Lately, I feel like my demographic has been getting it in the teeth. First, there's the general unease about mommy bloggers, that we're somehow whoring out our families if we write about them publicly and (God forbid) make money from that writing.
Second, there's the latest and greatest attack on my neighborhood, which apparently everybody hates (the neighborhood is so hateful that the demand for apartments outstrips supply, but hey, let's not quibble over details). As the author of this article acknowledges, "[n]o consideration of Park Slope is complete without a discussion of stroller semiotics, of the stroller as synecdoche for the perceived evils of the neighborhood and indulgent urban child rearing in general."* She goes further to say "[t]hat’s why our feelings about Park Slope are linked to our feelings
about our entire city: our overpriced, chain-store city run by bankers,
socialites and, it seems, mommies." And that's when I had to laugh out loud because, yes of course, it's the mommies who are running the city. Of course we are.
It seems to me that the criticisms lobbed at mommy bloggers and stroller-piloting Slopers are just plain old sexism dressed up to look like something else. Mommies, apparently, are still supposed to pack up our broods and disappear into the suburbs, where we only communicate with one another in furtive whisperings at school drop-offs or the playground (and, then of course, we catch shit for our disconnectedness from the Real World).
People get mad at mommies because we're a paradox. We have hard and often thankless jobs--whether we stay at home, work at home, or work out of the home--and we do them anyway. We complain about the beasties (we call them beasties!) when they aren't sleeping or eating or refraining from hitting their little sisters, but we love them anyway. It's not glamorous, it's not sexy, it's not what we went to graduate school for, but we do it.
Now, I need to get back to running the city. This afternoon I'm going to see what I can do to make the subway even less stroller accessible.
*Because I had to look it up: synecdoche is a figure of speech by which a part is put for the whole (as fifty sail for fifty ships), the whole for a part (as society for high society), the species for the genus (as cutthroat for assassin), the genus for the species (as a creature for a man), or the name of the material for the thing made (as boards for stage)