But last year, I stumbled across an anti-Mother’s Day tweet that has stuck with me.This was a post by a successful journalist who is a married mother. She flatly stated that mothers — I assume she is speaking of American mothers in particular — have no societal support.
“People here like children,” he told me as his 3-year-old son climbed up and down a stool in a crowded coffee shop. “Other people have kids, so it’s normal.” Even if you don’t eat from the trees of religion, nationalism, or tribe, you still live in a pro-child ecosystem — the norms, the expectations, and the infrastructure — those trees have created.
My first thought was that in my own world, and in Kemp Mill, , and at BYU–Idaho, the mothers have plenty of societal support for their ridiculous amount of work. In these religious subcultures, in these lively, fecund gardens, mothers are less likely to feel like they’re going it alone. The broader point: Motherhood in America is often portrayed in the media as a solo operation in which women have no support. Surely, this is true for many mothers, but I suspect it gets exaggerated in media.
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