Mayim Bialik

Mayim Bialik
Mayim Chaya Bialik is an American actress and neuroscientist. From 1991 to 1995, she played the title character of NBC's Blossom. Since 2010, she has played Dr. Amy Farrah Fowler – like the actress, a neuroscientist – on CBS's The Big Bang Theory, a role for which she has been nominated four times for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series, and won a Critic's Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionTV Actress
Date of Birth12 December 1975
CitySan Diego, CA
CountryUnited States of America
There's a tremendous amount to be gained from being a performer, and being an artist, and being an actor.
The most empowering feminist act is for women to be taught about the ways babies bond and then decide what they want to do.
Sleeping with your child, wearing your child in a sling as opposed to pushing them around in expensive strollers, those are things that matter biologically and sociologically for the structure of a family.
I basically look like a lot of modern Orthodox people you know, but I work on a TV show where I sometimes have to kiss Jim Parsons. That's why I don't take on the title of modern Orthodox, but in terms of ideology and theology I pretty much sound like a liberal modern Orthodox person.
Relationships are complicated no matter what style of parenting you choose.
I've become sort of an accidental advocate for attachment parenting, which is a style of parenting that... basically, the way mammals parent and the way people have parented for pretty much all of human history except the last 200 years or so.
I'm big on my kids being conventionally polite, and it works really well for them.
I'm a pretty quiet person.
My first son didn't really take a bottle, and I didn't like giving bottles.
I don't think my stylist would let me bedazzle my splint,
I wish I had read Sacred Pregnancy when I was pregnant instead of the dozen books I had to piece together to try to make sense of it all. Anni Daulter has created what should be the new standard for today's mom: birth journals, labor workbooks, pregnancy memoirs, and holistic wisdom. It is gentle and enlightening, and lays the foundation for what we know helps women have the labor and birth they want and deserve: support, self-knowledge, and empowerment.
I have a neuroscience background - that's what my doctorate is in - and I was trained to study hormones of attachment, so I definitely feel my parenting is informed by that.
I'm concerned about the ocean and the environment. And I love whales.
I don't care much about conforming.