<![CDATA[Jezebel: mommies]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/jezebel.com.png <![CDATA[Jezebel: mommies]]> http://jezebel.com/tag/mommies http://jezebel.com/tag/mommies <![CDATA[Mom Gets De-Programmed From The Cult Of Pregnancy]]> A British writer discovers that being pregnant in the United States - particularly New York - sucks.

Alexandra Starr moves to New York and declares,

In a city obsessed with self-improvement and status, becoming big with child is not a mellow experience. New Yorkers may appear to be concerned about your baby, but in fact it's all about you, not your child. How you eat during pregnancy is seen as a reflection of your character and social standing....Pregnancy in Manhattan combines crunchy-granola wholesomeness - go organic, absolutely no drinking (to say nothing of lighting up a cigarette), cut out the caffeine - with an urban prejudice against growing anything bigger than the ‘Perfect Bump' (as the title of a New York magazine article describing the city's epidemic of skinny pregnancies put it).

She bridles at the injunctions against everything from camomile tea to deli meats, at message boards' obsessions with staying slim and jogging through pregnancies, at her doctor's desire that she not gain more than 25 pounds and her injunction, "I would ask you whether the baby needs that slice of cake. For that matter, I would ask if you do." Ultimately, Starr decides to stick to the more laid-back NHS pregnancy guidelines, which allow for a little wine wiggle room and the occasional slice of meat. She's much happier.

While everything she says is well-taken, and the cult of pregnancy is obviously way out of control, I maintain that no mother can write about pregnancy objectively. It all seems to be a continuing search to justify one's own choices, or dismiss others as silly, because no one can live with the thought that she's not doing the best for her baby. In some ways, aren't all these discussions "about you?" As a few million men once said, women have been having babies for thousands of years, and while this sort of smug pronouncement seems to hinge on the notion that moms can pop them out like someone in a Pearl Buck novel, it's pretty clear that to a degree ignorance was bliss. Because it does seem like, in the U.S. at least, this isn't a conversation you can opt pout of - and ironically, Starr's article proves this as much as anything.

In New York, Pregnancy Is A Form Of Tyranny [SpectatorUK]

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<![CDATA[Heather "Dooce" Armstrong Makes Kathie Lee Uncomfortable]]> Talk about ice queens on the Today show: This morning, Heather B. Armstrong met with Hoda Kotb and Kathie Lee Gifford to talk about her award-winning, groundbreaking blog Dooce — is it just me or doesn't it seem a bit unfair to call it a "Mom Blog"? — and sat on the couch with her arms crossed the entire time, looking cold. (In temperature, not in spirit.) Maybe she was simply preparing herself for Kathie Lee's line of questioning. About three minutes into the interview, Kathie Lee admitted that she has "mixed emotions" about Armstrong's chosen line of work, then quickly changed the subject to tease the show's next segment about home decorating. Clip above.


Earlier: Dooce: Proof That Not All Our Pregnancies Need To End In Abortion?

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<![CDATA[Fake Housewife Of New York City]]> Thanks, Babble, for pointing out Cookie mag's new socialite/mommy column by Tatiana Boncompagni Hoover, the daughter of an Italian Princess and wife of a vacuum cleaner scion. Tatty wants us to know that her glamorous life is not all "blowouts and red carpets. Like most moms, I wake up in the predawn hours to give my daughter her milk." She doesn't comb her hair! She "schleps." Her pre-baby jeans still feel tight! OMG guys she's just like us! "Each week, I am deluged with invitations that offer an evening of glamour and, more importantly, adult talk... I've been invited in-store cocktail hours, intimate dinners, a weekend jaunt to a swanky new hotel in Miami, even a spa week at a tony Anguilla resort." Still just like us, right? Oh wait. [Cookie via Babble]

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