Two weeks ago, my sister asked this
season's first, “what do you want for Mother's Day?”
Mother's Day is a big business.
Greeting cards, brunches, champagne toasts, jewelry, spa treatments,
flowers, mugs from the paint-your-own-pottery place. The intention is
valid, even admirable: to honor mothers and the work they do raising
children.
Except this year, when my sister asked
what I might want for Mother's Day, I did not think of the potential
flower arrangements, necklaces with children's birth stones, or sappy
greeting cards that were supposed to honor the hours and attention I
give to my children. It's counter-intuitive, really, given that
raising children can be exhaustive work with only emotional
fulfillment as its reward. But raising my children is not what I
recently find so exhausting.
No, what I recently find exhausting and
what I thought of instead of the potential gifts I might reap is that
in 45 states, 944 provisions have been introduced that would limit
women's reproductive health and rights. I thought of how Arizona, now
declares by law that pregnancy begins up to two weeks before
conception - “from the first day of the last menstrual period of
the pregnant woman.” So for Arizona, life begins before an egg is
even fertilized, which by extension then means every woman in Arizona
is pregnant the first two weeks of her monthly cycle. This is purely
to limit abortion rights, but it just made the Sex Education taught
in the public schools that much more confusing. No matter though,
because while the most effective way to reduce teen pregnancy and
abortion is through education in the public schools, several states
introduced bills that would forbid anything but abstinence education
or stipulate that certain “facts” must be taught, even if these
“facts” aren't facts at all or have any medical or scientific
basis. Abstinence education, as we know, is very good at telling
women not to get pregnant by not having sex or to protect themselves
from getting sexually abused or raped. It's also good for
perpetuating sexist and traditional gender roles since when an
unplanned pregnancy happens, it's the woman's life it impacts or
education that gets derailed. It's lousy for educating or empowering
men to take responsibility for themselves in preventing rapes, sex
abuses, or unwanted pregnancies.
In Wisconsin, Gov. Walker repealed the
comprehensive sex education laws only to replace it with an
abstinence only one. He signed legislation to restrict abortion
rights in health care exchanges and require doctors to “investigate
women” seeking abortions to make sure they aren't being coerced
(because it's such a big decision – surely a woman can't work this
one out by herself). Then Walked signed a bill to nullify enforcement
of the federal Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay for Women Act. So he may want
women to have children, but he doesn't want to help them support the
children his laws encourage.
I also thought of how many friends I
have that since becoming mothers, they were passed over for
promotions and raises – all because of the perception, that because
of their family life, they would be less “available” or
“committed” or “reliable” or “serious” at work, even
though all solid evidence points to the contrary. Or the women who
receive inadequate maternal leaves, so they go back to work after two
or six weeks, as if they were out for a root canal rather than the
act of having a baby. I thought of how women, on average, make 77
cents for each dollar that men make and that number drops to 73 if a
woman is a mother. If that mother is single, the number drops further
to 60 cents. Mothers are also 79% less likely to be hired compared to
non-mothers with the same education and experience. Given that having
a baby is one of the leading causes of a poverty spell for a family
in this country, it seems we might want to point our attention to
empowering women to provide for the families politicians think they
should be having.
Then I thought of how every 90 seconds,
or in other words, 1,000 women a day, die from a pregnancy related
death. 90% of these are preventable and 50% of these happen in the
first 48 hours after delivery. The US ranks 50th in the
world for maternal health.
The US also spends 30 cents of every
dollar on the military, while only 4 cents goes towards education. So
while the US has figured out how to monetize the killing of people,
and even the incarcerating of people, we haven't figured out how to
monetize the raising and education of people, and therefore, it falls
to the bottom of the financial priority list.
I could go on about the recent
injustices aimed at mothers and women, but I don't know that I need
to. You get the idea, and that there's enough for me to say that to
live in a country so actively limiting the rights of women and
mothers on an almost daily basis – to such extent of 944 provisions
in the first three months of 2012 alone – that Mother's Day feels
like a cheap-drug-store-bought consolation prize of an
acknowledgment.
A champagne toast brunch is a tempting
way to spend a May Sunday morning; a boat ride on the lake in Central
Park is an exquisitely tempting way to spend a morning having my
parenting energies acknowledged. But I don't want it, because it's
meaningless in a culture that doesn't put its attention and money
where its mouth is.
No, what I want for Mother's Day is to
live in a culture that values women and mothers and empowers them to
be the best mothers they can be, and that means empowering them to
decide for themselves when and how to give birth and how best to
provide for their families, instead of leaving it up to a bunch of
white guys to decide for them. Until then, I have no interest in a
holiday that essentially is a band-aid for the rest of the year.
3 comments:
Great post and agree completely.
I conceived and gave birth in Arizona, which explains why he was two weeks late.
You hit the nail on the head with this one, and I'd just like to add (as a former sexuality educator) that Abstinence Only "education" also encourages boys to view girls as manipulative and coercive. Not so much education as indoctrination.
Well said Kristina! And thanks so much!
Post a Comment