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Read
if you dare:
My own thoughts, my own words, my own agenda...
Pro-choice
I am all for a woman's right to
choose about being a mother.
In fact, I'm all for a woman's right to choose
everything in her life.
It's unfortunate that so few women are able to
really choose anything.
They float along the mainstream, desperate to receive
approval from the majority, when it comes to everything they
say, do, and believe in.
The self-confidence it takes to find your values from
within and not from the environment is astounding.
I don't expect most to be up to the task, but for
those who are, I smile at their shining example of strength.
Women are afraid to choose what it
means to be a woman. During
those vulnerable and impressionable adolescent years of a
woman's life, she turns to external influences and images
in the media, and of course, what she sees at home. If her mother isn't a strong enough figure in her
life, or a positive enough influence, (I stress 'enough' because mom's really up against stiff
competition) then the images in the media will win.
In the United States, children and adolescents spent
an average of 5 hours a day in front of a television.
That's a pretty powerful source of influence, if
you happen to not be in denial about it.
What a young woman will see on the screen, in
sitcoms, reality/contest shows, commercials, and MTV will
have an effect on what she places value in.
For the most part the strongest impression that a
young person will get from the messages promoted in the
media today is that young women (from a shockingly young
age) are above all, valued more if they are blatantly sexy.
It doesn't stop at a young girl learning that if
she dresses more like Britney Spears, more people will like
her or want to know her, but in addition, young boys will
learn that women are supposed to be blatantly objectified,
and even enjoy that kind of attention.
When children grow up in a household where neither
parent is readily available for them (as is what inevitably
happens when both parents work full time, and aren't even
physically present until after their working hours every
day, --after that it becomes an issue of how much emotional
energy they have left over to parent to their potential),
they will automatically accept the substitute they are
forced to settle for -television, shopping malls, and in
general embracing the material and appearance obsessed
culture we are living in.
But how did it get this way? Western culture in the '50s certainly didn't revolve
around Victoria's Secret g-strings and music which
glorifies designer labels and promiscuity.
The feminist movement gradually liberated women from
expectations to focus her energy on her family, while the
husband of the family would provide financially.
Women finally had the opportunity to choose whatever
professional career they wanted, and to instead invest her
life and energies into academic, corporate, etc. ventures. This was wonderful -to have that choice. It was far from glorious for women who prefer some line of
professional pursuits to be expected to walk away from
education or other valuable experiences to stay at home and
raise a family. However, Women's Lib didn't end there. It kept going in the same direction to the point of society
reaching an extreme on the other end of the spectrum, where
women were now instead expected to work full time,
even if they had strong maternal instincts that would lend
themselves to achieving greatest happiness through full-time
motherhood. The
pressure is even more intense if the woman in question is
exceptionally bright and educated.
It is commonly agreed in our culture that it would be
a 'waste' for a woman of above average intelligence and
aptitude to choose to raise children and postpone other
time-intensive pursuits until she no longer has children to
take care of. More
and more this strong cultural influences has pretty negative
consequences for the women in question, but even more so for
the children who are short-changed as a result.
Women with strong maternal instincts are led to
believe that a) it's low-class and limiting yourself to
embrace motherhood at a young age and b) that if you want to
have children, that's no reason to slow down your
career-that's what day cares are for! A young woman, with a high school degree, who would like to
get married and start a family, is looked down upon from all
of society. After
all, she must simply not be intelligent enough for any type
of job if she is staying at home at 18, raising a family.
The pressure she experiences might lead her to
instead opt for college, which while is in itself a
wonderful experience, just increases the pressure (likely to
be voiced by everyone she knows) once she receives the
degree, to shun focusing her energy on family.
She will be constantly told (sometimes outright, but
mostly between the lines) that it would be such a waste to
pursue only motherhood after all that hard work, and why not
'have it all' and pursue a demanding and prestigious
(the more above-average in intelligence and aptitude she is,
the more intense the pressure and tempting the salary from
working outside the home) career while also having children.
Unless women today have tremendous self-confidence and are
able to resist all these outside forces, she will opt to
work and send any children to day-care from birth (after
only a 6 week maternity stay where she actually spends day
and night as a mother), in which case the mother only spends
precious few waking hours with her children during the week,
since women work until around 5 and small children go to bed
so early. This
will lead to a less-attached bond between mother and
child-mom never learns to really rely on her instincts in
responding to her child's needs hour to hour, day after
day, or really become the 'expert' on that child that
mothers who parent around the clock naturally become. This is most acutely felt by the small child who needs
his/her natural 'expert' (mommy) to provide custom care,
who is then prone to more night wakings, to be reassured
that mother is still there, and this is likely to be
resented by a full-time working mother who needs
uninterrupted sleep in order to function in her job the next
day. It
doesn't take that college degree to understand how a child
is not going to be getting the best possible foundation in
life from this arrangement.
Add to that foundation of insecurity a myriad of day
care workers and revolving public school teachers who
primarily raise him/her, and you can see how the child will
not feel totally bonded to any one particular set of values.
He/she is likely to believe that mothers work and
women are supposed to be sexy.
He's also likely to believe that modern day success
is two BMWs in the driveway, which will further shape his
expectations and preferences towards whether his wife works
outside the home (after all, it's hard to pay expensive
car payments as well as hefty mortgage payments on a house
that will impress the neighbors with only one paycheck).
This perpetuates the young woman's dilemma in
trying to 'do it all' and look enticing/desirable, earn
as much money as her husband, and be a sufficient mother,
all at once. Something
has to give-and it's always the children who pay the
price. This
also perpetuates the young man's dilemma from being taught
to value women with sexy exteriors, to expect a woman with
matching career ambitions, and to choose one who he entrusts
the important role of mother to his children.
No wonder the average age of marriage is increasing
almost as fast as the average age of having children.
Back
to my stance of 'pro-choice'-I believe that women
should choose. Choose
to be a mother. Choose
to work full-time. Choose
to dress enticingly, and all the implications on society
that comes with it. Just
have your eyes open that you only have one life to live and
not enough time on this earth to do it all -well. Strength, as well as a real set of values, comes from and
results in real choices.
Women should choose whether they want to take
advantage of today's allowances for women to function in
the workplace on a man's level, or, for some, to follow
their hearts and raise a family.
Whichever they decide, they should make the choice
consciously and be prepared to sacrifice other options in
it's favor. The
idea that women can 'do it all' is misleading and even
dangerous. And
opting to fall in the footsteps of more traditional gender
roles is likely to receive the most negative feedback from
society, so unfortunately, only the truly brash, strong women
will be able to handle that.
That’s a darned shame.
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