We've taken Beanie to JC Penney's for portraits at 6 and 9 months. We order an 8 x 10 from each session. A few weeks ago I put the last one in a frame, and it is sitting on the very top of our entertainment center.
And I feel like the Dursley's. A big, zoomed-in portrait of our precious child, beaming out and placed front-and-center like the most important and only child ever to grace this planet.
I feel like I am bragging and flaunting. I fear bringing the evil eye to our home.
She's been in bed since about 6:30, not even five hours. I find myself looking up at the picture, and being warmed inside.
Triple S was sick today, so he is also in bed. I can hear him snoring, alternating with the dog here in the living room.
I cherish this quiet time in the house. It's dark and quiet outside; I feel enclosed in the comfort of my own home. There's no TV, no radio. Just the sounds of my loved ones breathing. I can even see the rise and fall of the cat's torso as he lays curled up on the radiator.
And I have space. Space to think, to feel, to ponder. To hope, dream and worry. If I go to bed, I'd fall asleep, without exploring my inner world.
My life has changed over the last few years. Almost to a point that is incomprehensible and unrecognizable. A paradigm shift. Everything that I spend my time on now is different than in 2007, when I was pregnant.
My SIL and I briefly spoke of feminism recently. I believe that in some ways, the opening of the workplace to women has put a tremendous burden upon us.
Oh, I hear squeaks coming from the bedroom. I'll have to finish these thoughts later!
Later:
Now it is bright and snowing. I am still safely ensconced in my house!
Any way, bra burning and women in the workplace.
Now, to be a successful woman and a successful mom, the expectation is out there that you can have a job, raise your kids, have a sparkling clean house, cook for the bake sale. Do it all.
But, if you want a high pressure career, like being an academic scientist, you probably don't want to have kids. I think back to the women 'role models' when I was in grad school. I can easily recall 4 or 5 women professors, and I think one of them had kids. My own PI, a male, sent his kids back to China to be with their grandparents for a year. Sure, I think it's great to spend time with grandparents and I understand the Chinese tradition of the kids being raised by the older generation, but I know a certain someone who was glad to have the kids off his hands so he could work from 8 to 11. And I don't mean 11 am.
So, if you want to be a PI, you have to compete against the people who are willing to 1) not have a family or 2) ship the family off and out of the way.
That was a bit of a digression. Anyway.
So, one thing about women's liberation. I think it has put tremendous pressure on women to do all and be all. And this pressure comes from other women, from thinking that we are keeping up with the Joneses, from ourselves even perhaps.
Since Serenity died, I've learned to be brave and to define my happiness my own way. It was hard to quit my PhD at the time I was quitting. I wasn't happy and I didn't know anyone who was happy with a PhD either. But I didn't like the 'quitting' part. It would have been easier to just stay the course. Not to have to admit that I was wrong in deciding to pursue a PhD.
And now I look back, and wonder if I should have even gone on and got the Master's. Maybe if I had stepped back a step further, I would have gone back to more of what I learned for my bachelor's. Gone back to farming, because that is one thing I think I might want to do with my future once Beanie starts school. Of course, having the MS and having worked at the bench for all those years allows me to do the freelance work that I now do, at a decent wage, at home, around Bea's (and my blogging) schedule.
Returning to feminism, I think there are still issues to work out. Reports tell us that women continue to make less than their male counterparts. We have a laughable maternity leave policy in the US. Breastfeeding is still ostracized and under-supported. Pregnancy is all about glowing and not about real medical issues and treating pregnant women like they have a brain and can handle hearing about the risks to themselves and their babies. I don't know what academic feminists work on, maybe things more esoteric, but these are some of the issues I see down here in the trenches of modern life and motherhood.
I do have to say that I feel like a radical feminist. I am educated, yet I have chosen to stay home with my baby. That's not an easy choice to make, to give up the career identity. (I am glad to have the choice, and that's thanks to women's lib; and everyone else can choose to do whatever they want*) I was thinking about staying at home when pregnant with Serenity. I think I might have taken the plunge once she was born. One of the reasons I never wanted to have kids when I was younger was that I never wanted to rush through work and off to daycare. It's too much like trying to do two things at once for me. And I don't think it would sit well with me having my baby in daycare. I have a friend who has been through four daycare situations in 8 months. I think she is a perfect candidate for staying home, but she is in the middle of getting a degree. But sometimes you can't do it all to your satisfaction. If you were less picky about your science or less picky about how often your kid's diaper gets changed* or lived closer to where you worked, you could do it. But you can't have it all at perfection. Something has to give.
Wouldn't it be great if we lived in a society in which every woman got six years to be pregnant and get the kid to kindergarten and could then re-enter the workforce right where she left off? Or maybe you wouldn't like that? And that's one problem with having A movement. Not everyone agrees on what they want.
Some of the other SAHMs that I meet are punky radicalists too. They're into healthy eating and living and nursing their toddlers and tandem nursing their kids. This is not mainstream folks. Sure, green is a buzz word on many lips, but I don't think everyone really gets it. And it takes time. If you are working full time, you don't have the time to educate yourself. There is so much greenwashing out there. Some of the choices that have gone mainstream are better than what was available just two years ago, but they are kinda half-way.
I would be perfectly happy if Beanie had no plastic toys and no stuffed animals with plastic stuffing (colloquially known as polyester). But family members continue to derail my efforts. I spend hours (HOURS) researching toys and picking out a very few, value-added, educational, non-petrol, non-toxic, non-slave-shop-made toys. Only to have the house filled up with stuff I am not really into. I have an Amazon list people.
As I mentioned in an earlier post, Janis at Ferdinand's Gifts posts about simplifying her life. With this move we have coming up, I think it is an opportunity for us to do the same. I come from a family of packrats, holding onto things for sentimental or 'investment' purposes. From what I have read so far, this is very much not 'minimalist'.
So, this morning, I went to the basement, pulled out my record collection, looked through each sleeve one last time, and bagged them up to take to the record exchange. My record player has been on the fritz for a few years, and I haven't sat in the basement room (it's dark and lonely down there) to listen to records probably since 2006 or 2007. As I was looking at the records, Triple S said, "Those are something you used to truly enjoy. I don't think you should get rid of them. I'll buy you a new turntable when we move." I persevered. I can always buy these songs on ITunes, right? It'll be the same, right? And this way I can finally enter the 21st century and get an IPod!
I am also getting rid of clothes (I have a wardrobe that consists of sizes 6-12). I am getting rid of everything bigger than what fits me RIGHT now, because I never want to where those clothes again. I still want to loose 10-15 more pounds this spring, although I am not getting anywhere on that right now. When we move, I want all my clothes to fit in two plastic tubs (one if we move somewhere without a real winter). Can I do it? Does posting it on my blog make me accountable?
I am also thinking about books. But I don't think I am there yet. Maybe if I plan on getting a Kindle.....
I also plan to unload some furniture and some of the things I got from my Grandmother's house. For instance, she had this rocking chair, I don't know if it was someone's before her or not, but it is an uncomfortable SOB. She never sat in it. I never sit in it. It was in Bea's nursery for about a day, and I just couldn't take it. Then why the heck do I have it? I seem to be able to remember my grandmother without the chair, so I think I'll be just fine if I donate it.
These are some of my personal missions, some of the ideas that I have. Not an essay, maybe not coherent, but definitely stream of conscious.
What do you think about feminism and reproduction? Do you feel like more or less of a feminist with infertility? Infant loss? Or do you think the 'go for a career and delay childbearing' screwed you over?
And, are you an unapologetic consumer? Or a careful steward of both your wallet and your health?
***
*yes, we still have an entertainment center, since we don't yet have a flat screen, HD, LCD TV. Our 12-year-old tiny little TV works just fine.
*If you feel like you really do have a choice. I think that may be part of the point I am trying to make. We don't have perfect choices
*she's using cloth diapers with the cotton right against the skin (no liner) and yep, you really have to change those diapers as soon as the kid wees.
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4 comments:
I guess I find myself somewhere in between. If you check out my newest post on the new blog I am trying to get create, the post all about my greener goals moving forward. Hey, any tips would rock my world. I am very much part of the buy local movement and try to do so as much as possible. I cloth diaper, I nurse, my baby has never used a bottle. I recycle and compost and "I" try to purchase the best toys I can, as much as I can. I am cheap, damn cheap, I do alot of research before buying and think it through, I buy everything on sale, or better yet, second hand. I love second hand stuff and sharing/swapping with friends and family. I also don't take sentimental attachment to many thing and HATE clutter. My husband on the other hand, has bins and bins of sentimental items, but he is slowly parting with what he can. I am also an educated mom with 6 years post secondary, and I love my career. I honestly don't love being a stay at home mom. I found it stressful and difficult. However I also don't love someone else raising my child. In my ideal world I could work 3 full days and have 4 with the babe. I am also very lucky to live in Canada were we get 52 weeks of paid maternity leave.
Daycare is hard. I spend every lunch break with her and it's still damned hard.
I've heard it said that what will really bring about more family-friendly policies in the (U.S.) workplace are dad, not the stay-at-home dads, but the ones who want to work and be more involved than their dads were. Part of me thinks this will be awesome. Part of me is resentful that my country couldn't adopt family-friendly workplace policies when women & children were the most obviously affected groups, though.
I'm glad you have that portrait - 9 months is a big deal, and the Potters would have done the same with Harry if they'd been able to.
I've shelved my career for home life as well. I'm university educated and always had good jobs, but I haven't worked since I went on maternity leave for Hope. This time is for my children now, and raising them to be the best people they can be (even if one of them is not here and even if financially this is not the best option for us).
And I hear you on the toys thing! I'd much rather have just the toys we picked out for Angus, but birthdays and Christmases screwed that right up!
I *love* this post -- or what I've read so far. This is what I'm working on, personally, professionally. How feminism made some choices available, but there is always judgment, there is always pull one way or the other. Always, the question, "and do you have any kids?"
I'm so interested to see what other DBMs who are academics think about the path, the choices, the implications of pursuing the degree, the career -- what happens after the loss or IF. I totally want to print this out and talk to my adviser...
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I look forward to thoughtfully re-reading and finishing this post.
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