Growing up, my mom was always the ultimate example of exceptional
mother and wife-hood. She was beautiful and efficient, managing to take care of
both a house and four rambunctious children while still putting a family dinner
on the table every night. During her time as a stay-at-home mom she committed
fully to the role; she would sew us blankets, hand-make our Halloween costumes,
embody both Santa and the Easter bunny during their seasons, and always threw my
siblings and I epic, themed birthday parties. I still remember being shorter
than the counter and craning my neck up to watch her mold bread dough into the
shape of dog bones for my sister’s 101 Dalmatians birthday; later, for a
Lion King inspired event she hand-sketched and coloured the main characters on
large rolls of newsprint paper, taping them to the walls like guests at the
party. My mother was a crafty, Pinterest
queen before the concept itself existed, and I always idolized her as the peak
of wifely and parental success.
It’s no wonder then that when I married at twenty-two and held
myself to the same standard that I watched my self-esteem spiral with my
failure to ascend the pedestal. To me being a wife meant becoming the
housekeeper and cook that my husband deserved, and being a mother meant devoting
the majority of my time and energy into making my children’s lives both balanced
and magical. I assumed I’d feel gratified with these roles in place, that my
husband and I would seamlessly slide into being one of those content couples I
grew up idolizing; he the obliged breadwinner, she the happy homemaker. He husband, she wife. Even before we’d
married we had established this well-worn dynamic, and because we had witnessed
it with our own parents and relatives we were sure that it was necessary for both success and satisfaction. And maybe that was our biggest marital misstep- thinking that
marriage was about shaping ourselves to fit defined roles rather than creating
a unique partnership that suited our individual needs. Ultimately for us this
dynamic we’d created didn’t stick, and because our entire foundation was based
on it, as the roles soured so did the relationship. Afterwards, I spent a long
time trying to understand what was broken within me that had prevented me from
finding contentment in the wifely position we’d established, to see with
clarity what had made me unable to fit happily within it.
Perhaps it was because I’d never realized how much work
marriage would actually require, that decades of romantic comedies and soulmate
chatter had taught me that simply being
a wife and mother would equal fulfillment, the work just a mindless side-note. Or
maybe it’s that millennial undercurrent that coursed through my upbringing,
creating not only a sense of entitlement but also a struggle to connect genuine
success with the time and effort it takes to get there- that undeniable need
for instant gratification that our social media-centered culture has entrenched
in the majority of us born sometime after 1980.
But mostly I think it's about the fact that I never
actually asked my mother (or any of my friends’ mothers) what their lives were really like, never pried beyond how they
appeared on the outside to discover what they felt like on the inside. I never
asked them if they were happy, and that’s understandable because society didn’t
either. Only recently has it begun seeping into general consciousness that
perhaps stay-at-home moms and housewives aren’t as content as previously
assumed, and that despite the idealized and almost saintly image, these roles
can be both entirely thankless and non-compensatory, usually devoid of sick
days, vacation time and requiring enormous personal sacrifices.
And for some wives and mothers that’s okay; I admire these
women because they’ve managed to find happiness in one of the most stressful
and often isolating roles. But for me, it never worked; despite my own mother’s
success in that arena, it wasn’t a suitable position for me. And I think ultimately that’s what all of us
wives, mothers, working moms, stay-at-home moms, moms with help, moms without
help, proud feminist married millennial women must remember: in the end, we need to exercise
our right to choose what works for us, and embrace it unabashedly. We must cast
aside any notions of right or wrong, and replace them with an acknowledgment of
individual needs and limits.
Now a single mom, I’m determined that if I ever
marry again I will first decide what being a wife actually means to me, and I
will redefine the role in a way that suits my sensibilities rather than the
other way around. I will shake off the shackles of my upbringing and choose a
partner who accepts my unique ways; most importantly, I will tear down that inaccessible
pedestal, and learn to accept them too.
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