A Month in the Country!
"A MONTH!"
This is the main reaction I received to the news that I was going away for a month to write a book (about motherhood, as it happens).
Of course there were some people who got it (I think), who didn't react with a quickly-suppressed cough of scandal in their throats. These people said, “Go for it, just make it worthwhile, get that book written already! How brilliant that you've got a room of your own!”
Perhaps the only thing I am clear on is that I simply don't feel the guilt I know I am supposed to. Nor do I feel I "deserve" to have this month. I'm afraid I just want to work, I just want to be by myself, thinking and mulling, and putting stuff down on paper, feeling rubbish when it goes wrong, throwing stuff away, having inspirations and being overwhelmed. Like a writer.
My husband, meanwhile, is being congratulated as a hero, the best husband imaginable (and that’s true, except that he leaves his pants on the floor and snores (not at the same time)), for "giving his wife this opportunity". Actually, it was a negotiated settlement.
Just some of my many Motherload books. I threw away the What to Expect lot. |
Look at those titles: Working Mother, A Good Childhood, Shattered, Torn in Two, Mommy Wars, The Bitch in the House, Tiger Mother, I Don't Know Why She Bothers…
These are the titles that glare disapprovingly down at me as I try to write at home. A row of upright, big sisterly spines, that all proclaim they know better than I do how to be a mother, how to work, how hard to work, how to work hard, how hard it is to be a mother, how a mother shouldn't be trying so hard — enough!
I think that quite a few of those books were written by women who had got through their children's early childhood, and were damned if anyone was going to get away without learning a thing or two about how tough life as a mother really is.
Well, I'm not going to add to the pile. I'm going to write a book about pleasure. About happiness. About joy. About experimentation. About looking closely at one's lived experience, and testing the theoretical frameworks we are told to live by. About deliberately failing the contrived expectations of contemporary Western society — not by going to live in the woods and daubing myself in woad, but by living up to my own expectations. Which, as it happens, are pretty high. I invite you all to be subversive mothers.
Comments
I've just come across this - a friend posted your blog on fb and what a relief to read this.
I experienced the same when I travelled for work reasons. The longest I was away was a week and a bit and so many of my friends (who are also mothers) invited my husband and kids round for dinner, playdates etc. But when my husband was away, or working late, I didn't get the same offer... from the same friends.. funny that.
I'm so jealous!!
Just jealousy here, I'm afraid. I'm ready to kill for the opportunity, but unfortunately himself is in the Far East and there'd be no one to look after the kids.
You've articulated feelings I've had since having children, but especially since I've started working again. I have 3 kids and work, or at least attempt to work (it's sometimes pure hell), from home.
Sometimes I feel I'm walking on a knife edge trying to get the balance right and still feel like a human being. Our western cultural norms are actually still so unchallenged.
I love your idea about being a subversive mother! I'm going to put that up on my bathroom mirror for daily reminding.
GOOD LUCK with the book and just go for it!
Never mind the comments from senior staff about how I shouldn't go for a promotion because I had such young children and so wouldn't be able to put the work in - I left that place!
Enjoy your month :-)
I hope you don't mind that we shared a link to your blog on our theatre company's Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/pramsinthehall) . We are currently working on a play that deals with similar issues and were very excited to have stumbled upon your entry!
Curious to hear if the month will be long enough and fruitful... keep us updated!
Enjoy your time!
Anna and the Prams In The Hall team
Alexa from www.Alexa-asimplelife.com
A friend of mine is a SAHD and if he went away for a month I'd be sure to invite his wife over often and look out for her as I'd be aware she was thrown in the deep end to a certain extent and would have no structure to keep her going.
A similar thing happens at work when you're highly depended on and you need to leave for an operation or some such - people express surprise and worry at what will happen without you (this has just happened to my mum who is out for a hysterectomy). In reality people cope but no one likes their routine to change.
Some of it is definitely sexism, because it's seen as mum's job to be at home. But in larger terms someone has to be around for the children and if the person who normally does it is suddenly away for a fairly long period then the question does arise as to how things will run without them. The idea that dad will flounder is also terribly sexist. Most men, like most women, rise to a challenge. The kids may eat a lot of beans at first but over time like anyone else they get the hang of it.
Hope your writing is going well. FWIW I think some time alone with dad is lovely for children - it's out of the norm and they will probably remember it really fondly.