*This piece is running on Fox news here:
(*Thank you for sharing this post! Let me know if you do--and I'll be giving away another book and audio book!)
I’ll confess right up front, I’m a mother, and I’m likely a sap. I did actually dab my eyes while watching the online ad extolling motherhood as “The World’s Toughest Job,” because I believe it is. (If you haven’t seen it yet, watch it here: )
I’ll confess right up front, I’m a mother, and I’m likely a sap. I did actually dab my eyes while watching the online ad extolling motherhood as “The World’s Toughest Job,” because I believe it is. (If you haven’t seen it yet, watch it here: )
The backlash against
the heartwarming ad which has more than 17.5 million views by last count, has
taken many by surprise. Not me. Predictably, wherever emotions are evoked, cynicism
and all manner of sentiment against sentiment will follow. And, predictably,
whenever motherhood is raised, a firestorm will ensue. Here’s a taste of it.
Smriti Sinha at policymic declares it “a little silly to
objectively argue” that motherhood is “the toughest” job. Many others chime in here, ridiculing the superlative
“toughest” and the extremity of the described working conditions: no breaks, no rest, no sleep, no time off, no
pay, etc. And---suddenly on Mother’s Day we demand literalism from our
commercials?
For me, as a mother of six, the ad is not terribly far from the truth, but can we remember the genre here? This is a commercial, not a college essay. And it’s a tribute, not an argument, using hyperbole, deliberate overstatement to make a larger point. Did we miss the larger point, and is it really controvertible---that mothers work very hard, that they’re often insufficiently recognized and compensated and they should be appreciated more? Do we really disagree with this?
Mary Elizabeth Williams in Salon titles
her piece, “Motherhood Isn’t ‘World’s Toughest Job." She complains not because the ad went too
far, but because it didn’t go far enough: "You
want to thank women, want to show women they have value? Close the wage gap.
Challenge the insidious rape culture that exists in the military and in our
colleges. Join the fight for our reproductive rights.”
Yes, Dear Card Company, what were you thinking? Why are you
making cards and ads that express love and appreciation for mothers instead of
battling Congress to fix these national woes? Do it big, do it all or go home,
her message reads.
This all-or-nothing thinking continues in Charlotte
Alter’s piece in Time magazine. Alter complains that the ad says nothing about fathers
or stay-at-home dads. “This ad
shouldn’t be about motherhood, it should be about parenthood.” A blogger, a
father of twins, also complains about the exclusion of dads. How
welcome to hear a man weighing in and a woman asking for the inclusion of men,
but the exclusion is obvious and simple: it’s Mother’s Day this week, not Father’s Day. Don’t worry, Dads. Your
day (and ad) is coming!
But these complaints are only the latest in a growing
grumble against the day itself. Even the gentle practice of handing out flowers to mothers in
church has come under attack recently. (I fought vigorously for my flower here:)
We
are asked by sensitive dissenters, What
about the millions who want children and cannot have them? What about those
whose mothers have died? What about those whose mothers abandoned or abused
them? A dozen other scenarios are trotted out to dampen the day. Truly, I don’t deny that both Mother’s Day and
Father’s Day are emotional minefields for most of us, for myself perhaps even
more than others, but may I also say, Welcome to Life?
Here’s part of what’s wrong. Our
insistence upon inclusion
has become a kind of exclusion. It’s all of us, apparently, or none
of us. When
celebrating mothers, we can’t exclude women who
aren’t mothers. Heck, when
celebrating mothers, we can’t even
exclude fathers. So, the reasoning goes,
let’s either celebrate
everyone, or ditch the holiday entirely. This is
familiar territory in
a culture where children can’t lose and everyone gets a
medal, a
kind of equality where everyone ends up losing.
Here’s another part related and less
sung: Our culture has a
dangerous
intolerance for pain. We’re so focused on happiness, we’ll do anything to avoid
pain, especially on a holiday. But let’s
face it, imperfection and pain is an integral part of mothering and it always
will be. Nor does pain come to us equally or fairly. I fear that we’ve become
so happiness-driven and so self-focused we’ve lost the ability to “weep with
those who weep and rejoice with those who rejoice.”
This Sunday, I hope we can reclaim
Mother’s Day from selfishness, politics, cynicism and illogic to do something
simple: to rise and bless those women who have loved and raised us, however
imperfectly. That celebration may include tears, and it may or may not include
flowers and gifts. But loving and raising human beings, by any calculus, is a
tough job that deserves at least a sentimental card, even a whole commercial.
Maybe
even a whole day.
Are you with me, mothers?
(If you are, and you share this post, let me know and I'll enter your name in the hat for a Forgiving Our Fathers and Mothers book or an audio version of it.)
(If you are, and you share this post, let me know and I'll enter your name in the hat for a Forgiving Our Fathers and Mothers book or an audio version of it.)
Leslie, these words resonated deeply with me on this, my second mother's day: "Imperfection and pain is an integral part of mothering and it always will be. Nor does pain come to us equally or fairly." Thank you for this pre-Shalom reminder. It's prophetic. I shared it on the private forum I'm in on FB (my only current online presence). Blessing.
ReplyDeleteAmy--congrats on your second Mother's Day!! May you find a flower and a great mug of coffee during your special day. (Thank you for sharing!)
DeleteAmy! You won a copy of the book! Your choice---audio or real book?? And--where can I have it sent??
DeleteWell said Leslie!
ReplyDeleteThanks Louise! And wishing you a very special day of your own!
DeleteLeslie: Many years ago we were childless and unable to conceive. One Mother's Day, a small child in our church presented my wife with a beautiful red rose. In his eyes, she was a Mommy. It tore her up terribly. By the following Mother's Day, we had our adopted son for three months. When the Pastor asked Mothers to stand up to receive a flower, she shot up like a missile! Stop giving Moms flowers on Mother's Day?!? Over My Dead Body!! If people are so self-centered they cannot allow other Moms to be recognized, then they need some serious counselling! If men want to complain about not being recognized on Mother's Day because they're stay-at-home Dads, I say, Man up, suck it up, or get off the couch and get a job!!! There IS a Father's Day. When I retired from the military, I became a proud stay-at-home Dad. (I LOVED the afternoon naps with my then-18-month-old.). I cook, clean, shop, repair the cars, cut the firewood, and remodel the house. My pension covers life insurance and mortgage. Mom brings home the rest. It's unorthodox, but she needs to finish out her career so she can retire in six years.
ReplyDeleteThe reason our situation works is because it's not a 50-50 split on responsibilities. It's 100-100! We don't put half of ourselves forward. We both put it ALL on the line, and we cover for each other when one of us has to change our routine. I salute Mothers. Especially those who put forth the effort to be good, yea even, great Moms.
To those whiners who are simply jealous because someone else is getting attention: Get off your couches and do something worthwhile. You'll get recognized. Really.
Awesome commercial. Well done!
Dear Sir, father, husband---you're awesome! I love your 100-100 sharing attitude and I second it! And love that you loved being home with your child. You go, Dad!! Thanks for lifting my day!
DeleteAbsolutely right Leslie! Yes, it's right and good to celebrate all the joys and also the woes and hardships of motherhood. As a post-partum depression counsellor and advocate I walk alongside moms as they navigate their way through the messy and yes blessings of motherhood, and journey with them in the stuff of real, everyday life. If we are now saying that in the interests of not upsetting anyone in our over politically correct society we should just stop celebrating moms, the we really have gone too far!
ReplyDeleteThanks Linda---and thank you for what you do! Wow--what an incredible ministry you have! Love and encourage On!! (And we are almost getting to "too far.")
Deleteraw honesty, so refreshing. thanks leslie.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!! And blessings on your day--however you celebrate it!
DeleteLeslie, thank you for saying so well what has needed to be said: it's ok to hold others up for special recognition without including every who has a pulse, be it Mother's Day or Little League Soccer. When we give every woman a flower, every kid on the team an award and every student a ribbon, we tell everyone they are "special," which means no one is special. What's the point of doing the hard work to succeed if we award everybody, whether they put out any effort or not? I went through 7 years of infertility, and you can bet that on my first Mother's Day, I wanted my carnation! It is still pressed in my son's baby book. I did share your post, not to win the book, but because your words are wise and needed to be heard. (P.S. and I was a bit teary-eyed at the commercial too.)
ReplyDeleteAhhh, so good to meet another self-confessed sappy mother!! The ad brought back all those sleepless nights, the fevers, the vomit, the surly talk-back of teens, etc!! So yes, we'll take that flower with joy. thanks for reading, for writing back---and for sharing!! Wishing you many flowers!
DeleteThoroughly enjoyed this; thank you, Leslie.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes I shared it on FB.
Thank you Becky!! (I'll put your name in the hat!)
DeleteThank you, Leslie. Yes, if there's even a whiff of 'traditional' in the room the smoke detectors go off and the sprinklers start dousing. Its quite sad.
ReplyDeleteI do hope you have a happy mother's day.
~ John
Thanks John. I will, though 4 of my kids are out of the house and far away. Still, I know they love me and I love them. What could be better??!!
DeleteArgh! The enemy is busy keeping us tired and living in strife. Let's keep our eye's on He who makes it all possible.
ReplyDeleteMotherhood is tough. Fatherhood is tough. Heck, even back-country trout fishing is tough. Enjoy the journey.
Haaaa!! Okay, you need to start a Trout Fisher's Day!! And us commercial fishers wouldn't boycott it. We'd just be happy for you!!
DeleteShared! Amen, sista
ReplyDeleteThanks Barb!!
DeleteBarb!! You've won a copy of the book. WHere can I mail it?
DeleteShared on Twitter. I could've stopped at watching the video ad and skipped the article. Can't believe people get miffed about such things. The video became quite blurry at the end. Well done! Never, never enough recognition for motherhood. I'm sorry for those who are childless, but we do all have a mother, or someone who did the job in her place. Honor where honor is due. One way or another one of these days I'm going to read your new book :-) Thanks, Leslie, for this.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much Joyce! (I don't know what to do about the video . …) I DO hope you get to read the book. I'll put your name in the hat this week! Blessings on you, especially tomorrow!!
DeleteGreat post... What if we raised kids to face pain...sorrow and disappointment in healthier ways... When God told us to rejoice...to mourn with others...this was not a quick applaud...or a shallow ...I am sorry...no...there is so much depth to this...to truly rejoice with those who rejoice ...we have to get outside ourselves... To be thankful when someone is getting or experiencing something we don't have... And to walk alongside those who mourn ...we have to get outside ourselves too... It is a hard, hard place to walk. So let's live and and model how to live in this way...so we can live more like Christ... In celebration and sorrow!!
ReplyDeleteYes, absolutely, Ro. It is our job as mothers to model this kind of empathy and to lead our kids in helping others. Even when they may not feel the emotion we are--or someone else is, they can learn the habit of helping. Bless you tomorrow on your special day!!
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteGreat response...we can't keep ourselves from pain and if we let it, we grow stronger. We cannot always be safe from pain.
DeleteThanks Leslie!
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ReplyDelete