I was raised to believe all the usual liberal things about men and women. How humans are all broadly the same apart from differently shaped genitals and some socialisation; how sexist stereotypes alone are what hold women back in the workplace; how success in the workplace and the world at large is what men and women, to equal degrees, do (and should) aspire to. How parenthood, not motherhood, should have equal impact on both parents; how having a child would be a temporary blip in a life otherwise oriented outwards, towards the world.
Then I had a baby. It is commonplace to observe that life after becoming a parent is different from life before, which is true, and one part of this was my cherished liberal beliefs running aground on the physical reality of being, not a parent, but specifically a mother.
For me, becoming a mother involved 12 surreal and painful hours of labour followed by a crash C-section and a week on a drip. Recovery took a month. On sharing this with other women who are mothers I discovered that most of us have a horror story of one sort or another about childbirth, but that a polite omerta exists around sharing these either with men or with non-mothers. On the whole this is probably for the best, or no woman would ever consider getting pregnant. But it is only the first layer in a cloak of obfuscation that lies over the nature of motherhood.
Gestating a baby is physically punishing, and one sports science study compared it to running a 40-week marathon in terms of energy expenditure. Getting the baby out is not easy, either. Although, mercifully, fewer women die having babies in Britain nowadays thanks to modern obstetrics, childbirth still carries a high risk of sometimes life-changing complications.
Women who have had one or more babies by vaginal delivery are at double or treble risk of developing pelvic floor disorders – that is to say, anal or vaginal prolapses or urinary or even faecal incontinence. And once the baby is there, breastfeeding demands some 500 or so additional calories a day, is painful to establish and comes with a risk of mastitis and other unpleasant experiences.
This life-changing experience collides at a fundamental level, as I discovered, with the liberal vision of all humans as equal, rational individuals, for whom embodied existence is a mere servant to the pursuit of individual desire. To the extent that it is a liberal movement, much of feminism has focused on freeing women from those aspects of our traditional roles that seemed an impediment to women’s freedom to fulfil ourselves.
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SubscribeOh my goodness, yes!!! I was pregnant as a teenager under horribly traumatic circumstances and forced to give up my baby. Those biological effects and the symbiosis between mother and child are powerful. It has had a powerful effect on my whole life. I was turned off by feminism for a long time for this very reason.
I studied animal behavior for a while because I wanted to become a dog behaviorist and this is something we share with other mammals. Other mammals can’t make up ridiculous rules about gender roles, but the roles of each sex in caring for their young are largely biologically determined.
Thank you for saying it!
Mary, 2 years late but I was directed here by your link in your article posted today, 2 Mar 2023. This is a brilliant and eye-opening piece. I have never read or heard this discussion in any other forum before. Thank you. I will make one small comment: you say this discussion has been kicked to the corner by everyone irrespective of their political affiliations. I think it is just that nobody has thought of it in these terms due to the societal conditioning that you talk about.
Mary, 2 years late but I was directed here by your link in your article posted today, 2 Mar 2023. This is a brilliant and eye-opening piece. I have never read or heard this discussion in any other forum before. Thank you. I will make one small comment: you say this discussion has been kicked to the corner by everyone irrespective of their political affiliations. I think it is just that nobody has thought of it in these terms due to the societal conditioning that you talk about.
Great article. Properly eye-opening and revelatory.
As side issue, there does seem to be a campaign, in our society, to convince women that if they go outdoors they will be assaulted by a stranger and if they go home they’ll be murdered by their partners.
Neither of these things is true. Men are the majority of victims of violence. Male murder victims out-number females by 2:1
Sad that the theme of this article is both obvious in the real world and yet a taboo subject. And so many influential people want to fight this natural reality. In brief they want to stop people being humans and turn us into soulless automatons.
Sad that the theme of this article is both obvious in the real world and yet a taboo subject. And so many influential people want to fight this natural reality. In brief they want to stop people being humans and turn us into soulless automatons.