HomeNewsTrendsLifestyleMy Family and Other Globalizers | Resist the all-consuming ideology of motherhood

My Family and Other Globalizers | Resist the all-consuming ideology of motherhood

Not just a vessel and caregiver, a 'woman' is more capacious than a 'mother', and must prioritise herself on a par with her baby. Too much sacrifice and abnegation are harmful to both a mother and her child.

June 11, 2023 / 11:13 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Representative image. (Photo: Tamara Bellis via Unsplash)
Representative image. (Photo: Tamara Bellis via Unsplash)

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

Every woman must find her own way through the obstacle course of motherhood. There may be no single road, but every path should be walked without sacrificing the self-actualisation of the traveller.

Story continues below Advertisement

So many of the parenting theories bursting from the shelves of bookstores today are misogynist in effect, from the proselytising of breastfeeding evangelists, to the insidious idea that every little decision a mother takes — what to eat when pregnant, whether or not to sleep with the child in the same bed, and whether or not to put her kids down in front of the TV to get a break — will have deep lasting effects on the child's character and behaviour.

When I was researching for my 2016 book, Babies and Bylines: Parenting on the Move, I’d come across one bit of “research” that claimed children who don't share their mother's bed until the age of three tend towards promiscuity in later life. Another 2014 newspaper article in the UK’s Daily Mail titled “Bad News for Dads: Babies should share mother's bed until age three because it's good for their hearts” claimed that if a mother does not have a baby sleep on top of her chest it "makes it harder for mother and child to bond — and damages the development of the brain, leading to bad behaviour as the child grows up."