Saturday, February 16, 2008

Are They Reinventing Motherhood (or just giving us a sneak peak into previously private journals)?

Guest Post by Ron of R-World (cross-posted at R-World)

Kids? It’s like living with homeless people. They’re cute but they can just chase you around all day long going, “Can I have dollar? I’m missing a shoe! I need a ride!”


- Kathleen Madigan


Motherhood is a confusing performance, like painting for the legally blind, the preoccupied audience of husband and children caught up in their own drama or anomie and chronically unaware of the great effort expended on their behalf.


While philosophers love the idea of humanity, it is mothers who navigate the real mess of it, the humanity of little people who leave in their wake lost shoes and scuffed walls. A woman whose charm, beauty, and intelligence has given her a variety of romantic options suddenly finds herself confined to home with a big-headed creature who, if he could talk, would go on at length about the flavor of the couch.


And about this game of romance. In what other arena does success require one to immediately retire? Imagine Tiger Woods forced to the side lines after winning his first master’s tournament, victory forcing him into retirement, and you get some sense of how disorienting it is for a woman have finally navigated the mine field of love to learn that this part of life is over; from now on, odd and beguiling children are likely to be the sole beneficiaries of their charms.


But in their blogs, these smart mothers may be creating a new kind of motherhood – at the very least they are finally performing before an appreciative audience of other mothers who “get” what they are doing.


While the act of mothering may be basically the same, its context has been transformed in the last few decades. Mothers no longer sit in a web of extended family that play the role of easily available baby sitters and reference points, people who can sit watch against the attacks of insanity. Mothers are often raising children hundreds or thousands of miles away from their own mothers and sisters. Churches are less likely to provide a default community. University education and an excess of reading has created an ideological divide between them and their own family, even if they did live close by, a divide that makes sharing parenting problems and tips awkward at best. Probably at no time have mothers been more isolated, less able to depend on those around them.


Blogging mothers have done two things: they’ve created a network for themselves and they’ve given the rest of us front row seats into a performance that would have otherwise been completely missed. We get the jokes that would have sailed over the heads of their children, the expressions of serious frustrations that preoccupied husbands dismiss as petty, and the profound insights that would have been forgotten by the time they finally got a coffee break with friends, unable to remember what they were so eager to say now that they are forced to socialize distracted by the peripheral parenting that characterizes almost every activity at a particular stage of life.


It might just be that historians and sociologists will eventually conclude that the blogging mothers have created a new kind of motherhood. Meanwhile, the rest of us are beneficiaries of their willingness – perhaps even their eagerness – to perform, at last, before an audience that can’t help but applaud.


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If you are looking for examples of this blog genre, here are four I’ve come to enjoy. (And to be clear, these women are mother bloggers in the same way that Bruce Jenner was a javelin-throwing athlete. It is a big part of who they are, but it is by no means all that they write about or all that they are.) All of these women show a lack of pretense, a sort of unfeigned modesty uncalled for when one can write so smartly and with such humor. Theirs has been a reminder to this idea junkie that behind abstract terms like humanity lie real people with runny noses and definite ideas about appropriate wardrobe and menu selections even at the ripe old age of 7.


Kyran Pittman pushes at the boundary of blogging, waffling between writing about the daily drama and at times actually transcending the genre with postings that seem to fall somewhere between short stories and vignettes. She is probably helping to pioneer a new form of literature.


Slouching Mother peels back the wrapper on motherhood in a way that is strangely honest without insistence on showing the scabs. Her stories are at turns provocative and warming, and she makes motherhood seem as beautiful and at times pathological as it must be, and is one of Kyran's fellow pioneers in the creation of a new literary form that might just get studied alongside the short story and novel in a few years.


Chesca has an unfair advantage over other bloggers because she not only writes with self deprecating humor, but could model – and often does for the benefit of her blog reading audience who get to pretend that they are in her living room as they leaf through the family photo album and listen to her whimsical and witty reports that she closes with unpredictable punch lines just often enough to keep readers off balance.


Cce’s brilliant writing is balanced by her rather quaint reading– she comes here most days. (Hello CCE.) Our exchange of comments has become for me a bit like mid-morning tea in which each of us gets to share what’s animated our thoughts and be heard and acknowledged before moving on with our day. I, for one, take comfort in sharing sensibilities with a woman this smart and talented, even if our lives are playing out in opposite corners of the country, in very different phases. And someday I plan to tell people that I was among the first to realize her potential.


For me, these mother bloggers do so much more than entertain. The rest of us get to be beneficiaries of expressions of charm that might have been muttered into the clothing hamper and lost in an earlier time. And I am at a stage of life when I get a little better sense of my own wife’s incredible performance of transforming sofa chewers into university students (sadly, about a decade or two after such awareness might have been of comfort). [And yes, that's my wife and children from about 14 years ago in the above picture. It would be fascinating to be able to read Sandi's blog from that time.]

Monday, February 4, 2008

Writing, Blogging and Criticism.

When I was ten, my English teacher told me, “You have a gift. Make sure you use it. I fully expect to walk into a bookstore one day and see your name on a novel.” It’s been many years and the path of my life has taken me many different ways, but I’ve never really forgotten what she said.

Heading into college, I wondered if I could make a decent living as a writer, and decided to pursue my other passion, biology, with the intention of going to vet school. I received my biology degree, changed my mind about vet school and after two and a half years as a biologist at NIH, decided that while science in the classroom is fun, science in the lab is boring. For the past three years, I’ve been a stay-home mom and part-time vet tech, occupations which have given me plenty to write about.

Almost a year ago, a friend urged me to start a blog, which I did mainly to keep out of town relatives up to date on my kids. As it turned out, I love blogging and have yet to run out of things to talk about. It’s awakened that desire to be a professional writer. I think I’ve got the chops for it, and given some help with navigating the industry, I’m confident that I could eventually be successful.

Then someone anonymously left an unkind comment on one of my posts and I learned something about myself. I’m not that concerned about the opinion of someone who doesn’t have the guts to leave their name, but I’d be lying if I didn’t say it stung a little. When you’re good at something, it’s natural to want other people to think you’re good at it too. Reminders that not everyone will agree with you can be hard to swallow. Before I can make my way as a writer, I need to develop a thicker skin, because criticism is as inevitable as the day is long.

Over the summer, a columnist in my hometown wrote a piece about pitbull bans and I strongly disagreed with him. We exchanged a few emails on the subject, but I tried to make it clear that while I thought he was wrong, I respected his perspective. When I looked up the column online, I was shocked to see some of the hateful comments readers had left behind. I wonder if the author reads the comments on the site, and if he does, how he deals with them.

After that, I happened upon the blog of one of my favorite authors, Tess Gerritsen, who has twenty novels to her name. When you read her blog, you can feel her anxiety about book reviews and sales, about success and failure, and it struck me that even a seasoned author like Gerritsen is prone to the same misgivings as the rest of us.

I think the Internet makes it easier to be cruel or hateful because of the impersonal nature of cyberspace. I read things online all the time that I hope people would never say to another person’s face. It’s easier to be mean when you don’t have to look someone in the eye or worry about bumping into them at the grocery store. So I also believe a writer needs to consider the source when taking criticism over the Internet. The author who supported pitbull bans is not a horrible, dog hating person, and the people who left angry comments are probably not violent or antisocial, they’re probably just animal lovers who feel strongly about the subject and who reacted emotionally after reading the column.

In addition, a writer needs to decide how to handle comments that turn ugly. A difference in opinion is one thing; nasty accusations that lend nothing to the conversation are, in my opinion, better off being deleted.

I dismissed the comment on my blog because I’m smart enough to know that not everyone will agree with me, and I’m not egotistical enough to believe that my opinion is the only one out there or that I am always right. For me, my goal is to not take criticism personally, but to use it as a tool to make myself a better writer, to expand my readership, to reach out to a different audience through words.

**Crossposted at The Great Walls Of Baltimore