Feminist Mama


I am a liberated stay-at-home, not some sort of June Cleaver throwback!

Among all of the difficult adjustments that accompanied Aodán's birth six and a half years ago, one of the most frightening was becoming dependent on my husband in a way I had never been before. I wanted to be at home with my baby, but had been used to working and being a student, getting feedback on the work I was doing, managing my own money, being appreciated for my intelligence and skills. And all of the sudden I was doing utterly exhausting work that didn't feel like any work I'd ever done before and that I would have been pining for if someone were paying me to be somewhere else, only they weren't because we'd just moved to Prague. I wasn't really accountable to anyone so long as I kept him clean and fed, which was strange feeling -- I could spend the day making flashcards teaching the baby ancient Greek and calculus and grinding my own organic babyfood, or I could spend it passed out in front of the television, and no one would fire me. But then again, it wasn't like working harder was going to pay me better. I actually just spent a lot of time waiting for Raven to come home each day so he could hear about my latest adventures in grocery shopping... but there was this vague uneasiness, I wasn't sure about what I was doing. In many ways it resembled those first few days living in college dorms before classes began when nobody was telling me where to be or when to be there. I made jokes about donning pearls and high heels to vacuum, but spent many days in leggings and t-shirts unable to get out of our apartment, unable to find the time to shower. And isolation didn't make me any more sure of what I was doing.

I think some of the strange feeling was this clash between the part of me that knew I was the best person to be caring for child and the part of me who had spent her life being told how smart she was and what great things she was going to accomplish. Free to Be You and Me had been an anthem, telling me little girls could grow up to be anything they wanted. I am just not sure that being a mommy counted. And as an intelligent woman, I was supposed to be out vindicating all the hard-won rights my feminist forebears had fought for. On the other hand, I had just been introduced to this idea that perhaps feminism could be defined as believing that every woman, as a person, gets to express herself fully as the person she is -- that she not have to be one way or another simply because she is female. Surely that applied to the choice to be with my children if that is what I choose... at least I think it's what I choose.

Actually it's not that great a choice: surely the work I do, the creativity it requires, the exhausting hours, the vulnerability and humility and willingness to keep trying when I realize that I am not at all cut out to be a mother but rather one of those park rangers who lives in remote corners of national parks watching out all day for forest fires, surely these shouldn't leave me with no social security, a big gap on my resume when I decide to try contributing to the gross national product officially again, the statistical risk for intense poverty if Raven should ever decide he's had enough of me. But on the other hand, if I were employed, I'm pretty sure most of what I earned would go to paying somebody to do what I'd want to be doing myself, and a lot of what I have seen of day care scares me. If my children can drive me, who loves them more than life itself, a little crazy, imagine the effect they'd have on someone without the biological imperative to keep showing up for them day after day!

You don't have to survey much mommy culture to realize what a huge divide the stay-at-home vs. working issue is -- and I have friends all over the spectrum. But I think it's one of those debates that distracts you from the real issue, about how our society doesn't particularly value the work of child-rearing (and the best discussion of this I've ever read is in Anne Crittenden's The Price of Motherhood ).

So if the political is personal, how do I survive being a feminist who is dependent on her husband? I think using the term "equal" is a bit misleading, because if you were to look at this mathematically, our jobs, our worths, our needs are incommensurable, we're doing different, necessary things and trying to remember to appreciate the others' roles. He is an amazing cook and a fun father and my best friend and if I tried to keep score of who was doing what and who was getting what I'd waste a lot of energy and be miserable -- I just know that I'm getting better at asking for the time and space and resources I need.

When one of my sons starts worrying about whether I'm being fair, I usually try to redirect the discussion and remind him that we all have different needs at different times and that I do my best to meet his needs and also his brother's, and that I'd rather spend time playing than bookkeeping, so he's just going to have to trust me. I'm not saying that in the big picture fair isn't worth fighting for, but my family is not going to be the battlefield for this fight, when trusting feels so much better.

Posted: Thu - June 19, 2003 at 10:40 PM      


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