Showing posts with label sexism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sexism. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2014

From the Vault: The Peculiar Relationship Between a Mother and a Daughter

Yesterday, mothers across the world were celebrated.  I, too, celebrated my own mother, mother-in-law, and expressed deep gratitude for my own children –blessed that I am now called mother as well.  Mother’s Day also caused me to reflect on my ever-evolving relationship with my mother.  On May 11th, most individuals proudly proclaimed that they have “the best mother ever.”  In all honesty, my mother probably would never be awarded such an honor by any typical societal standards, but I also love her immensely and am grateful for the strength and determination she has passed on to me, though often unintentionally.  The following piece was written at age nineteen for a Women’s Studies course.  It was also included in an anthology that discussed discrimination and sexism in our nation.  Every woman has in her the power to hurt and the power to heal, and almost every woman I know underestimates her strengths, or has her talents diminished by society.  I share this personal essay that every woman may know she is loved and stronger than she believes.  I share this to let every woman know that we are not required to live in shame and fear of our flaws, for we will be forgiven by those that matter most.  I share this to give voice to those mothers who worry they have failed their children.  Our failures make us human, and they are only temporary;  a mother’s love, however, is forever.  This essay was written with the deepest of love for my own flawed, yet incredibly beautiful and brilliant, mother.  Thank you for all that you are and everything you do, Mom.  I love you more than you will ever know.
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The Peculiar Relationship Between a Mother and a Daughter

 I received a telephone call from my sister today.  She spoke heatedly of hatred for my father and shared her desire for my parent’s separation.  I couldn’t believe she said these things with such conviction and genuine detestation.  As she spoke, I denied the possibility that my parents would ever seek a divorce.  My sister went on to inform me that my father had been behaving as a jerk, and that my mother was in agreement with this assessment of his behavior.  I also agree.  My father can often be an insufferable jerk.

However, I went on to defend my patriarchal flesh by advising my young sibling, “Oh, that’s just normal,” as if it were acceptable for our father to be an asshole to his children and their mother.  I have somehow convinced myself that it’s okay for our father to treat us like domestic servants instead of daughters while he sits on the recliner in front of the television hollering out demands – fetch me this and fetch me that.

There remains within me the idea that my mother and I both need him. Society certainly affirms that my mother needs him – for both economic stability and social acceptance.  There is a selfish and culturally obedient child within me that believes my mother should stay and quietly endure my father’s mistreatment.  Despite my belief, I’ve often remarked, “If I were you, I wouldn’t put up with his shit.”  But I am a liar, because I will brush off his behavior as acceptable.  Society has not been alone in teaching me to do this.  My mother has taught me this too; I’ve followed her example.  I am not as strong and seemingly insensitive as my mother though.  Sometimes when my dad yells, I cry.  Other times, I yell back.   

My mother does not yell back at my father.  She takes her anger, her hurt, her pain, out on me instead.  I have a clear memory of many times that my mother verbally shot me down.  I look silently into her face and toil to forget such wounds as we stand together outside.  She stamps out a cigarette with a pair of worn white tennis shoes that she’s had for as long as I can remember.  I then tell her she should really stop smoking and she whips back, “If you don’t like it, go away."

I often find myself staring at her features and, more and more, I find myself in her.  I don’t always like what I see.  That mirrored reflection tends to frighten me.  I find her wiry eyes staring back, her sloping nose leading to her wicked mouth, her thick eyebrows, and heavy hair containing a few noticeable strands of gray.  Her face looks so wry and troubled – much as I am.  She looks back at me and tells me to just “leave me alone.”

Sometimes I will wonder why she says this. I am concerned that she might not love me or that she doesn’t realize how much I truly love her.  My concerns begin to fade away as I understand my mother more.  I don’t know why I ever imagined or expected to find my mother overflowing with sunshine and support all of the goddamn time, as though she walked off the set of some sitcom.  Those women are non-reality based and the images they represent contribute to my belief, and the belief of women across our culture, that it is acceptable for men to act as my father does.  But if my mother should act similarly – how shocking and sinful!  I realize now that this is bullshit.

My mother has many reasons to desire no disturbances. My mother works so hard, moves in accordance with other’s desires, and has little left to truly call her own.  My father works his one full-time job expecting to be waited upon while he sits righteously on his ass after arriving home.  My mother works two jobs, cares for her four children, and completes all household tasks.  As is the case for most women, much of my mother’s work goes unnoticed and unpaid.  I would suspect that serving my father is not a high preference for my mother as this is the employment my mother performs for below minimum wage.  My mother has remained in this pink-collar occupation since the age of sixteen where she first waitressed at an A&W.
When my mother makes her request to be left alone, I no longer take this personally. I am much more understanding because I have felt the same sexist, societal pressures that my mother feels.  These pressures wear my mother down, and make her cold and bitter.  I am still young and fighting, but life isn’t sweet, so leave me alone.

 wish I had the courage to share many things with my mother.  She has built a wall around her heart and is hesitant to let me in.  I know she’s really not as tough as she appears, but I often feel so weak that I need to trust in my mother’s tautness.  Every time I attempt to share with my mother, she appears to be avoiding me, putting on a front of coolness.  I could tell you that this is not fair, but nothing really is. I have learned this too from my mother. 

Sometimes my mother will use the word ‘bitch’ when referring to me, and sometimes my father will use the word ‘bitch’ in reference to my mother.  When I hear this word, I am filled with violence untypical of my personality.  No one has ever called my father a ‘bitch.’  I have concluded that this title comes along with the territory of womanhood. My mother is not a bitch; she’s my mother.  I am not a bitch either; I’m her daughter.

 want to escape all of this unnecessary, gender-based hatred.  My mother and I step into her car together and she remarks, “Those stupid birds just keep on singing.  They must not know how shitty it is outside.”  It’s black and raining out there, but I know I’ll be safe in here – next to her.  She doesn’t intend to hurt me.

She lights a cigarette and I again ask her to quit.  She ignores me and turns on her country-western radio station.  I hear a familiar song playing – She don’t know she’s beautiful – never crossed her mind.  She don’t know she’s beautiful – no, that’s not her style.  She don’t know she’s beautiful – though time and time I’ve told her so.  My mother is so much more beautiful than she’ll ever realize.

When I ride along with her, it doesn’t matter where we’re going.  I don’t need a destination.  I just need her.  Neither of us needs anyone else; my mom would survive even without my father.  I wish we’d keep driving forever.  Mommy, let’s run away together.  Mommy, promise me that everything is going to be all right even though I know you would be lying.

One finds it difficult to describe the peculiar relationship between a mother and a daughter.  We are not what you might believe. Please just leave us alone. 



Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Momma Dreams


I woke last night from another one of my nightmares.  I screamed so loudly that I woke my spouse and toddler daughter, who had once again made her way into our bed. My husband gently rubbed my back and reassured me I was safe.
 

My daughter then brought her tiny hand to my cheek and softly embraced me, stating, “It okay, Momma.  I had sweet dreams of kitties and puppies.”

 
As she regularly reports having such sweet dreams, her father asked, “Can you send Momma some of your sweet dreams?  Can she dream of kitties and puppies instead of the bad things?”

 
“No,” my daughter adamantly shook her head, “She no dream of kitties and puppies.  She has to have Momma dreams.”

 
“Momma dreams?” her father asked, “What do Mommas dream about?”
 
 
“Mommas need to dream about cooking and cleaning,” she merrily replied.  

 
While there was amusement in my daughter’s naïve response, those words also brought forth anger. This anger was not directed at my adorable, comforting child, but at our culture and my own role in our skewed society.  At only three years old, has my daughter already become conditioned to believe that women’s roles are as mothers only, to raise the children, cook the meals, and clean the home?  Does she believe she must spend the remainder of her life subservient and smiling?  Does she believe that she can be defined only in relation to a man?

 
If so, those are not my dreams for her.  In addition to those delightful dreams of soft, cuddly puppies that she currently reports, I have far superior, more significant dreams for my daughter.  I dream that my daughter may never find herself in so many of the unfortunate positions I have discovered myself in.
 

I dream that my daughter may never work in an environment where sexism is so commonplace that a complaint is scoffed at.  May she never sit in an employee lounge where copies of FHM and Maxim are spread across the tabletops, with the images of barely clad women smeared with greasy fingerprints.

 
I dream that my daughter will never be in an occupation where she works more skillfully and competently than her male coworker, yet earns $2.00 an hour less despite his lack of experience. 

 
I dream that my daughter will never date a man who requests she step on a scale to verify his belief that she isn’t trying hard enough to stay pretty for him.  I don’t want her to doubt her self-worth so greatly that she would remain in this relationship.  

 
I dream that my daughter may never believe that intelligence is shameful in women.  I never want to hear her say, “I didn’t want to do well on the test because my friends would just call me a geek for being too smart.”
 

My greatest aspiration for my daughter, though, is that she pursue her own dreams – whatever those may be, with disregard to common gender roles. Should she achieve her goals, I aspire to a world where she is respected and rewarded consistent to her male counterpart. I want her to know that some mommas may cook and clean, but they also do, build, think, teach, inspire, plan, shape, and lead.  My dream is that she believes in herself enough to recognize she can do any or all of these things. 

 
I know that my nighttime terrors may not vanish should these dreams be achieved.  However, such dreams would make growing up a girl less frightening for all young females.  So, have sweet dreams and big dreams, my bright, growing young woman.
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Cook Me Dinner, Dick


Today, I saw a student in my study hall wearing a tee shirt that read: “Cute story babe – Now make me a SANDWICH.”  Really? Really? Are you kidding me? What year is it? 1952?  I could not ignore this, so I asked the young fifteen-year-old shaggy headed male if he currently had a girlfriend.  The clearly expected reply was received: NO.  Then his friend chimed in, “… and he’s not going to get one either wearing a stupid shirt like that.”  These were my sentiments exactly.  I conceded to his friend’s comments, and added that I thought his shirt was “extremely sexist.”  He ignored my interruption, and returned to his Algebra homework. 

However, that’s not even really the sad part of this story.  The terrible thing is that the awful script on this kid’s tee shirt reminded me of a former relationship.  We’ve likely all heard the saying that women are to be barefoot and pregnant.  For one ex-boyfriend, I modified this common expression to “women are meant to be sucking dick and making sandwiches, right?”  He would laugh when I said this, and reply, “Damn straight.”

In addition to his frequent sexist comments, which led to my modified expression, this dude had a shit ton wrong with him.  Crazy (me) attracts completely and totally bat shit fucked up beyond all recognition crazy (almost every single man I have ever dated).  To begin, he was dumb – box of rocks dumb.  While I was an honors student, I think he may have needed to complete specially modified course work.  He used to carry books with him all over the place though.  I later realized this was just to give the appearance of intelligence, and he never actually opened these books or turned a single paper page.  At one point, his stacks of books were all dedicated to his “study of herbology.”  This meant two things. One: he got high a lot.  Two: he carried around an old hemp purse of mine, which he called a satchel, and collected dandelions and other weeds in it.  Just damn weird.  At another point during our time together he began carrying a canteen with him everywhere – to science class, the football game, the cinema.  At least I could be assured I would not suffer from dehydration while dating him.

Once for my birthday, he gave me a Grateful Dead CD sealed in Saran Wrap.  I asked him why it was packaged in such a way.  He said it was because he had bought it from a used music shop.  But, oddly enough, my brother had recently lost his same Shakedown Street CD.  I put two and two together, a skill I think he may have been incapable of.  From the receipt of that gift, however, I learned a very valuable lesson:  Do not try to have intercourse while Jerry Garcia is playing in the background; the rhythm is just all off.

Years later, I have also learned to not date sexist assholes.  I can’t believe this is a conclusion I had to come to through trial and error.  This should have been a given, and I hope with all my heart it’s something my daughter will know without requiring similar experience.  Today, everyone – everyone – knows that I wear the pants.  This is true to such an extent that it’s surprising I have not physically grown my own testicles.

Maybe I will purchase some iron-on letters this week so I can arrive at school wearing a tee shirt that states: “Eat my pussy and cook me dinner, dick.”  I really don’t see how it would be any more inappropriate. Sexism is not cute or comedic.  Those tee shirts belong on the shelves at Kohl’s and Wal-Mart as much as women belong restricted to the kitchen and as much as I need a man who carries a canteen at all times.