Mother Daughter Exchange Club -
Then, the daughters exit, and the mothers share their own raw truths: the sacrifices they made for family, the career dreams they postponed, the insecurities they still carry at 45.
“That’s the secret sauce,” says Linda Park, 48, a founding member. “My daughter won’t tell me when she’s scared of failing. But she’ll tell her ‘exchange mom’—my best friend—in two seconds. And then that mom tells me, and I learn how to ask the right questions.” The “exchange” also involves skill-sharing. One week, a mother who is a mechanic teaches three daughters how to change a tire. The next week, a teenager who runs a small Etsy shop teaches three mothers how to negotiate a Venmo refund or start a TikTok campaign. mother daughter exchange club
Founded in Portland, Oregon, and rapidly spreading to suburban communities nationwide, the club operates on a radical premise: You don’t really know your daughter. And she doesn’t really know you. The structure is simple but powerful. Eight to twelve mother-daughter pairs meet biweekly. For the first hour, the mothers leave the room. The daughters—aged 13 to 19—hold a facilitated “open council” discussing everything from social media pressure and body image to academic stress and romantic relationships. Then, the daughters exit, and the mothers share
Note: Depending on the intent (lifestyle, cultural exchange, or fiction), this article leans toward a community/mentorship program. If you meant a different genre (e.g., adult fiction), please clarify. By Jessica M. Hayes The next week, a teenager who runs a
