MyTribe

Helping you thrive in parenthood and postpartum

You don’t have to go through the transition to motherhood alone.

A Parenthood community you’ve been longing for.

You weren’t made to go through this parenting journey alone!

Feeling overwhelmed, or not quite like yourself is completely normal during pregnancy, birth, postpartum, and as you enter into motherhood.

But for many mothers today, we just don’t have the right people around us as we dive into this crazy new world of motherhood. And the feelings really get intense as we cope with miscarriage, infertility, traumatic birth experiences, overwhelm entering motherhood, work-life balance, challenges with your partner, and ALL the other wild things new moms go through.

Not to mention, when you look for help in a Facebook group or online it’s way too common to run into toxic environments full of shame with an “us vs. them” vibe instead of being a place that fosters compassion, curiosity, and support.

What if you could join a positive community of women and parents who are walking through all of this right now, just like you are? And what if that community had access to expert-crafted courses and parenthood resources to help you learn all the things you wish someone would have told you?

Did you know?

Up to 1 in 5 women experience postpartum anxiety or depression in the first year after becoming a mother.

Services

Community

Join our expert-moderated community of women and parents who are walking through this season of life right alongside you.
We’re your virtual tribe.

Courses

Access evidenced based courses tailored to your experience, created by a perinatal mental health provider.

Concierge Resources

We’ll provide a warm hand-off to trusted providers you need in your region so you don’t have to search for them.

What Makes
Our Parenthood Community

Different?

At MyTribe, we bridge the gap between aspiring/new parents and the community and resources they need to thrive. Find your tribe with us!

Created and curated by an ANCC Board Certified Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner working as a perinatal specialized psychiatric provider.

A moderated community, with tailored sub-communities so you can connect with parents who are in the same stage of the journey as you, providing invaluable support for mothers as well as non-birthing partners.

More accessible than therapy, providing the support and education you need on-demand and at an affordable price.

A catalog of trustworthy courses on the topics relevant to you, right when you need them and at a flat, affordable rate.

Three pairs of hands, including a child's, rest on a pregnant woman's belly outdoors.

A connection to vetted, qualified professionals in your area so you don’t have to spend hours searching when you’re already maxed out.

Did you know?

80% of moms with anxiety or depression go undiagnosed, meaning that whatever they are experiencing is ‘normal’, leading them to never seek treatment.

About MyTribe

As a psychiatric nurse practitioner, Kim Meehan was well aware that women experienced a wide variety of challenges entering motherhood. But it wasn’t until her own lived experience that Kim saw the glaring need for more mental health support for moms and new parents. 

Kim was inspired to get her perinatal mental health certification (PMH-C) to support mothers in her private practice. But she also knew there needed to be reputable resources and a positive community available to women and parents everywhere, not just the ones she could see in her work week. And so, MyTribe was born.

Let’s Connect

COMING SOON! 

We’re currently crafting courses and features, so when we launch MyTribe, it will be full of the resources you’ve been longing for.

For now, here’s how you can get connected.

Sign up for our newsletter to be the first to know when we launch the MyTribe community and to receive access to other MyTribe news and resources.

Follow us on social media to join the conversation and get tips from Kim Meehan, Psych NP, PMH-C!

Did you know?

Only 20% of new moms are screened for mental health concerns and of that only 15% receive treatment.