9 comments


  • Where do I start?

    Here: I love your poems. So powerful.

    Thank you for such an honest and unflinching post.

    I couldn’t read the whole exchange that you linked to, because I became too angry regarding Zucker’s assumptions about motherhood. I don’t know whether she ever reaches the point of saying that sometimes she envies the perceived “extra time” that women without children have. I don’t know whether she acknowledges between choosing not to do something and having that choice taken from you.

    I do know that I’ve often assumed it was choice–one I respect–only to pull myself back and remember that it might not be. Always a reminder to me to be sensitive in case or either way.

    I also don’t know whether it’s ever addressed that men don’t refer to themselves as “men writers” (with some notable exceptions, including Bly). And on the other hand, I still have my copy of Rising Tides, a women’s anthology that I carried with me constantly in the early ’80s.

    I could go on and on, but I won’t. I will say that I do not view pregnancy and/or motherhood as the primary fulfillment of being a woman–and that one of the most important societal roles is the cool aunt. Just ask my kids.

    November 15, 2009
  • I also couldn’t make it through the essay without being exasperated.

    “The female archetypes available in our culture are few. Mother, wife, spinster, whore.”

    & I disagree with this, nowadays.

    November 16, 2009
  • Thanks Joannie.

    Jilly – I sure hope that’s so.
    I think they should at least add “superheroine/supervillainess” to the list.

    November 16, 2009
  • I am without words — thank you so much for this post.

    November 16, 2009
  • Ack. I’m with you on the comment about fearing and pitying (?!) women who aren’t mothers. Gross. Because I’m not married, I assume, I don’t really get asked whether or not I have children, but I am frequently asked whether or not I’m married (I have a long-term live-in boyfriend) or when I’m planning to get married (as of now, I don’t) and I despise the (similar) judgment that married couples levy on unmarried couples. As though a relationship isn’t serious unless you tie it up with legal, social and religious binds, or such binds categorically make it serious.

    November 19, 2009
  • though i am not a mother, i am a daughter. and if feminism isn’t for daughters, the women who come next, who is it for and what good is it?

    if i never have children, i can still make the world safer and more respectful of your daughters. i am still part of this lineage.

    it is sad to me that women who can’t (or choose not to have children) are still judged in such harsh, antiquated, minimizing ways.

    November 20, 2009
  • Thank you! I, too, can’t have kids and it’s really hard going over that fact again and again with people. When I was younger, I didn’t want kids, and when people found out, they called me “selfish” which I’ve never understood.

    I have lots of imaginary daughters in my poems — perhaps wish-fullfillment?

    November 23, 2009
  • Wow, what a beautiful post! Happy Thanksgiving Jeannine xoxo

    November 24, 2009
  • PS for the record, I also have three children, and don’t relate to Zucker at all –she really raised my ire.

    November 24, 2009

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