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April Cheri's avatar

I really appreciate this because it helps me understand why I don't relate to much of the anger in privileged mother writing. I'm also cis and white with a college education, but it was obtained while living on welfare because I came from poverty and became a single mom at 17 (my son's father abandoned us). I had another child 5 years later as the result of rape and of course had no support from that person either. I had to raise my children and lift us out of poverty by myself by choosing jobs for pay rather than passion and yet didn't have this big anger about motherhood and work that I'm seeing from more privileged moms. Frustrations yes, but my focus was different.

I think expectation has everything to do with it. I never expected or hoped to "have it all." There was nothing in my family life to indicate such a thing was possible and I've been aware since I was a teenager that this culture is built on lies. We immediately became poor when my parents divorced when I was 9. My dad lived middle class privilege while we at one point lived in a condemned house with broken septic and had to go eeling on the jetty for meat to eat. I learned early what's real for millions of abandoned mothers and their children. I also came from generations of abused and traumatized people, and at least 3 generations of teen moms. My mom was mentally ill, emotionally abusive, and at times an addict who married an alcoholic/addict who couldn't hold a job after my dad. I wanted but never expected a good partnership from a man or to be able to follow my dreams while single mothering. My expectations were about breaking long cycles of pain and earning enough that my kids would not have to know the shame and hardness of being poor for long.

What I expected was for my kids to not be broken and burdened by Complex PTSD upon leaving home like I was (I now wonder if my mom had it too). My mission was to raise kids who feel whole in themselves and who feel safe to be all of themselves with me, and my kids tell/show me I succeeded. In light of that it doesn't matter that I didn't have a partner or the career of my dreams for those 23 years. I'm a decade into empty nesting now, I've co-created a fabulous marriage free of patriarchal bs, and I'm working on the dream career, so eventually I do get it all, just not all at once. I also have a one year old grandchild who is the first I know of in our matrilineal line that was not born out of or into traumatic circumstances (my daughter is 28 and has a wonderful partner). I could die today without ever achieving the dream career and know this breaking of pain patterns in my family is the most important thing I could ever do with my life. So yeah, different expectations.

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Sri Juneja's avatar

This is something I've thought about a lot. I'm a well-to-do mother of color in well-to-do suburbs. I grew up low/middle class and our financial situation changed around the time I was in my early teens. I remember both experiences. Here are a few random, incoherent thoughts:

-Unfortunately, there are a lot of huge, gaping holes in systemic support of women and families (basically anyone not a white man)

-Like anything else, historically we're feeling the friction of seeing a very different approach to family life and that's causing a lot of strife and dissatisfaction (until fairly recently, many women did stay at home and that was the family support and no one thought to do anything about it systemically)

-I say this matter-of-factly but women were all fed a lie that we could have it all and we're now realizing now one actually wants us to have it all and that's pissing us off.

-Upper-middle class white women do have louder voices and more platforms and agency to broadcast their voices. I think there are equally as many dissatisfied mothers who don't identify with the upper middle class educated cisgender white woman but they just feel there's no one who's going to listen. Why speak up and waste precious energy that could go into keeping yourself somewhat afloat?

Obviously, these are just my thoughts and experiences (and I have a lot more!) but this is kind of been my viewpoint with tangential experience.

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