This blog is in response to an article
in the Daily Mail entitled “The
women who think they're too clever to have
babies”
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2236467/The-women-think-theyre-clever-babies-Theyre-educated-dynamic-careers--believe-motherhood-beneath-them.html#ixzz2CxOT7z6o
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2236467/The-women-think-theyre-clever-babies-Theyre-educated-dynamic-careers--believe-motherhood-beneath-them.html#ixzz2CxOT7z6o
Actually (considering it is from the
Daily Fail) it isn't a bad article. But I am afraid I came at it with
my Feminist Hat on and, as often is the case, the issues that leaped out for me in the “child free versus child” debate were those
that were omitted.
I completely understand why some women
chose not to have kids *.
The fact that women in the late 20th and early 21st
century are in a position to even make this choice is something that
we must never take for granted (in much of the world women still do
not have the economic, educational and reproductive health freedoms
that we have). It is slightly incredible that a sane, successful,
solvent person would give up a good disposable income, sex and
weekend lie-ins for years of sleepless nights, turbulent
relationships, toddler tantrums, snot, sick and sh*t (oh my word,
there is just so much sh*t) and a monthly expenditure that try as you
may always exceeds income.
One
woman stated “Having children alters a woman’s personality. It
makes them boring to me”. I hold my hands up to this completely –
baby talk is very dull. Even as a mother there gets to a point
where you do not wish to know any further detail about little
Charlie's bowl habits, how frequently Elizabeth woke in the night or
the new additions to Alfie's vocabulary. But I am equally driven to
pull out my own eye lashes by intricate office politics explained ad
infinitum
by the utterly tedious people who have nothing else in their lives
other than work and who believe themselves to be indispensable.
And
I won't be held responsible for what happens to the next person that
puts 300 photos on Facebook of this year's 7th exotic
holiday whale watching/ice diving/Himalayan trekking. Having small
children doesn't automatically make you intrinsically dull, some
people are like that anyway.
Is saying Motherhood is the “hardest
job” simply "a smart way to satiate unappreciated women" as
one commentator suggested? Yes, it is very difficult if you define
“hard” as 24/7, physically and emotionally exhausting with no
clocking off time and no toilet breaks (well unless you call having
to end a fight between 2 two year olds while changing a tampon a
“break”). Challenging and demanding it is, mentally stimulating
it is most certainly not. So yes, it occasionally pains me when I
know at the end of a long day my husband has designed a telephone
network that keeps the London Stock Exchange running yet the most
important decision I have made all day is which nozzle to use in my
piping bag (not a euphemism). I do at times feel frustrated – there
are days where I wonder of what further use a science degree and a
masters will be. Although I suppose my PGCE does come in useful (once
I have relocated that star chart and reminded myself that extreme
shouting and locking children in the under stairs cupboard are no
longer deemed appropriate sanctions for misbehaviour).
But this statement worried me:
‘You can be
too intelligent to have children. To reach your full intellectual
potential you need to be childless. If you are a thinking woman it’s
more sensible not to become a parent.’
It depresses
me to think that in the 21st century there still has to be
a choice between being educated and successful or being a mother.
After all this is not a choice that most men have to make. Why is it
that people forget that children have fathers too? I fully respect a
woman or a man for choosing to not have children. But I question what
proportion of those women who “put their careers first” would
actually, in a perfect world, not like to have the opportunity to
have both a fulfilling career and a family life? I suppose it could
be argued that biology is against us: often the critical stage in a
woman's career coincides with declining fertility (late 30s early
40s). But is this not just a social construct? How many men make a
serious decision to sacrifice their careers in order to have kids?
Until it becomes socially acceptable (and practical) for the the
whole child rearing business to divided equally between both parents
then this debate will just keep on going. Let's hope my daughter
truly has all the opportunities of her brother born 13 minutes
after her.
Gemma x
*
I
am not in anyway trying to belittle the experiences of those who for
whatever reason are unable to have children when they desperately
want to. And yes I am truly grateful for the healthy existence of my
two little brats.
No comments:
Post a Comment