tiptoparticles.com
Home Page :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Privacy :> Terms & Conditions :> Submit Article
Search:   
Get 3 way links
 
 

Realty & Property

 

Business & Services

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Family & Home

 

Self Healing

 

Creative Arts

 

Investment & Finance

 

News & Media

 

Politics & Government

 

Fashion & Lifestyle

 

Travel & Vacation

 

People & Society

 

Computers & Software

 

Teens & Children

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Shopping Online

 

Employment & Careers

 

Fitness & Health

 

Recreation

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Education & Reference

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

Research & Science

 

Home Page » Family & Home » Home Trips & Holidays
 

Marching Towards Mother's Day

 

"Mother: the most beautiful word on the lips of mankind." -Kahil Gibran

This coming Sunday is our big day, moms. Its the one day a year when we get officially honored for what it is that we do. I dont know about you, but I usually find myself reflecting on exactly what my role is, anyway. Motherhood has evolved over the past two generations into a job which, many would argue, looks far different than the job our own mothers knew. And given the unfortunateand oftentimes divisivedichotomy between working mom and stay-at-home mom with which many categorize themselves, the job description sometimes gets fuzzier, rather than clearer. Does extensive volunteer work place you under the working or stay-at-home group? Does a part-time position at your kids school or at your church push you out of the group with which you always identified yourself? And our role changes, after all, as our kids grow up. Optionsas well as the resulting disequilibrium in shifting family dynamicsintrude on what once was a fairly easy job description to comprehend.

Controversy about motherhood is nothing new. Thousands of books, articles and commentaries have been written about our dilemmas ad nauseam. As if forty-and fifty something moms havent wrestled long enough with their career-parenting decisions, young moms get additional fuel for their fires with glaring mainstream media headlinesjust in time for Mothers Day. Throw in a new poll or twoas well as more advice and analysis by traditional parenting expertsM.D.s and Ph.D.sand you have more psychobabble than the baby-burble running down these sleep-deprived mommys sleeves!

Articles like the New York Times The Opt-Out Revolution; best-sellers like Perfect Madness: Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety; and critics calling motherhood everything from a trap to a cult to a myth to a "mess," turn notions about our role upside down and leave moms everywhere confused and conflicted. Look at some recent media messages:

Author/journalist Judith Warner of Perfect Madness fame claims that: a substantial number of GenX moms (are) too focused on perfection, too focused on their children, too competitive with one another, and that its driving all moms crazy and providing their kids with no benefits. She asserts that theres an oppressive culture of total motherhood that leaves no room for mothers own interests with suffocation the direct result.

Sumru Erkut of the Center for Research on Women at Wellesley College, asserts that: societal expectations for moms have been racheted up by professional moms whove upgraded motherhood to a bigger job than it used to be and views these moms as having misplaced vigor.

New York Times book critic Judith Shulevitz, commenting on Warner (who said that motherhood has gone from art to cult) calls the job a mess and motherhood a trap powered by fear of a loss of face.

A recent article by journalist Meredith OBrien in an online Boston paper headlines with: The Mommy Myth: Mothers pay a high price to be perfect. (Since when did we start attaching the word myth to mommy?)

Pretty bleak picture of motherhood, huh? Hold onto your pantyhose. These journalists only paint part of the story. I dug into the facts, studied their articles, read the data and checked out their credentials. I came up with a totally different picture of motherhood and boldly challenge their assertions:

A brand new poll (April 25) by ClubMom reveals that 63% of moms admit to feeling no pressure to live up to a society-driven version of the perfect mom. This same poll finds that most moms are happy with their family relationships.

51% of those GenXers theyre talking about have traded super careers for motherhood because when they viewed the trade-offs required to gun their own careers (and some believe, through direct observation of their own working moms), they decided that the sacrifices required just werent worth it.

79% of moms overall rate their own sense of well-being an A or B; 84% believe they are able to keep their minds sharp and active; and 76% rate their overall health (mental and physical) as high.

In stark contrast to the trap or mess that these experts call motherhood, polls find that only 10% of working moms would choose to work full-time if money were no object, i.e. some 90% of moms would prefer the trap of motherhood to the workforce.

Of Harvard Business Schools women graduates of 81, 85, and 91women currently in the fortysomething crowdonly 38% are working full-time.

26% of women at the cusp of the most senior levels of management do not want that next promotion, choosing more time at home with family over career advancement.

This job of motherhood is huge, it is vitally important, and those of us on the frontlines know it. Moms at home raising children today are there because we view our job as the most important one ever invented. I am working hard to help put motherhood with excellence back on the map. Thats what rocket mom is all about. I uphold with unapologetic optimism the distinct role we mothers play in shaping human destiny. If thats called over parenting or a myth or a cult or a trap or a mess, than somebody better wake up and flip the pancakes.

I dont have all the answers; in fact, I have only a few. I dont pretend to be the worlds best mother; just ask my kids how often I throw up my hands in frustration and resignation. But I am intent of helping momsand our culture at largereview and renew the importance of what we do. I dont care if you work in the home or work in a beautiful office; divisions among moms are unhealthy. Truth is, once we have children, were all in this together.

I just wish to inspire you, encourage you, and celebrate with you, the honorable role we play in shaping this whole next generation to greatness. On Mothers Day. And everyday.

Happy celebration!

Author: Carolina Fernandez
 
Author Bio:

Carolina Fernandez

Carolina Fernandez earned an M.B.A. before working at IBM and as a stockbroker at Merrill Lynch. She left the corporate world to work as a full-time wife, mother, and homemaker.

Coming home to longer hours, harder work, and more demanding relationships left her feeling totally overwhelmed. Granted, she traded one investment field for another which has yielded immeasurable returns heretofore unimagined. Nonetheless, her frustration at her lack of ability in tackling all of motherhood?s inherently difficult challenges pushed her into a nearly twenty year labor of love. Her research in child development, child psychology, social psychology, nutrition, and exercise physiology, along with indispensable insights and experiences gained along the way, finally evolved into ROCKET MOM!

She re-invented herself in the process. She has dabbled in the domestic, performing, and visual arts, undertaking projects ranging from painting in oils to hooking rugs to singing onstage in Carnegie Hall. She has developed strong convictions about the role of the arts in child development; these convictions have shaped the specific strategies played out in the book.

She has a passion for inspiring creativity in people of all ages, from pre-schoolers to rocket grandmoms! Indeed, she receives particular joy in helping moms on the front line as they engage in what is arguably the most creative challenge ever invented: motherhood. To this end, she writes and speaks extensively, and is constantly developing teaching materials in her effort to share the crucial intervention of creative nurturing in developing children. She shares her message via radio and TV interviews; print media; and in speaking platforms via seminars and workshops, lectures and keynotes for pre-schools, women?s groups, retreats, civic organizations and adult education classes. Her soon-to-be-launched cable TV program, ROCKET MOM! will reach thousands of households in the Fairfield County area of Connecticut.

Her newly-formed Rocket Mom Society attempts to meet her mission head-on as she ?encourages, equips and empowers moms for excellence.?

She lives with her husband and their four children in Ridgefield, Connecticut.

This article can be searched using: trip planner, boat trip, train trips, quick trip, cheap trips, trip maps, plan a trip, field trips
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Psychology of Color - Decorating a Kitchen for the Subconscious
 
5 Quick Steps to Landscaping Your Home Before You Sell
 
Backyard Metal Casting for The Hobby Worker
 
Anti Static Bars
 
Wholesale Beads
 
Pregnancy Symptoms, Signs and Symptoms of Being Pregnant
 
The Real Desire for the UK House Buyer
 
Quiet Upsets: The Solution is Visual Baby Monitors
 
Selection Of Garden Tractors
 
Bottle-feeding Could Make Your Baby Overweight
 
 
 
Home Page :> Privacy :> Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2008 www.aaronslist.com