Second Thoughts

Af OrnaRaz

82.5K 1.3K 382

Personal essays about life : identity, women, widowhood, families, relationships, love, money and much more Mere

Best Friends Are Forever?
A Skype Mother
Blue Jasmine, A College Dropout Or A Gifted Anthropologist?
"Call The Midwife:" Nurse Matilda
Childhood Under A Magnifying Glass: Over-Parenting Revisited
How NOT to Write About Motherhood
Lot's Wife And The Danger Of Curiosity
Mothers and Mothers-In-Law: A Different Bridal Shower
No longer Arthur's Sister: The New Bat Mitzva
On Remaining Unpublished, or The Most Underrated Novelist of the 20th Century
She Is A Real "Womensch"
The Celebration Of The Middle Aged Widow: The Book Of Ruth
What Would Dorian Say? Or My New Gray hair
He Ain't Heavy... He's My Brother
Some Thoughts About The Choice of Being A Mother
"It Ain't Easy": The Fifth Commandment
What Is The Purpose Of Your Visit? About Friendships
When It Comes To Women Ambition Is Still A Dirty Word
Instead Of Berlin? See Under Zoo Aretz Zoo
The Fall From Grace of Age 30 And Josef K
A Woman's Career And Bad Karma
The Eggs In The Gilded Cage
Breastfeeding In Public? Not In My Front Yard
Whose Money Is It Really?
Furnishing The Dollhouse: A Lesson About Money
Facebook Power: From Clarence Thomas to Yitzhak Laor
The Long Line Outside The Women's Restroom: An Allegory
From Marriage Ban To Freezing Eggs: The High Price Of Equality
The Bad Luck Of Cancer Patients
The Jewel In The Desert: Phoenix Museum Of Musical Instruments
"I Beg Your Pardon?" My Foreign (Israeli) Accent
Is It Really About Love? Valentine's Day
"The Other Is [Not] Me:" Lack Of Empathy
Liking Barack Obama
Those Who Are Absent From The Seder Table
Roads I didn't Take And Public Transportation
The US Is A Foreign Country Or It Is Best Not To Know
"We Do Not Know What A Jew Is. We Only Know Men"
Bring Back Mother's Day
A Coal Stove In Auschwitz and Other Monuments
There Is Always More To The Story
Privacy-A Useful Concept ?
A Whole Life in One Short Passage: The Case of the Cargo Cult Tribe
How To get Rid Of A Middle Aged Casanova
"I'll Think About That Tomorrow ": The Comfort of Denial
Public Mourning Is Naked
My Husband'd Last Words
Lonely In Jerusalem
In The Absence Of A Personal Moment
Judging A Town By Its Library
Make Room For Chapter 2
Your Best Is Not Good Enough For Me
"She Is Not Really Beautiful, But": About Seemingly Good Ideas
Some Ask For Help Others Have Help Thrust Upon Them
Can Great Literature Save Lives?
Mother Of The Year Award
Princess Victoria Has Thick Ankles-Insults And Their Consequences
Give Me The Facts But Don't Tell Me What To Think
"Not every death is the end of a well lived life"
Love [Doesn't]Mean Never Having to Say You're Sorry": When in Doubt Apologize
Please Leave Me A Note: The Language Of Personal Notes
The Dangers Of Art And Ideas: Between Mike Leigh And Miri Regev
Two Lovely Misses: Together For Over Forty Years
Women And Aging: The Pnina Rosenblum Version
It's A Scary Thing How Quickly The People Closest To You Can Become Strangers
The Past Has A Vote And Religious Feminists
It's Time To Listen: Women Wage Peace
Who Needs The Israel Broadcasting Authority?
Ignoring Each Other? The Hirschsprung Family And The Smartphones
The Deception Of A Native Accent
A Friend In Need: Cancer And The Vanishing Friends
David Or Daveed: The Truth About Women Wage Peace
"When I want Something I Get It:" Benjamin Netanyahu's Desires
"I Am A Camera": Visiting Kiryat Arba And Hebron
Surely Erela Would Call You
The Fall of a Poet: Naim Araidi
That First Year: Coping Tips For New Widows And Widowers
Kind Neighbors, or A Young Reporter from Um El Fahem
My [Facebook] Home Is My Castle
Lord of the Flies Is Here: Israel 2015
See No Evil: "The Night In Question"
A Senior Intern: Stereotypes and Reality
Israel Conference On Peace and The Missing Parents
What Do Boyer Graduates Do For Fun?
Sour Grapes of Parents, Sons' Teeth and Chapter 2
Ethiopian Jews Are Not Welcome
Novy God and the Kosher Shrimps
Electric Light Is the Most Efficient Policeman: Breaking The Silence
Small Towns In Texas And Personal Friends
The Most Important Profession In The world
The Power Of The Written Word: "Naftali Please Ban My Book"
How I Became the Enemy of Peace and Givat Haviva
My Mother's Wish
Kindergarten Children Under A Magnifying Glass
A Rabbi, a Pastor, and a Mensch
Rabin's Legacy and the Orphans
Black/Israeli/Palestinian Lives Matter
King Benjamin the First
Contempt Of Erudition And The Council For Higher Education
Don't Block My View With Your Disabilities: The Case Of Yonah Yahav
"Where Ignorance Is Bliss": Bashing The Whistleblower
The Sons Garden: Stepping on Collective Toes
We Still Have Choices: Cancer Patients and Their Families
Please Don't Tell Me Everything: A Mother's Viewpoint on the Big Trip
The Invisible Peace Activists: International Authors And Occupation
Facebook's Community Standards and the community
A Personal/Open Letter to Naz Shah
"Let Them Eat Cake": May Day in Haifa and the Mimouna
The Narrative of My Generation Is the Yom Kippur War
On May 16th 1948 The State of Israel Was Born
Life Behind The Partition Of The Law School Graduation Gala
54 Years Ago Today: Eichmann's Execution And A Personal Tragedy
"People of the Book" Did Not Make The Top 10 List Of Literate Nations
For Positive Communication: Netiquette Revisited
For Father's Day: The Father As A Teacher
Ostracism and the Collaborating Daughters
The Face of Jewish Settlers In Hebron: The Sheriff
The Kid Who Ran Away from School and Children Books' Justice
Motherhood Revisited: In Defense Of Andrea Leadsom
Strong and Purposeful: Women Wage Peace

IMA Is More Important Than

548 8 0
Af OrnaRaz

Going north on Ayalon highway you can't miss the eye-catching yellow building with the word IMA (mother in Hebrew) in huge letters and beneath in smaller print: "is more important than." Even once the full sentence is revealed with the rest of the word IMA--GINATION, and we remember Albert Einstein's quote, the word IMA stays with us.

So if IMA is that important, how come so many young women today still have to struggle in their roles as mothers and career women? The other day I heard an inspiring yet somewhat disturbing story. It was about the challenges of an Israeli career woman-- a mother, in the relentless business world. Her daughter celebrated her birthday at the preschool and had warned the mother that if she failed to show up to the party on time, she would dismiss her as a mother.

On the appointed day the mother had to attend a meeting which was due to end fifteen minutes prior to the party. As it was rush hour, she knew that she would never get from the center of Tel Aviv to the party on time. Desperate times called for desperate measures, thus she had planned ahead and hired a delivery motorcyclist who waited for her at the end of the meeting and raced through heavy traffic to the school: She wasn't late.

That time the mother found a solution, but I have to wonder about all the other instances when she couldn't, and about all the important occasions in her daughter's life that she had to miss.The preschooler and her mother suffered many disappointments. It seems that from an early age the daughter learnt that a threat could actually be an effective tool to help her mother steer in her direction.

The story demonstrates the creativity and resourcefulness of the mother, she thinks outside the box and comes up with innovative solutions. Those are rare and sought after qualities even in the business world. However, it is a sad comment on our society when a mother has to literally risk her life to get to a her daughter's birthday party on time.

For generations Feminists have been wrestling with the issue of combining home and work. Simone de Beauvoir in The Second Sex, (1953) was against women's employment and argued that combining home and work meant a burden of the 'double day' which underpinned the subordinate position of women in society. She further details the hardships in store for women, at all professional levels, who attempt to combine marriage and work. She points out the difficulties of the woman worker or employee, the secretary, the saleswoman, all of whom go to work outside the home. It is much more difficult for them to combine their employment with household duties, which would seem to require at least three and a half hours a day, with perhaps six hours on Sunday – a good deal to add to the hours in factory or office. As for the learned professions, even if women lawyers, doctors, and professors obtain some housekeeping help, the home and children are for them also a burden that is a heavy handicap.

De Beauvoir, who never married, wrote about the plight of working married women. The sociologists Alva Myrdal and Viola Klein studied working mothers and like most Feminists of their era, advocated part-time work for mothers once their children went to school. They promoted this style of work in their book Women's Two Roles (1956) since they regarded being part of the working force for women as a mission and as an end in itself.

Today, sixty years later, most mothers cannot afford to work part time even if they wish to do so. De Beauvoir was right: many women, mothers in particular, still face the burden of the double day once they get home. And if they need to make some changes in their work's schedule, they have to take heroic measures.

After all this time, most men still find it easier to view this situation as a woman's problem, but it is a grave oversight. Men should help make the working environment conducive for mothers, as it is also their own children that the mothers are forced to disappoint.

I hope that the daughter in the story would not grow up believing that it's just not worth it. Moreover, it will be unfortunate if she, and other female friends, would decide either not to have children like de Beauvoiror, or to go back to being stay-at home IMA because it is more important than disappointing her daughter.

The essay appeared in the Times Of Israel 

 http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/ima-is-more-important-than/

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