Why “Mother” Should Be on Your CV: A Look at Leadership, Resilience, and Caregiving
Maryam Alkadhimi, PhD*
Research Consultant, Lightworkers Advisory and Management FZ LLC, United Kingdom.
*Corresponding Author: Maryam Alkadhimi, PhD, Research Consultant, Lightworkers Advisory and Management FZ LLC, United Kingdom.
https://doi.org/10.58624/SVOAMR.2025.03.019
Received: October 06, 2025
Published: October 23, 2025
Citation: Alkadhimi M. Why “Mother” Should Be on Your CV: A Look at Leadership, Resilience, and Caregiving. SVOA Medical Research 2025, 3:5, 172-176. doi: 10.58624/ SVOAMR.2025.03.019
Abstract
Being a mother is frequently viewed as a "gap" on a resume, a stop in career advancement that needs to be justified. The significance of caregiving to society and the skills it fosters in individuals are both misrepresented by this framing. This article questions the idea that motherhood represents absence rather than growth by drawing on developmental psychology, neuroscience, leadership theory, and introspection. As highlighted by the attachment theory and neuroscience, early caregiving reduces stress, supports resilience, and predicts long-term health outcomes (Bowlby, 1969/1982; Ainsworth et al., 1978; Feldman, 2017). Public health and economic evidence show that caregiving yields immense social and economic benefits that surpass most subsequent interventions (Heckman, 2006; Shonkoff et al., 2009). Leadership research proves that qualities such as teamwork, emotional intelligence, resilience, adaptability, and ethical judgment are paramount for good leadership. All of these qualities are critical for daily care (Heifetz, 1994; Goleman, 1995). Personal reflections show how these skills are a part of practical settings. It covers pregnancy, early caregiving, teamwork, and professional empathy. My resilience and adaptability have grown as a result of being a mother, and I now talk to clients and coworkers differently, seeing them as former children who are looking for understanding. Being a mother does not automatically depict leadership. It offers a strong opportunity to represent the skills most valued in the workplace. We should not refer to it as a "gap". This phase must be accepted as an experience that promotes social welfare and individual growth.
Keywords: Motherhood, Leadership, Attachment Theory, Emotional Intelligence, Professional Development, Work-Life Integration