Motherhood Isn’t Red or Blue

By: The Well Mom (View Profile)

When I think back to where my head was in the days and early months of new motherhood, I could barely get dressed some mornings, let alone find the time to dissect and digest world problems. For me, a proud personal victory was taking a shower.

I was planning to go back to work after a few months of maternity leave. And while I ended up not returning to a demanding 24/7 job covering hard news, I have managed to cobble together some part-time work that keeps my mind energized and quells my anxieties about not staying on the hardcore career track. Some days I am perfectly satisfied and comfortable with my decisions. When I have the delicious luxury of sitting and reading to my children at the neighborhood library in the middle of the day or can drop everything when someone is sick or have the time to take them shopping for shoes without stress or time pressures, I know that my choices about work and family were the right ones for us ... at this point in time.

There are days when being a mom isn’t easy and certainly isn’t glamorous. I don’t love every single minute of every single day. But through my own experiences, I have come to realize that motherhood in the twenty-first century isn’t black or white ... or red or blue. No matter where you stand, steadfast working mom feminist or conservative stay-at-home happy housewife or some combination of the two, the intense scrutiny and debate over Governor Sarah Palin only reinforces to me that how each one of us approaches motherhood is a deeply personal choice.

Despite the hype about the “mommy wars,” now that I’ve joined the club, I believe there really is no right or wrong or one size fits all prescription as to how to be the best mother in this day and age. And while I differ in my ideologies from Palin’s stands on choice and gun control, I cannot judge her for her decision to step onto the national stage despite having a four-month-old infant with special needs and a pregnant teenage daughter at home. How could I possibly know what was going through her mind? Who am I to cast stones?

Like many women, I’ve been riveted by coverage of the little known Governor of Alaska who has been thrust into the media spotlight by the McCain campaign. (Disclosure: I worked briefly in McCain’s Senate office while on a journalism fellowship in 1998.) My first reaction to the news that Governor Sarah Palin would be McCain’s VP pick was frankly, offense. As if Hillary supporters would just suddenly fall in line behind a pro-life, anti-gun control candidate because she has a vagina. It was insulting. As I started to read more about her background, I thought it seemed to be a smart choice for the GOP to find someone female, fresh-faced, and a self-described hockey mom to boot. I’m assuming that the strategists figured that adding a contemporary working mom with modest roots to the ticket would reflect a modernity and down to earth element to a McCain White House.

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posted: 09.08.2008
Kristi Stevens
You know, I completely agree that Palin's choices for her family are hers and hers alone. As a working mom raising my kids in a suburb where most moms don't work, I've certainly had my share of direct and indirect criticism and I don't appreciate it. Where I differ with Kathleen's comment below is here: If Sarah Palin makes her personal views on how she chooses to raise her family the template for us all, then I think its fair to ask how exactly her children are being parented. If she is to become the new standard for all working women, then by all means she must share with us exactly how she does it and how she intends to help us all do it. If she keeps her personal life separate with the attitude of "this works for me and I won't pretend to know what works for you" then I'm all on board with judging her sticlty on what qualifies her to be VP. So far on that point, I'm a little fuzzy. I'm looking forward to her first National interview with Charles Gibson for clarificaiton.
posted: 09.05.2008
Kathleen Wiant
This is a great article on the issue that has been on the forefront of all of our minds week: How will Sarah Palin do it all? If Sarah Palin were running for Mother of the Year, an appropriate question would be "How will she be a good mother while being VP of the United States”. Seeing as she is running for Vice President of the United States, the appropriate question then becomes, “How will she be a good Vice President while having 5 children?" Period. The questions end there. It is not appropriate for us therefore to ask “How will she care for her kids? Who will care for them? When will she see them? How much time is she spending with them?” And everytime we have a woman like Sarah or Hillary in the limelight, it brings us one step closer to equality.
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