{"id":10267,"date":"2012-03-18T17:22:11","date_gmt":"2012-03-18T17:22:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=10267"},"modified":"2012-03-18T17:22:11","modified_gmt":"2012-03-18T17:22:11","slug":"18th-march-mothers-day-post","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/03\/18\/18th-march-mothers-day-post\/","title":{"rendered":"18th March: Mother’s Day Post"},"content":{"rendered":"
It’s Mother’s Day today, and although there have been lots of influences in our lives which might have turned us towards feminism, we’ve found that lots of feminists ‘blame’ their mothers for starting them thinking about things like gender and equality. I asked some of the BadRep team about their mothers…<\/p>\n
“I would say I was raised very feminist. The family has a double-barreled surname because my folks hyphenated their names to negotiate the whole names and marriage thing. (Pro tip: don\u2019t hyphenate \u2013 people will assume you\u2019re really posh, and if both names are unusual you\u2019ll spend the rest of your life spelling it out to people.)<\/p>\n
“As I\u2019ve grown up I\u2019ve realised retrospectively just how rad
my mom was \u2013 she
went to Greenham Common<\/a>, she bought Spare Rib<\/strong><\/a> magazine, she had rainbow shoelaces (which
I\u2019ve stolen) – but also I\u2019m profoundly grateful that she
never ever let me become fucked up about food and body image, or to
correlate body-image with self-worth. I really feel like I\u2019ve dodged
a massive bullet with that one and am a lot better off than many women
because of it.<\/p>\n
Love you, Mom (now quit pestering me about grandkids).”<\/p>\n
“My Mum didn’t really raise me in a ‘feminist
way’, but the cumulative actions of my parents together has
helped to shape my views on the world and, more specifically the
concept of equality. \u00a0As I understand it, my Mum took time off
work to look after me when I was very little and after my brother was
born too, but when he was old enough, Mum and Dad essentially swapped.
\u00a0Mum went back to working in the City and Dad became a
househusband right up until I was 12 years old. \u00a0Having a mother
who worked full time in London and a stay-at-home dad is bound to have
an effect (insert some philosophical\/psychological insight into
strong independent female figures and role models), but that
wasn’t the only thing.<\/p>\n
“Let’s be clear on one thing: my mother (who is
Bulgarian) is a farmer’s daughter. Whatever else she became
later on, she can still kill and pluck a chicken, cure many common
ailments with mysterious herbs, and pick tobacco leaves with her
bare hands (no lie: she still has the scars). Of course,
that’s not all she is. For one thing, when the local doctor
decided to try bloodletting to cure my infant aunt’s colic, my
mother snatched her from the doctor’s hands and ran away with
her, reasoning that the doctor was a fool and that at nine years old
she was clearly more qualified to treat her sister. (Who was fine,
by the way, due in no small measure to my mother’s
interference.) By the time my mother was thirteen, she had outgrown
her local village school, and so she simply packed her bags and
moved out of the family home to a nearby city to continue her
education.<\/p>\n
(The one thing she ever forbade me to do was to become an
accountant. Her reason? \u201cBoring.\u201d)<\/p>\n
“In this different country, with Communism a fading memory
from far away, my mother blends into the background, no different
from any of the millions of women in our cities and villages. But
when the light is right, and if you know how to look, she is still
the twenty-year-old in the pictures: the one with the long hair and
the wide smile, who shimmied down the side of a building to sneak
away from the secret police and escape, laughing, on the back of her
dissident lover\u2019s motorcycle.<\/p>\n
I think we can all be grateful she decided to be a mother, rather
than an Evil Overlady.<\/p>\n
As for the accountancy? I hate to say it, but I should have listened
to my mother.”<\/p>\n
Rai<\/h3>\n
Viktoriya<\/h3>\n