Betty Conroy, PT
When I began my MTY journey during the onsite M8 module, I was hopeful to learn how to integrate my passion for yoga into patient treatments and to gain competence in teaching yoga classes....
This is part two of a conversation on Women and Mother’s rights, How Far Have We Come?
Rose Kennedy, mother of 9 children, including President John F. Kennedy said, “I looked on child rearing not only as a work of love and duty but as a profession that was as fully interesting and challenging as any honorable profession in the world and one that demanded the best I could bring to it.”
Mothering is a most honorable profession, more important than sending men to the moon or even leading a country. After all, does not the future of our country rest in the hands of our children? So then, mothers should not (have to) apologize for putting the profession of mothering at the top of their priority list.
It is time to stop lavishing superficial praise on mothers for taking time out of (or canceling entirely) their careers to give birth and raise children. Society has pushed its skewed work ethic onto mothers so heavily – that they end up apologizing for mothering or end up being pushed out of the workplace (or from mothering) entirely.
Case in point – a colleague of mine (to remain unnamed) – recently sent me an email. In it she apologized for not being able to multi-task well enough to keep up with her workload during her pregnancy.
The mother of 1 (with a second on the way) writes, “I am feeling guilty about contacting you without a plethora of attachments filled with work for our project, but I need to let you know that I have been unable to make headway yet. I have to admit that my priorities have shifted more than I expected with this pregnancy ~ being only 6 weeks away from delivery. I just need to accept that this (having to slow down and take care of myself and my unborn baby) is how it is and it is okay. I certainly hope I have not made life more difficult for you. However, I cannot take on the project at this time. I will look forward to it in the future. My focus is on being a mom and keeping my small business running…”
My response to her, “First of all. Relax and enjoy. You did not have to write the email to me. I would absolutely expect nothing different from you right now. You may have to defend your priorities and family dedication to the rest of the world, but not me. Being a fellow mom, business owner, and therapist who holds similar root values – I empathize and understand.
This time in your life you are exactly where you need to be. You are a wonderful, dedicated, intelligent woman and professional. – and when you are ready, I know you will be perfect for the project.
In fact, what you are doing now (mothering) is creating the perfect experience(s) for you to become a master at your professional specialty in the future. Society may not recognize this Truth – but you are becoming an expert in your profession BECAUSE you are a mother, NOT in spite of it.
Is the United States a country which loves its children? Not if the current system remains the way it is.
We must:
Society needs to put its money where its mouth is.
Our society has become a “2 income culture”, forcing women back to work and displacing our children into the hands of daycare workers – who are under-paid and under-appreciated. As a result, staff turnover can be high and workers with degrees in early childhood education can be difficult to find and keep.
Love and sacrifice is not lacking. Don’t get me wrong. I am not suggesting that parenting or mothering is not rewarding or wonderful or that mothers should get “paid” to be parents. As mothers, we love our children. Through all of time and history women have made the sacrifice to put everyone first – children, husbands, families, even communities. We do it out of love.
The real Truth, and where the problem lies is – society has long taken advantage of a Mother’s Love. It is time for American society and government to love our children enough – to create equitable rights for mothers.
Rose Kennedy was right – mothering is the most honorable profession, as honorable as any other. Mothering is the ultimate service we are able to render to God and country. Let all mothers stop apologizing for working in this most honorable profession – and start demanding the resources and remuneration to do the job well.
*my oldest son, with a flower he picked for me
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