HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesMy Family and Other Globalizers | Taking motherhood out of purdah

My Family and Other Globalizers | Taking motherhood out of purdah

By failing to discuss the poo-soaked labour of motherhood, society conspires to set up mothers to fail.

April 30, 2022 / 12:01 IST
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Some of us are “liberated”, most of us remain subjugated to varying degrees, but all of us need to be having a loud, public, conversation about motherhood. (Representational image: Charles Deluvio via Unsplash)
Some of us are “liberated”, most of us remain subjugated to varying degrees, but all of us need to be having a loud, public, conversation about motherhood. (Representational image: Charles Deluvio via Unsplash)

Note to readers: My Family and Other Globalizers is a weekly parenting column on bringing up global citizens.

Childbirth might be a biological norm, yet when I had my boys, there was little that had felt “natural” about the experience. Not physically, and certainly not psychologically. My body had been violated, given the entire football team of doctors and nurses poking at my nether regions. It was chewed at, quite literally, by an infant on the breast. Emotionally I’d been under extreme stress, compounded by the sleep deprivation. If anything, motherhood was an abrupt, almost violent, upending of the normal.

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And yet for the 33 years before I had my first child, even as several aunties (and the occasional uncle) made solicitous inquiries about my child-bearing plans, no one had sat me down to discuss how traumatic it could be: not my mother, not my peers, not my doctors and not the strangers on the bus who made happy faces and clucking sounds when they caught sight of my swelling belly.

Wider societal messages – film and TV representations or advertisements – only signalled tenderness and warmth. It was all glowing mothers and cuddly babies, with scant sign of the blood and gore. In short: by failing to discuss the poo-soaked labour of motherhood, society conspires to set up mothers to fail.