To celebrate mothers, give women their rights, respect
When I was young, my father gave me a piece of advice about choosing a career: Stay away from any occupation with a national “appreciation” day.
As a public high school teacher, he believed that those days were a performative substitute for fair wages and social respect.
So what, by that logic, are we to make of Mother’s Day?
I’ve been a mother for 27 years, and was the child of a living mother for 40, so I appreciate the importance of a culturally enforced day in which motherhood is celebrated with breakfast in bed or tea in some fancy garden, with cards and gifts and floral and/or edible arrangements. You will not see me ever turning down any of these things (though I never have been a fan of breakfast in bed, mainly because I know if something spills, and it will, I’m the one changing the sheets).
But if we’re being honest, motherhood is not something this country actually celebrates at all.
Oh, we sell motherhood. Hard. We make it abundantly clear in every cultural medium at our fingertips that while having a mom can be a bit of a chore, being one is the best. From “Baby Boom” to “Jane the Virgin,” film and television have taught every woman who didn’t think she wanted a child that it was the best thing that could ever happen to her.
We greet celebrity baby bumps with unabashed glee, watch YouTube videos of complete strangers’ gender-reveal parties of complete strangers and nod in amused sympathy at all those TikToks about kids’ messy rooms or really stupid texts. Moms: They really do do everything, including shoot hilarious emotional breakdowns in their cars for our general amusement.
And we love, or love to hate, the accouterments of motherhood. Will Crocs ever not be in fashion? Or tote bags? “Mom jeans”?
Never mind the multibillion-dollar industries aimed directly at mothers, from birthing classes and baby clothes boutiques to test prep and wedding planners.
But when it comes to actually supporting mothers – as in, providing essential services that they actually need – well, that’s another story entirely.
Since the Supreme
Court overturned Roe v. Wade, many states have made it abundantly clear that they consider motherhood a legal obligation, if not an actual punishment for having sexual intercourse, consensual or not, that results in pregnancy. Intent, desire, capability matter not at all. Cells are dividing in your body and you will ensure that they result in a child. Or else.
Given that 60% of those seeking an abortion already have at least one child, surely control over their own bodies is a better Mother’s Day present than a gift card to T.J. Maxx.
Not surprisingly, those new laws have resulted in pregnant and miscarrying women being turned away from emergency rooms and clinics, where doctors and nurses are too afraid of being penalized for potentially assisting in or failing to report anything remotely resembling an abortion to do their actual jobs.
You want to celebrate motherhood? Forget the cards and flowers; guarantee pregnant women access to emergency rooms in every state.
And how about if every company that uses Mother’s Day as an advertising opportunity uses that money to help fund affordable daycare instead?
I am not saying we should cancel Mother’s Day, which is lovely and important, and I will definitely be expecting French toast and flowers from my children and spouse. But as we all make those brunch reservations or run out for last-minute bouquets, let’s take a moment to consider how our country actually treats motherhood.
I love being a mother, so much so that I had my third at 43, and I’d do it all again in a heartbeat. But it is a 24/7, no time off, sometimes physically demanding, often emotionally draining job that should not be forced on anyone, either through legislation or social conditioning. Nor should it be made any harder than it already is.
If we truly celebrate motherhood – or worry about declining birth rates – we should show it by treating all women and their reproductive choices with respect, and by supporting those who choose motherhood with policies that address the reality of the American workforce and those mothers who are struggling in and outside it.
To paraphrase the suffragettes: We may love roses, but we also need bread.