Wednesday, June 29, 2011

June 29, 2011


I recently read some work written by Adrienne Rich. I was totally blown away by her words.

“A natural mother is a person without further identity, one who can find her chief gratification in being all day with small children, living at a pace turned to theirs….should be quite literally selfless….”

As a mother, have I become totally lost in that particular world? Are we nothing more than breeding factories, or someone's wife? I have been on those paths of self discovery, like what Rich wrote about.

At 51, I am in school, again -- just this time finishing. I am planning on law school.

I have reinvented myself again. This is the life of the average american mother -- a series of reinventions. In some cases finding our true self, other than the self of being a Mommy!

Oh, but please forgive me I am not complaining. Like Rich contends in her writing, “This is what women have always done.”   We have lived in a male sponsored society and I have so often thought that I was not important. But, I am not sure whether this is true in our different sub-cultures. I do not know how women are treated in New York City or San Francisco or any other major city other than the cities among the Gulf Coast.

I do know that life as a mother was very lonely to me until I started become friends with myself and started to understand that I could make some of my mother tasks into hobbies – like gourmet cooking,  embroidery,  the love of history into genealogy research, and so forth.

So this trek is a blog of self discovery. Which I will share, starting out with Rich’s literary work.  Why would I want to do that? I started researching her and WOW! Her work and life is something to be shared.

Adrienne Rich is my father’s age. Her youngest son is my age.  She is a fantastic writer. She had three children (boys) about the same time my mother had her three children (2 boys and a girl.) She had to get permission to have a tubal ligation. A nurse told her after the procedure, “Had yourself spayed, did you?” according to Rich.  What was she a type of non-human primate? But when discovering about her life I kept thinking about the Donna Reed “motherism.”  What is interesting, I had to get permission in 1992 for my tubal ligation. I was living in Mississippi at the time and there were legal guidelines that need to be met.

But the Donna Reed “motherism” was just a television induced myth. It wasn’t supposed to be that way. But the real Donna Reeds and the Adrienne Richs are much more than just mothers.  They were also anti-war activists during the Vietnam Era.  They were and are major contributors to our society – contributors who were classified in a patriarchal society as someone’s wife or mother. Their contributions came from a very powerful tool, their brain and their that has been reinvented time and time again.




Purple Babies

Purple Babies
They are cute. I am glad they aren't mine.

Important Question?

Can a mother be a man? Yes --- in a New York minute! He can change a diaper and wipe a nose. Can a mother be a father? Yes -- a woman can put a worm on a hook just as fast as a man.

Important Questions ?

Does giving birth make you a mother? Does having a child in a relationship make you a father? On both accounts no. Just because you have a biological connection to a child makes you not a mother or a father. A real father or mother is painful, tearful, dramatic, tempered, hurt, love, hate, like, giving of one's needs totally to the point of distraction and so on. The biggest thing you can give you child doesn't come in the form of a gift. The biggest thing you can give your child is "YOUR TIME."

About Me

My photo
This blog started as a class project, but I couldn't put it down. There is just too much information that we need as women and as parents! We shouldn't be afraid to talk about any of it!