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International Women’s Day!

08 Thursday Mar 2018

Posted by frannyritchie in Parenthood

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caregiving, feminism, feminist, international women’s day, mommy blog, motherhood, Parenthood, parenting, social justice

No gender normative toys here!

When my first kid was born, a friend sent me a message that said ‘hurray for feminist boys!’

And that was the first time I’d thought about my feminist responsibility in really specific terms. I had birthed five pounds of feminist baby. This was happening.

As the big kid gets bigger, it is becoming more clear-cut, if not exactly easier. I have age-appropriate conversations with him about consent almost….constantly. When he says ‘don’t kiss me, mummy!’ I do my best to listen, and respond. And then, when he treats me like a climbing frame, I can remind him that I respect his body, and he needs to respect mine. I am confident this strategy will pay off eventually. Dear lord I hope it does.

There have been a few occasions where I have had to re-examine bits of my childhood I had been excited to share with my children. For example: Green Eggs and Ham: he said no! No means no! The lesson about trying new things seems less pertinent to the current #metoo moment than, ffs, leave the poor guy alone. Who wants to eat green ham? Can you blame him?

Or The Little Mermaid….have you ever thought about the lyrics to ‘Kiss the Girl’? In case you are less steeped in Disney than I am, here is a sample lyric:

Yes, you want her
Look at her, you know you do
It’s possible she wants you too
There’s one way to ask her

So. That’s gross.

With the babies, it is harder. About a year ago, a friend told me about some friends of hers who had avoided using gendered pronouns with their child, a boy with a gender-neutral name. Everyone at the table scoffed a bit. One woman said ‘I mean. My child is a boy, so I’m not going to stop calling him one. If he decides at some point that he isn’t, well, I will deal with it then.’

I thought that seemed like a fair perspective. But then. For the next couple of days, I noted all the occasions I referred to my children by gender, and I was shocked. Spoiler alert: it was constant. Phrases like ‘clever boy,’ ‘brave boy,’ and ‘strong boy’ had permeated my vocabulary. I have since read that, as innocuous as that might seem, it reinforces gender boundaries for children, who figure their boyhood/girlhood must be essential, since adults refer to it all the time.

In the last few weeks I have made a real attempt to stop gendering my infant children. It is hard. I’m not 100% successful – Daphne is wearing a pink floral romper this morning. I chose it, I love it, I think she looks beautiful. My convictions only extend so far (Fiona is wearing gender neutral clothing, though, and she’s no less cute for it). I am not sure how sustainable it is, not least because they will self-identify as girls soon enough. It’s just – I try not to call them ‘the twins,’ though that’s a separate thing – and now I try not to call them ‘the girls.’ Calling them by their names is a six-syllable mouthful and calling them ‘Fi and D’ is twee and grating. It’s a work in progress.

None of this is the end of the world, of course. But I do think it’s important to begin as I mean to go on. So I want to set a tone, for myself as well as for my children. I want them to know that their parents are are feminists and I want them to be feminists too: I want a desire for gender equality completely baked into their psyche.

It has been a humbling experience. It has given me new respect for my mother, who seemed to do it effortlessly. Even more, it’s given me appreciation for the extent to which raising feminist kids is a two-parent endeavour, much as I hate to e reminded I don’t have a monopoly on the Feminist Perspective in our household. On one memorable occasion last year, my partner completely schooled me in the art of feminist parenting. Theo asked me about penises, and I told him that he and Daddy both had one; that men have penises and women had vaginas. Just as I was feeling a bit smug, my husband chimed in: ‘most men have penises and most women have vaginas,’ he said.

Mic drop, husband.

I don’t want to end my Women’s Day post with a fawning anecdote about my husband, so I will end here instead: I want to explain sexism to my children the same way I explained landline phones to my son last week. It is something that still exists, but is indisputably on its way out.

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Poop.

14 Tuesday Nov 2017

Posted by frannyritchie in Early Days, Parenthood

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Tags

baby girls, daughter, feminism, parenting, personalispolitical, preschool, son, values

Theo has discovered toilet humour. So that’s awesome.

He’s actually a little late to the poop party – most kids discover it around the time they get toilet trained.

I understand. I am a thirty-four-year-old woman and I love a good fart joke. But most of the time, I don’t want to listen to a preschooler sing ‘poop poop poop!’ at the dinner table. Some of the parents and carers I know are really keen to shut it down, but to be honest, I’ve been surprised by how little I care.

What I HAVE been surprised by, on the other hand, is how vehemently I care about my kids’ ability to read the room. I don’t mind if he talks about poop. But my line has been ‘I’m not interested in talking about poo, Theo, so let’s please talk about something else.’

It turns out toilet talk isn’t an issue for me, but instilling in my kid the sensitivity to change the subject definitely is – in fact, it is one of my Core Parenting Values. Talk about poop with your friends, kid. Don’t talk about it with me.

Most of my revelations about parenting have come that way: I establish a policy about a fairly prosaic part of everyday life, only to realise that it stems from something deeply held. For example: you can go up the slide instead of down, but not if someone wants to use it properly. Not because I care about slide etiquette, per se, but I care about having a child who is aware of other people and will be respectful of other playground users.

Broadly speaking, I came to parenting with my Core Parenting Values fully fledged: I want my child to be kind. I want my child to be respectful. I want my child to be feminist and generally anti-discriminatory. And there were a few specific things I felt strongly about, mostly drawn from my own childhood: I wanted girls to have my name, for example, because I have my mother’s. I felt strongly about not propagating ideas about Santa Claus, because duping children for the amusement of adults seems gross to me. I didn’t want my son to have clothes with cars on them, because I think that’s weird, sexist, outdated and unfortunate: I hate cars (I’m an urban planner).

Like any parent, many of my strongly held beliefs have disintegrated in the face of, well, reality. My daughters DO have my name, but Santa Claus is a losing battle: I haven’t endorsed the myth, but Santa made appearances at nursery, at my husband’s office party, the Christmas market, and pretty much everywhere else, too. And cars – well, yeah. That didn’t happen, either. I’m hardly the first parent to give birth to a kid thinking I can control some aspect of their life, only to find myself proven fundamentally, laughably wrong about five minutes after the kid was born.

And as someone parenting a preschool boy and baby girls, I find myself navigating new territory in terms of gender expression and identity. The onslaught of sweet frilly things has proven way harder to resist than I expected, because it turns out I like sweet frilly things way more than I expected and I like NEW frilly things even more than that. I thought that putting my kids in gender neutral clothing would be an expression of Core Parenting Values – but actually it turns out, what I care about is that my children not feel oppressed or constrained by their gender, or frame their sense of self-worth in terms of their private parts. I don’t think the adorable pink overalls I inherited from a friend are going to factor in, long term.

I let this post marinate for a while now – I started it back in October – because, you know, who cares, right? In parenting, you learn by doing. Shocking surprise twist. But I think the takeaway for me is that in parenting, the personal is political, in that everything is a proxy for a more deeply held belief that I often have not thought to articulate until it is expressed via a stupid or seemingly trivial rule.

Don’t talk to me about poop, kid. Talk about it with your friends.

 

 

I live in a foreign country.

20 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by frannyritchie in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Ani DiFranco, feminism, Germaine Greer, Gloria Steinem, Indigo Girls, politics

My original plan for Monday was to take a crap-ton of photos of Lavenham, a super cute town in Suffolk, and then post about it after having been.  As it turns out, I saw less of Lavenham than I had hoped.  Rather than show you other people’s photos, I’m going to wait until I can get there, investigate at a leisurely pace, and then tell you all about it. But Monday’s post ended up just being kind of lame. I know.  I’m sorry.

To make up for it, here is a bonus Tuesday night post, and its another rumination on the challenges of living in a foreign country.  As foreign countries go, England is an easy one to live in, at least for an American.  But England is still a foreign place.  One of the ways that this has been brought home to me is via my coworker Hollie.  Hollie is roughly my age, tiny and blond, with a quick laugh (which I love, because she laughs at all my jokes).    She’s much cooler than I am and I have a big girl-crush on her; we share a common love of Adobe products, a fondness for baked goods, and similar attitudes toward marriage, women’s rights and feminism.  I knew I really liked her (and my other coworkers, for that matter) when I realized that in my all-female workplace, no one has taken their partner’s name.  That is the sort of place I’m psyched to work at.

Even though Hollie and I have a lot in common vis-a-vis feminism, I’ve been amazed by how much cultural currency we don’t share.  She’s never listened to Ani DiFranco, for example – every feminist-y American I know would probably say she’s an Ani DiFranco fan (or at least went through an Ani phase), but Righteous Babe Records hasn’t made inroads in the UK market.  Ditto Indigo Girls (and, by extension, Lilith Fair, which was my first real concert-going experience).

Music is admittedly a superficial indicator of someone’s deeply held convictions, but it is a very convenient form of shorthand, and one that I miss now that its gone.  And, to be fair, we don’t necessarily share more substantive experiences of feminism, either: I’ve never read Germaine Greer and she doesn’t have any knowledge of Gloria Steinem (although maybe we’ve both read Simone de Beauvoir.  I’ll have to ask her).  While we ultimately came to the same conclusions, we did so despite a totally different kaleidoscope of influences. Its made me wonder what the cultural hallmarks of feminism are, both in the US and the UK.  The biggest shared tenet I’ve found is keeping your last name, but I know many women who identify as feminists who took their partner’s name, or plan to; I also know women who kept their name who probably wouldn’t consider themselves feminist.  What do you think constitutes a culture of feminism?  And if you’re not from the US or the UK, what would you say is the thing where you’re from?

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