. I've had friends that haven't even had it. So it took me a while to recognize that being enough wasn't about having a perfect routine or keeping a pristine house. It was about showing up, being present and even on the chaotic days.

Alexandra:

So to any mama who is feeling super overwhelmed or isolated, you just got to know you're not alone. Even though you do feel alone, you're not like. It's so easy to feel like you're failing when you compare yourself to these other moms that seem like they have it all together. But we all know, like social media and Instagram like we do. It's a highlight reel. It's a highlight reel of your life. Yes, you are showing some tough times, but you got to lean on your community, whether that's your partner, your friends, other moms. But that's why I created Back to Home Based and Planned-ish, because I want that space where moms can feel vulnerable and honest about their struggles without feeling completely judged. But everyone is just doing amazing. We're doing it like you're showing up and you're enough. I mean, that's all you can really tell yourself.

Alexis Schmoker:

Hey there, wild Crew Mamas, some super exciting news. If you're like me, these days any day is a hat day. Literally, probably every day is a hat day, and we have two new hats for Mama of the Wild Crew podcast. I am so excited and huge shout out to my sister-in-law, bree, over at Schmokey Designs, for taking these ideas and bringing them to life. We have Mama of the Wild Crew podcast hat and we also have the cutest hat. It says motherhood is my ministry. And ain't that the truth, guys? Head on over to our Instagram at mama of the wild crew, underscore podcast, dn me or comment on one of the posts and let us know that you want your hat today.

Alexis Schmoker:

Growing up, our parents had a super special tradition. We kept this big stork in our garage and whenever someone, either in town or one of our friends, had a baby, we would all load up and go over to their house and put this stork in their yard to help them celebrate. It was one of my favorite childhood memories and my sister, addison Sewell, has carried on that tradition. She is the proud owner of Owasso Storks, offering personalized stork deliveries to families celebrating the arrival of a new baby, whether it's a baby announcement, a baby shower or to celebrate the birth of a little one, owasso Storks is the perfect thoughtful, sentimental gift. There are even options to celebrate proud big siblings and even those furry little family members.

Alexis Schmoker:

For a sweet, memorable gift, reach out to Owasso Storks. Check them out on Instagram. That's at Owasso Storks, at O-W-A-S-S-O-S-T-O-R-K-S, and you can find their contact info in the show notes. Guys, this is just the sweetest gift. I have personally been blessed by a stork from Owasso Storks before. Owasso Storks was a thing and it was just the sweetest thing. So definitely reach out to. Owasso. Storks was a thing and it was just the sweetest thing. So definitely reach out to Owasso Storks. Okay so, alexandra, your faith journey is beautifully quiet and personal. How has that kind of grounded belief carried you through the chaos and joy of parenting?

Alexandra:

So faith has always been an anchor for me, but it's definitely evolved since becoming a mom.

Alexandra:

It's not that I suddenly found a perfect path or had all the answers becoming a parent, but my faith has definitely grounded me so much throughout all this chaos.

Alexandra:

It's given me a sense of peace through those stressful days and confidence to trust that I am completely enough as a mother. In the madness of motherhood, especially with twins, I learned that sometimes faith is just about completely surrendering control. It is trusting that, even though I cannot do it all, I'm still doing what's best for my family. It's a quiet, steady belief that this journey, even with all its messiness, is exactly where I'm supposed to be and that has been such a complete comfort. But for me, faith isn't like a loud declaration, but it's almost that whisper of reassurance that, no matter what happens, I'm not alone. So, whether it's a lack of sleep or just trying to figure out how to balance that work and home life and stay at home, mom and back to home, base and planned-ish, I've just learned that it's knowing that I'm supported, no matter what and the kind of piece I try to bring into my everyday life, and I think that's something that moms can really lean on when they feel like they're being and they're running on empty, to be honest.

Alexis Schmoker:

But yeah, that's beautiful. I love that because, yeah, it's that, like you said, the center and surrendering control can be so difficult and sometimes you just have to like you cannot do it all, even if you want to, and I think that's where you can just run yourself ragged. Yes, if you don't, just like accept that surrender, that's. It can be so difficult if you don't. And yeah, and you can feel alone, but you're not. You're never alone, and I think just always telling yourself at least it helps me, is just like God chose me to be their parent, like I am placed here intentionally and like I am not messing up like this. This is the plan and I was chosen for them and they were chosen for me and we're going to, we're going to get this figured out. We're going to do it, we're going to do it. Uh well, alexandra, I am so excited for your podcast to come out and, again, I just love all the content that you share and thank you for taking time while you're on your vacation. I hope you guys are having the best time. Um, so, thank you for sharing your honest, funny and fiercely practical voice with us today. Your willingness to embrace both the structure and, like you said the surrender is something that so many of us needed to hear. Said the surrender is something that so many of us needed to hear.

Alexis Schmoker:

Mamas, if you're craving more ease, more laughter, more grace in your week, go follow Alexandra at Back to Home Base and check out her new podcast Planned-ish. Like we said, it drops tomorrow, may 28th, and by the time you guys are hearing this it is already out. So I will link both things in the show notes and remember you, wild Crew Mamas, your chaos doesn't disqualify you from joy. You're doing better than you think and you're never, ever alone. So until next time, stay wild and wonderfully planned-ish. Thanks, alexandra.

Alexandra:

Thank you so much you so much, mama.

Alexis Schmoker:

I'm so grateful that you took time out of your busy schedule today to listen to Mama of the Wild Crew podcast. I'm Alexa Schmoker and I hope you love this conversation and that it resonated with you. Thank you so much for opening up your circle and letting us in as we walk through this wild ride of motherhood together. Remember, in the chaos of motherhood, there is always joy to be found, so keep looking in those little moments that make it all worth it. Be sure to follow along on Instagram at mamaofthewildcrew underscore podcast. Please don't forget to like, subscribe and share our podcast. I'd love to hear from you, so comment, tag me, dm me, let me know what you think and let me know what you'd like to hear next. Mama, I am praying for you.

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