!!! DEVELOPMENT MODE !!!

Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Κοινωνικά θέματα και προβληματισμοί
Κανόνες Δ. Συζήτησης
Προσοχή: Σύμφωνα με το νόμο απαγορεύεται η δημοσιοποίηση ονομαστικά η φωτογραφικά ποινικών καταδικών οποιουδήποτε βαθμού & αιτιολογίας καθώς εμπίπτουν στα ευαίσθητα προσωπικά δεδομένα του ατόμου. Τυχόν δημοσιοποίηση τέτοιων δεδομένων ενδέχεται να επιφέρει ποινικές κυρώσεις στο συντάκτη. Επιτρέπεται μόνο αν έχει δοθεί εισαγγελική εντολή και μόνο για το χρονικό διάστημα που αυτή ισχύει. Οφείλετε σε κάθε περίπτωση να ζητήσετε με αναφορά τη διαγραφή της ανάρτησης πριν παρέλθει το χρονικό διάστημα της νόμιμης δημοσιοποίησης. Η διαχείριση αποποιείται κάθε ευθύνη για τυχόν ποινικές ευθύνες αν παραβιάσετε τα παραπάνω.
Άβαταρ μέλους
AlienWay
Δημοσιεύσεις: 28206
Εγγραφή: 08 Οκτ 2019, 13:15
Phorum.gr user: AlienWay

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από AlienWay »

Λίνο Βεντούρα έγραψε: 28 Ιούλ 2023, 10:57
AlienWay έγραψε: 28 Ιούλ 2023, 10:55
Λίνο Βεντούρα έγραψε: 28 Ιούλ 2023, 09:31

Κάνε παραθεση μα γελάσουμε
Δεν με αφήνει. Θελει λέει να είμαι συνδρομητής και να πληρώνω αυτή τη τόσο αξιόλογη εφημερίδα που λέει αυτά και άλλα όμορφα πράγματα.
Ε, ναι, ούτε κι εμείς μπορούμε να το διαβάσουμε
Αυτό μπορουμε
www.theguardian.com
The big idea: why the maternal instinct is a myth

The big idea: why the maternal instinct is a myth

The ‘parental brain’ is something that develops with experience – and anyone can get one
Chelsea Conaboy
Mon 10 Oct 2022 12.30 BST
Last modified on Wed 12 Oct 2022 16.36 BST

The weighing scale at the weekly breastfeeding support group I visited gave me some reassurance I was doing all right feeding and caring for my son, who was born small, at under six pounds. Even so, I was filled with worry: about feeding and caring for him, about whether I was enough, about why I didn’t feel the flood of warmth and certainty I had expected in new motherhood.

As I sat there listening to other people trade tips about pumping, getting a better latch or preparing for the transition back to work, I looked around and wondered about all the things they weren’t saying. Did they feel it too – this clash between how they thought it would be and the reality? The sense in themselves that something had shifted, so deep it seemed impossible to name? And if not, what did that say about me?

In the months that followed, as I searched for words that could describe what I was feeling as a new mother, I came to understand that there was nothing wrong with me. In fact, I was just as I should be – a committed, attentive, protective parent. But there was a whole lot wrong with the assumptions I had carried into the role. Specifically, the ingrained idea that a readymade maternal instinct would propel me through those first hard days of motherhood.
illustration of a clock
The Big Idea: can you learn to predict the future?
Read more

The notion that the capacity for caregiving is wholly innate and automatic, as well as distinctly female, is a lie. It leaves women feeling broken when, in their first days of motherhood, they experience something else – shock, fear, uncertainty, anger, sometimes alongside joy and wonder. And it leaves so many other kinds of parents out of the story.

In fact, what we know about the science of the “parental brain” serves to validate the experience I went through. It shows that new parents enter a period of hyperresponsiveness in the first months postpartum. This is so they can tend to their babies and engage in an intense process of learning to read and respond to their cues, to predict their needs and know how to meet them. That does not come about through a rigid instinct – a fixed pattern of behaviour – but through a process, one of adaptation, that is inherently quite gruelling. New parenthood is a time of major upheaval for the brain, shaped both by hormones and by exposure to the very powerful stimuli that babies provide. It’s thought that anyone who commits themselves to caring for a baby can develop this parental brain, no matter their sex or path to parenthood.

Maternal instinct is rooted in religious notions of mothers as selfless and committed entirely to the role

Learning about the parental brain changed my view of myself as a mother. I wasn’t broken. I was changing. But the more I read, the angrier I felt – why hadn’t I learned this in the prenatal classes I took, or in the many baby books I read?

That may be in part because of the stickiness of the idea of maternal instinct. Even if we see it as outdated to some degree, it is hard to dismiss entirely. It feels true. Generation after generation of mothers have cared for babies. We believe that something compels them to do that. And the idea offers comfort – the promise of falling in love with a child at first sight and a kind of certainty in the face of the unknown. We feel ourselves changed by parenthood, parts of us mirroring the protective “mama bear” and the nurturing “mama bird”, and we see this replicated in others.

A long line of experts has named those changes for us. I think of maternal instinct as a classic case of disinformation, something that seems true and gets repeated over and over until we believe it reflexively. But it is not based in science. It is rooted in religious notions of mothers as selfless and committed entirely to the role.

In evolutionary theory and in the writing of naturalists at the end of the 19th century, such ideas were projected on to other animals, whose maternal behaviours are actually far more varied than the entirely protective, self-sacrificing figure that the moral view of motherhood favours. Early psychologists soon defined maternal instinct as, in the words of William McDougall, stronger than any other, “even fear itself”, something that provided a woman with the “tender emotion” necessary for the role that became her “constant and all-absorbing occupation”.
skip past newsletter promotion

Sign up to Inside Saturday
Free weekly newsletter

The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend.
Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

after newsletter promotion
Bitch by Lucy Cooke review – a joyous debunking of gender stereotypes in nature
Read more

Austrian ethologist Konrad Lorenz, who presented himself as an expert on human bonding based on his work with geese, frequently described instinct using a lock-and-key metaphor. His work had a major influence on British psychologist John Bowlby and his theory of attachment. Historian Marga Vicedo has detailed how the connection between the two men and Bowlby’s writing after the second world war carried forward the idea of maternal instinct, even as some scientists had begun to turn away from instinct as an explanation for behaviour.

Bowlby’s work changed our understanding of infants and their needs for the better, but it presented a good mother as someone who not only cared for her child but who also provided a very specific kind of maternal love which became the key to a child’s healthy development.

In the 1960s and 70s, a new generation of researchers challenged the Lorenzian view of a fixed pattern of behaviour in mothers. Psychobiologist Jay Rosenblatt and colleagues at Rutgers University studied rats and found that both males and virgin females, on exposure to pups, also developed “maternal” behaviours. They found that time spent with the young – and not only hormonal changes – were incredibly important for mother rats, too. In short, experience mattered.

Anthropologist SarahBlaffer Hrdy, among others, began asking questions about the primates she studied whose behaviour did not match the evolutionary theory she had been taught. Mothers, she wrote, were “just as much strategic planners and decision-makers, opportunists and deal-makers, manipulators and allies as they were nurturers”.

The work of Hrdy and Rosenblatt is the foundation for the modernday study of the human parental brain. Some feminists have pushed back, particularly against Hrdy’s work on the biological mechanisms that shape motherhood, saying it promotes a traditional view that has too often been a trap for women.

I see it differently. New parenthood is a major stage of development. The biological changes that come with it are deep and profound, but they are not what we’ve been told they are. They are not automatic, nor are they the sole preserve of mothers driven by a rigid, inborn female predisposition towards caregiving. Instead they are the product of intense focus on the needs of another, the result of a rewiring that comes as we assume the responsibility for a near-helpless child and start the hard work of caring. That should be the contemporary answer to any question that begins: “What if I’m not cut out for this?”

Mother Brain: Separating Myth from Biology – the Science of the Parental Brain by Chelsea Conaboy is published by W&N.
Further reading

Bitch: A Revolutionary Guide to Sex, Evolution and the Female Animal by Lucy Cooke (Doubleday, £20)

Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change by Angela Garbes (Harper Wave, £25.99)

The Nature and Nurture of Love: From Imprinting to Attachment in Cold War America by Marga Vicedo (University of Chicago, £26).
Τελευταία επεξεργασία από το μέλος AlienWay την 28 Ιούλ 2023, 11:02, έχει επεξεργασθεί 1 φορά συνολικά.
Ζούμε σε ένα σύστημα.
Δημοκράτης
Δημοσιεύσεις: 27998
Εγγραφή: 25 Ιαν 2019, 00:26

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Δημοκράτης »

Maternal Instinct Is a Myth That Men Created

By Chelsea Conaboy

Ms. Conaboy is a journalist specializing in health and the author of the forthcoming book “Mother Brain: How Neuroscience Is Rewriting the Story of Parenthood,” from which this essay has been adapted.

Aug. 26, 2022
Around the time that Mimi Niles became a mother, an upstairs neighbor in her New York City apartment building had twins. When the two women ran into each other in the hallway or on the sidewalk, Ms. Niles would ask the neighbor how she was faring.

“Fabulous,” Ms. Niles remembered her saying. “I’m so happy.”

Ms. Niles was dumbfounded. She was not feeling fabulous in new motherhood. She was exhausted and anxious. She slept little and cried a lot. Even as she worked to bond with her daughter through co-sleeping and baby-wearing, she struggled to understand what the baby needed.

But Ms. Niles soon discovered that there was little room for that struggle within the prevailing narrative of motherhood, or even in her conversations with other parents.

All around her swirled near-rapturous descriptions of the joys of new motherhood. They all celebrated the same thing — the woman who is able to instantly intuit and satisfy her baby’s every need, and to do it all on her own.

Ms. Niles, who is now a midwife and researcher, wondered what was going on. Of course, she was aware of the “baby blues” and knew women who suffered from postpartum depression, but what she took issue with was something more fundamental, about how our culture approaches motherhood. Where did the idea that motherhood is hard-wired for women come from? Is there a man behind the curtain?

In a sense, there is a man behind the curtain. Many of them, actually.

The notion that the selflessness and tenderness babies require is uniquely ingrained in the biology of women, ready to go at the flip of a switch, is a relatively modern — and pernicious — one. It was constructed over decades by men selling an image of what a mother should be, diverting our attention from what she actually is and calling it science.

It keeps us from talking about what it really means to become a parent, and it has emboldened policymakers in the United States, generation after generation, to refuse new parents, and especially mothers, the support they need.

New research on the parental brain makes clear that the idea of maternal instinct as something innate, automatic and distinctly female is a myth, one that has stuck despite the best efforts of feminists to debunk it from the moment it entered public discourse.

To understand just how urgently we need to rewrite the story of motherhood, how very fundamental and necessary this research is, it’s important to know how we got stuck with the old telling of it.

Modern Christian archetypes of motherhood were shaped by two women. There was Eve, who ate the forbidden fruit and in doing so caused the suffering of every human to come. And there was the Virgin Mary, the vessel for a great miracle, who became the most virtue-laden symbol of motherhood there is, her identity entirely eclipsed by the glory of her maternal love. Mary’s story, combined with Eve’s — unattainable goodness, perpetual servitude — created a moral model for motherhood that has proved, for many, stifling and unforgiving.

Still, for centuries, across time and cultures, the status of a mother within religious society was not entirely limited to child-rearing. The home was the seat of economic production as well as a place of politics, education and religious activity.

But the Industrial Revolution pushed the walls closer together, moving people from farm to factory and separating work and home. Of course, many American women — disproportionately women of color and immigrants — did continue to work. Nevertheless, the rise of industrialization ushered in a major shift in the domain of women from one of economic participation and production to one of domesticity and consumption.

The “sacredness” of home grew as capitalism focused work and politics on individual competition and created a ladder for men’s earning potential. The family was seen as the backstop against such self-interest, “the arena in which people learned to temper public ambition or competition with private regard for others,” the historian Stephanie Coontz wrote in her book “The Way We Never Were,” which examines the history of American family life. A mother’s moral imperative and responsibility within the home were inflated — the “angel in the house” — as her role in society shrank.

In the 1800s, Charles Darwin and other evolutionary theorists upended how we thought about human nature, shifting the focus from faith to biology.

And while one might have expected such a shift to dispel longstanding chauvinistic ideas about women and motherhood, the very opposite happened. Within his revolutionary work, Darwin codified biblical notions of the inferiority of women and reaffirmed the idea that their primary function is to bear and care for children.

“What a strong feeling of inward satisfaction must impel a bird, so full of activity, to brood day after day over her eggs,” Darwin wrote in “The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex” in 1871. Observant as he was, Darwin apparently ignored the hunger of the mother bird and the angst of having mouths to feed and predators to fend off. He didn’t notice her wasting where wing meets body, from her own unending stillness.

Women are specialized to care for other humans and men to compete with them, he explained. By that basic fact, he argued, men achieve “higher eminence” in virtually all things, from the use of their senses to reason and imagination.

EDITORS’ PICKS
The Fight for the Right to Trespass
July 26, 2023
Blood of Young Mice Extends Life in the Old
July 27, 2023
When Ancient Eruptions Pumped Diamonds to Earth’s Surface
July 26, 2023
A Summer Dinner Party That’s Actually Fast and Easy
July 27, 2023
How Fake Science Sells Wellness
July 26, 2023
Barboncino, a Brooklyn Pizza Restaurant, Becomes a Union Shop
July 26, 2023
Two Empty Nesters Strive to Come Up With a Down Payment. Which House Could They Buy?
July 27, 2023
What You Should Know About the Potential Risks of Kratom
July 26, 2023
I Am Estranged From My Toxic Mother. Should I Go on Her Birthday Trip?
July 26, 2023
36 Hours in Newport, R.I.
July 27, 2023
As more women demanded their own identities under the law, social Darwinists seized on this idea as justification for continued male dominance. Among them was the English philosopher Herbert Spencer, who wrote that childbearing extracts “vital power” from women, stunting them emotionally and intellectually.

The psychologist William McDougall took things one step further in 1908, writing that the instinct to protect and cherish her children — along with the “tender emotion” required of the task — becomes “the constant and all-absorbing occupation of the mother, to which she devotes all her energies.” It is an instinct stronger than any other, he wrote, “even fear itself.”

Interestingly, he did not believe it to be strong enough to withstand education. McDougall wrote that as a person’s intelligence grows, parental instinct declines, unless countered by “social sanctions” that discourage, for example, birth control, divorce or the erosion of gender roles. The education of women was therefore a major concern for McDougall, a eugenicist for whom maintaining maternal instinct was linked with maintaining white supremacy.

Early feminists were quick to push back against such ideas. In 1875, Antoinette Brown Blackwell, a suffragist and the first woman to be ordained a minister, published a critique saying that Darwin had simply found “a fresh pathway to the old conclusion” about women’s inferiority.

But Blackwell and her peers, sometimes referred to as “Darwinian feminists,” saw opportunity in evolutionary theory precisely because it moved the gender debate away from biblical ancestors and the status of a person’s soul and toward science. The solution, they thought, would be for female scientists to identify the questions most urgent in their own lives and advance their own skills so they could answer them.

This was easier said than done. At the time, science was largely walled off to women, dictated by rigorous protocols and supported by institutions to which women were routinely denied entry. To Blackwell and women who thought like her, evolution had meant “freedom from stories about virgin mothers and evil temptresses,” writes the historian Kimberly Hamlin in “From Eve to Evolution.” To the men of the scientific establishment around the turn of the century, however, science was too often a means of affirming the status quo.

In following decades, as women began to gain entry into scientific establishments, many worked to push back on retrograde ideas about motherhood. In 1916, the psychologist Leta Hollingworth wrote in The American Journal of Sociology that women were compelled, for the purpose of “national aggrandizement,” to believe that their highest use was as a mother by the same means that soldiers were compelled to go to war. Hollingworth encouraged political leaders to give up on such “cheap devices” and instead provide women with fair compensation, “assuming always that the increased happiness and usefulness of women would, in general, be regarded as a social gain.”

Still, the notion of maternal instinct hung on and resurged following World War II, when mothers in the United States saw wartime job opportunities — and its accompanying federally funded child care — disappear.

And throughout the 20th century, a chorus of psychoanalysts, psychiatrists and child development experts declared mother love to be as important to the emotional development of children as vitamins are to their physical development. As the historian Marga Vicedo writes in “The Nature and Nurture of Love,” where before a mother’s role was seen as encouraging her child’s capabilities through education and good rearing, now experts insisted it was a specific kind of love that only a mother could give that would determine a child’s future — an idea that would grow roots and fuel maternal guilt for generations.

Image
Credit...Csilla Klenyánszki
Today, many proclaim that motherhood is neither duty nor destiny, that a woman is not left unfulfilled or incomplete without children. But even as I write those words, I doubt them. Do we, collectively, believe that? Maternal instinct is still frequently invoked in science writing, parenting advice and common conversation. And whether we call maternal instinct by its name or not, its influence is everywhere.

Belief in maternal instinct and the deterministic value of mother love has fueled “pro-family” conservative politicians for decades. The United States, to its shame, still lacks even a modest paid leave policy, and universal child-care remains far out of reach. The Comprehensive Child Development Act of 1971 was the last serious attempt to establish a national day care system. Richard Nixon vetoed it, saying it was a “family-weakening” bill and the government must “cement the family in its rightful position as the keystone of our civilization.” Implicit in that statement was a belief about a woman’s natural place.

That attitude was also evident in March 2021 when an Idaho state representative, Charlie Shepherd, announced (in remarks he later apologized for) that he could not vote for a bill that would use some $6 million in federal grants to support early childhood education because it made it “more convenient for mothers to come out of the home and let others raise their child.” It’s a belief that isn’t always stated so blatantly but seems to dictate local and national policies. President Biden’s Build Back Better package would eventually be stripped of its paid leave plan along with a nearly $400 billion investment in affordable child care and universal preschool.

Belief in maternal instinct may also play a role in driving opposition to birth control and abortion, for why should women limit the number of children they have if it is in their very nature to find joy in motherhood? A 2019 article published by the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, a Christian anti-abortion policy group, claimed that “the ultrasound machine has been the pro-life movement’s strongest asset in recent years” because once a woman is informed of her pregnancy, “her maternal instinct will often overpower any other instinct to terminate her pregnancy.” Why, then, should the law consider the impact of pregnancy on the life of a person who has the full force of an instinct stronger than “even fear itself” to gird her in the task?

The myth of maternal instinct places a primacy on biological mothers, suggesting the routes to parenthood fall into two categories: “natural” and “other.” It sustains outdated ideas about masculinity that teaches fathers that they are secondary — assistants, babysitters — and encourages mothers to see them that way, too. It undermines the rights and recognition of same-sex couples and transgender and nonbinary parents, whose ability to care for their children is often questioned.

ADVERTISEMENT

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
But the myth of maternal instinct is not as strong as it once was. More and more, narratives of perfect pregnancies and perfect mothers are being challenged as more people share their less-than-glorious experiences of new parenthood and just how completely blindsided they were by it.

The comedian Ali Wong’s Netflix special “Hard Knock Wife,” performed after her first child was born and she was pregnant with a second, was fueled hilariously by the outrage of the unprepared over the physical trauma of birth and over the stupid things people say to working mothers. Of breastfeeding, she said, “I thought it was supposed to be this beautiful bonding ceremony where I would feel like I was sitting on a lily pad in a meadow and bunnies would gather at my feet while the fat-Hawaiian-man version of ‘Somewhere Over the Rainbow’ would play.” She went on: “No! It’s not like that at all. Breastfeeding is this savage ritual that just reminds you that your body is a cafeteria now.”

Social media is full of posts from mothers sharing stories about the realities of motherhood, pregnancy, their postpartum bodies, their sense of themselves, or the anxiety and monotony of parenting — as well as accounts of pregnancy loss and infertility. Often, there is a disconnect between the frankness of the words and the flattering photograph above it, as if it’s OK to get real if you still look good, in natural light, while doing it.

Increasingly, though, there’s rawness in the images, too: stretch marks and C-section scars, tears and spit-up, an awkward feeding, a hand cupping the feet of a baby who arrived as a stillbirth.

ADVERTISEMENT

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
In February 2020 Frida, a company that makes products for new parents and babies, released an ad depicting a postpartum mother trying to use the bathroom. In the video — which garnered nearly four million views in its first two weeks on YouTube — a woman switches on a lamp, reaches over to comfort her newborn, then hobbles to the bathroom in pain. She struggles to use the toilet and replace the postpartum pad held up by her hospital-issued mesh underwear.

Friends and I passed around the link and marveled at how it made us weep. There is no narrative arc. It is just a snapshot, one that hits us because it is us. We know the smell of the witch hazel pads and the squish of the peri bottle full of warm water, the agony and the relief, the sharpness of the physical pain against the haze of sleeplessness and emotional upheaval.

The ad was deemed too graphic to be run in the Oscars broadcast that year. Frida’s chief executive told The New York Times that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences had suggested that Frida consider a “kinder, more gentle portrayal of postpartum.”

Such a portrayal would have been false, one more obfuscation. The ad worked because all of us thought we were alone, that no one else felt adrift, miles from shore. And yet there we all were on the screen. Lost together.

ADVERTISEMENT

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
I imagine all of this — the Frida ad, the rise of the confessional social media post, Wong onstage screaming about the need for maternity leave so that mothers can “hide and heal their demolished-ass bodies” — like bits of garish graffiti scrawled around the edges of a giant billboard depicting some Virgin Mary-like mother, rested and at peace, her baby plump and contented. That picture still looms large.

We’ve become good at protesting the parts of this story that feel wrong to us. But we haven’t replaced it. Not yet.

The science of the parental brain — much of it now the work of female scientists who are mothers themselves — has the potential to pull back the curtain, exposing old biases and outdated norms, revealing how they are woven throughout our individual and societal definitions of mother or parent or family, and offering something new.

Using brain imaging technology and other tools, and building on extensive animal literature, researchers around the globe have found that the adaptation of the human parental brain takes time, driven as much by experience — by exposure to the powerful stimuli babies provide — as by the hormonal shifts of pregnancy and childbirth.

ADVERTISEMENT

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Research tells us that to become a parent is to be deluged. We are overwhelmed with stimuli, from our changed bodies, our changed routines, and from our babies, of course, with their newborn smell, their tiny fingers, their coos and their never-ending needs. It is brutal, in a sense, how completely engulfed we are by it and from multiple fronts, like a rock at the ocean’s edge, battered by waves and tides and sun and wind.

Studies show that about 10 percent of those who give birth develop postpartum anxiety. In those tumultuous early weeks and months, new parents are thrown into a state of hyper-responsiveness, with increased activity in brain regions related to motivation, meaning-making and vigilance. Eventually, it’s thought, this activity shifts, and they develop a stronger capacity to read and respond to the needs of their ever-changing babies and then to predict them, to make mistakes and to use those mistakes to make better predictions next time.

The parental brain is changed, and it’s also changeable — made more plastic than at most other points in adulthood. And while the biological mechanisms for change are quite different for gestational and non-gestational parents, scientists now believe that the outcomes may be similar for anyone — including fathers, adoptive parents and nonbinary parents — who truly invests time and attention in caregiving.

What happens if we look at this new science with full knowledge of how the old science was interpreted? What if we examine it with urgency and with an awareness of the cultural baggage we bring to the task? Then what story will we tell?

ADVERTISEMENT

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
It might acknowledge parents in all their forms and celebrate the fact that human babies have always relied on more than just their mothers for survival. It could recognize new parenthood to be a major overhaul for the brain, a new stage of development that takes time and that brings with it incredible adaptation and incredible risk.

It certainly will be a call to action, to overhaul clinical care to address the radical transformation new parents experience, including screening during pregnancy for depression risk factors, more home- and community-based support, and meaningful efforts to reduce the prevalence of postpartum post-traumatic stress disorder, which as many as 9 percent of mothers develop.

Maybe — one can hope — it will help lawmakers in Washington to finally pass paid parental leave, something so critical to family well-being that the United States is one of just six nations that fail to offer it.

ADVERTISEMENT

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Perhaps this new story will help us talk, parent to parent, a bit more honestly about just how it feels to become one.

Chelsea Conaboy is a journalist specializing in personal and public health and the author of the forthcoming book “Mother Brain: How Neuroscience Is Rewriting the Story of Parenthood,” from which this essay has been adapted.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.

A version of this article appears in print on Aug. 28, 2022, Section SR, Page 4 of the New York edition with the headline: The Pernicious Myth of Maternal Instinct. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
READ 1089 COMMENTS
Give this article

1.1K
More in Sunday Opinion
Wagner troops preparing to return to their base in Rostov-on-Don in June.
Opinion
All Is Not Well on Russian Front Lines

Opinion
The Moment of Truth for Our Liar in Chief
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT


Opinion
In the U.K., a Disaster No One Wants to Talk About
Editors’ Picks

Our Favorite Workouts So Far This Year
“I had so much fear,” Lara Love Hardin said. After she wrote her memoir, she explained, “I felt lighter.”
From Pet Cemetery Owner to Identity Thief to Best-Selling Ghostwriter
Maria Antonia Cay, known as Toñita, owns the building and bar called the Caribbean Social Club in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Her Social Club Isn’t Going Anywhere. Toñita Has No Plans to Quit.
Trending in The Times
Sima Moradbeigi fled Iran with her husband and daughter, with the aid of a human smuggler, after being shot and seriously wounded by state security forces.
Iranian Mothers Choose Exile for Sake of Their Daughters
Sinead O’Connor at her home in Knockananna, Ireland, in 2021.
The Tiny Irish Village Where Sinéad O’Connor Escaped the World
Hazy skies in Manhattan this month, a result of Canadian wildfires.
Is It Too Hot for Fun in the Summertime?
ADVERTISEMENT

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Unlimited access to all of The Times.
Only €3 €0.50 a week for your first year.
Unlimited access to all of The Times.
Only €3 €0.50 a week for your first year.


Introductory offer:
€3 €0.50 a week for your first year.

VIEW OFFER
Cancel or pause anytime.
Site Index
Site Information Navigation
© 2023 The New York Times Company
NYTCoContact UsAccessibilityWork with usAdvertiseT Brand StudioYour Ad ChoicesPrivacy PolicyTerms of ServiceTerms of SaleSite MapCanadaInternationalHelpSubscriptions
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/26/opin ... -myth.html

Η πατριαρχια φταει για το "εγώ ποτέ θα γίνω μανα"
Άβαταρ μέλους
AlienWay
Δημοσιεύσεις: 28206
Εγγραφή: 08 Οκτ 2019, 13:15
Phorum.gr user: AlienWay

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από AlienWay »

Δημοκράτης έγραψε: 28 Ιούλ 2023, 11:01 Maternal Instinct Is a Myth That Men Created

By Chelsea Conaboy

Οπως το περίμενα. Ξεκινά με μια μεμονωμένη περίπτωση (περιπτωσιολογία), έπειτα επικαλείται μια έρευνα αμφιβόλου αξιολόγησης και στο τέλος αραδιάζει ένα σωρό γενικόλογες μπούρδες, οι περισσότερες εκ των οποίων είναι και άσχετες με το θέμα.

Κλασικοί ξεφτιλισμένοι New York Times.
Ζούμε σε ένα σύστημα.
Άβαταρ μέλους
AlienWay
Δημοσιεύσεις: 28206
Εγγραφή: 08 Οκτ 2019, 13:15
Phorum.gr user: AlienWay

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από AlienWay »

Σας έχω ένα καλό:

Οι συντηρούκλες αμερικάνοι (τύπου "ψηφοφόρος του ΝΙΚΗ) μαζεύονται κάθε χρόνο σε μία εκδήλωση που λέγεται Prayer Breakfast όπου συζητούν ζητήματα πουριτανικής ηθικής.

Σκάει λοιπόν η Ρεπουμπλικανή *νάρα για να βγάλει λόγο και εξηγεί γιατί άργησε να εμφανιστεί:


When I woke up this morning at 7, I was getting picked up at 7.45, Patrick, my fiancé, tried to pull me by my waist over this morning in bed. And I was like, ‘No, baby, we don’t got time for that this morning.’”

“I gotta get to the prayer breakfast, and I gotta be on time,” she continued.

“A little TMI,” Rep Mace added. “He can wait, I’ll see him later tonight.”
Αυτό πυροδότησε συζητήσεις και αστεία σχετικά με το "προγαμιαίο σεξ" που κάνει και έδωσε εξηγήσεις στο τουίτερ
Ms Mace tweeted on Thursday, reposting the video of her speech, writing: “I go to church because I’m a sinner not a saint! Glad those in attendance, including @SenatorTimScott and my pastor, took this joke in stride. Pastor Greg and I will have extra to talk about on Sunday.”
Daje :smt047

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/worl ... 83270.html
Ζούμε σε ένα σύστημα.
Άβαταρ μέλους
Dwarven Blacksmith
Δημοσιεύσεις: 49563
Εγγραφή: 31 Μαρ 2018, 18:08
Τοποθεσία: Maiore Patria

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Dwarven Blacksmith »

🔻 There are decades where you fuck around and days where you find out🔻
Άβαταρ μέλους
Jimmy81
Δημοσιεύσεις: 7871
Εγγραφή: 04 Ιαν 2019, 05:42
Phorum.gr user: Jimmy81
Τοποθεσία: Ουκρανικές στέπες

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Jimmy81 »

Διδακτικό βίντεο ενάντια στην χοντροφοβία. Για να μάθουμε να είμαστε ευγενικοί και πολιτισμένοι με τους συνανθρώπους μας όπως κι αν είναι. :8)

Άβαταρ μέλους
AlienWay
Δημοσιεύσεις: 28206
Εγγραφή: 08 Οκτ 2019, 13:15
Phorum.gr user: AlienWay

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από AlienWay »

100+ Trans Men Signed Up For the Miss Italy Pageant After Trans Woman Were Banned

Εικόνα

https://www.out.com/news/miss-italy-transgender
Ζούμε σε ένα σύστημα.
Άβαταρ μέλους
AlienWay
Δημοσιεύσεις: 28206
Εγγραφή: 08 Οκτ 2019, 13:15
Phorum.gr user: AlienWay

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από AlienWay »

Πήγαν να βάλουν τα επίπεδα τεστοστερόνης ως κριτήριο για τη συμμετοχή γυναικών στα αθλήματα, ώστε να επιδιορθώσουν το άλλο με τσι τρανς αθλήτριες.

Αλλά πάλι:

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/RuWS-gAkNxU
Ζούμε σε ένα σύστημα.
Ένοπλος σοσιαλμπαχαλάκης
Δημοσιεύσεις: 28993
Εγγραφή: 19 Σεπ 2018, 10:47

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Ένοπλος σοσιαλμπαχαλάκης »

Στα σχολεια της Φλόριντα μαθαίνουν τα παιδιά πως η δουλεία είχε και τα θετικά της, γιατί αποκτούσες δεξιότητες. Μια χαρά πάει ο αντιγουοκισμος. Αυτοί που τον πουλάνε άλλωστε, πάνε και επίσημες επισκέψεις στο παράνομο καθεστώς της βόρειας κυπρου, ποιος ειναι άλλωστε πιο αντιγουοκ από τον ερντογαν; :p2:
Για μένα, το λοιπόν, το πιο εκπληκτικό,
πιο επιβλητικό, πιο μυστηριακό και πιο μεγάλο,
είναι ένας μπαχαλος που τον μποδίζουν να βαδίζει,
είναι ένας μπαχαλος που τον αλυσοδένουνε.
Άβαταρ μέλους
Scouser
Δημοσιεύσεις: 14547
Εγγραφή: 13 Αύγ 2020, 23:18

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Scouser »

Μαύρες Γαλλίδες καρφώνουν λευκά μωρά σε πάσσαλο και «σταυρώνονται» με αυτόν - Η παράσταση που έκανε... «πυρ και μανία» τους Γάλλους
Δίχασε η σουρεαλιστική θεατρική παράσταση «Carte noire nommée désir» που θέλησε να ανατρέψει τα βαθιά ριζωμένα, ρατσιστικά, σεξιστικά κλισέ

Εικόνα
https://www.protothema.gr/world/article ... ania-tous/
In Washington, there is a new sheriff in town, and under Donald Trump’s leadership, we may disagree with your views, but we will fight to defend your right to offer it in the public square, agree or disagree.
JD Vance
Άβαταρ μέλους
break
Δημοσιεύσεις: 1360
Εγγραφή: 04 Οκτ 2018, 22:49
Phorum.gr user: break

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από break »

AlienWay έγραψε: 30 Ιούλ 2023, 13:45 Πήγαν να βάλουν τα επίπεδα τεστοστερόνης ως κριτήριο για τη συμμετοχή γυναικών στα αθλήματα, ώστε να επιδιορθώσουν το άλλο με τσι τρανς αθλήτριες.
Αυτό που άκουσα σε ένα podcast, και τώρα που το έψαξα λίγο είδα ότι μάλλον ισχύει, είναι ότι τα επίπεδα τεστοστερόνης που ζητούν να έχουν οι τρανς γυναίκες για να τις δεχτούν στα γυναικεία αθλήματα είναι πάνω από αυτό που θα θεωρούνταν ντόπινγκ σε κανονικές γυναίκες. Ο λόγος που δεν κατεβάζουν τα επίπεδα ακόμα χαμηλότερα είναι επειδή είναι επικίνδυνο για ένα άντρα (i.e. την τρανς γυναίκα) να πέσει χαμηλότερα.

Οπότε έχοντας να διαλέξουν ανάμεσα στο να διακινδυνεύσουν την υγεία της τρανς και στο να κλέψουν τις κανονικές γυναίκες στο ντόπινγκ... η ζυγαριά έγειρε στο να κλέψουν τις κανονικές γυναίκες.

Υ.Γ. δεν έχω ήχο στην δουλειά οπότε δεν ξέρω αν λέει για αυτό που γράφω.
Άβαταρ μέλους
Green Dragon
Δημοσιεύσεις: 24828
Εγγραφή: 17 Απρ 2020, 12:02
Phorum.gr user: Green Dragon

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Green Dragon »

Jimmy81 έγραψε: 28 Ιούλ 2023, 19:36 Διδακτικό βίντεο ενάντια στην χοντροφοβία. Για να μάθουμε να είμαστε ευγενικοί και πολιτισμένοι με τους συνανθρώπους μας όπως κι αν είναι. :8)

Χοντροφοβία :giggle:

Βλακείες, ισχύουν οι κοινωνικές κατευθύνσεις που ίσχυαν πάντα, να είσαι δηλαδή ευγενικός και διακριτικός. Οι κανόνες όμως δεν λένε να μην γυρνάς κωμωδίες που έχουν αστεία με χοντρούς, αυτά τα λένε κάποιοι κομπλεξικοί που χρειάζονται ψυχολόγο και όχι 'αγώνες κατά των διακρίσεων'.

:smt023 Naughty Professor :smt023
Τελευταία επεξεργασία από το μέλος Green Dragon την 02 Αύγ 2023, 07:29, έχει επεξεργασθεί 1 φορά συνολικά.
Άβαταρ μέλους
Green Dragon
Δημοσιεύσεις: 24828
Εγγραφή: 17 Απρ 2020, 12:02
Phorum.gr user: Green Dragon

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Green Dragon »

Ένοπλος σοσιαλμπαχαλάκης έγραψε: 30 Ιούλ 2023, 13:49 Στα σχολεια της Φλόριντα μαθαίνουν τα παιδιά πως η δουλεία είχε και τα θετικά της, γιατί αποκτούσες δεξιότητες. Μια χαρά πάει ο αντιγουοκισμος. Αυτοί που τον πουλάνε άλλωστε, πάνε και επίσημες επισκέψεις στο παράνομο καθεστώς της βόρειας κυπρου, ποιος ειναι άλλωστε πιο αντιγουοκ από τον ερντογαν; :p2:
AAAAAA EIΔΕΣ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Όταν τα έλεγα ότι οι γουοκομαλακίες θα γεννήσουν νομοτελειακά καινούργιες μαλακίες από την άλλη πλευρά λόγω αντίδρασης ήμουν υπερβολικός!
Άβαταρ μέλους
Λίνο Βεντούρα
Δημοσιεύσεις: 12445
Εγγραφή: 05 Δεκ 2018, 18:51

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από Λίνο Βεντούρα »

Green Dragon έγραψε: 01 Αύγ 2023, 16:57
Ένοπλος σοσιαλμπαχαλάκης έγραψε: 30 Ιούλ 2023, 13:49 Στα σχολεια της Φλόριντα μαθαίνουν τα παιδιά πως η δουλεία είχε και τα θετικά της, γιατί αποκτούσες δεξιότητες. Μια χαρά πάει ο αντιγουοκισμος. Αυτοί που τον πουλάνε άλλωστε, πάνε και επίσημες επισκέψεις στο παράνομο καθεστώς της βόρειας κυπρου, ποιος ειναι άλλωστε πιο αντιγουοκ από τον ερντογαν; :p2:
AAAAAA EIΔΕΣ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Όταν τα έλεγα ότι οι γουοκομαλακίες θα γεννήσουν νομοτελειακά καινούργιες μαλακίες από την άλλη πλευρά λόγω αντίδρασης ήμουν υπερβολικός!
Παπαριες γράφει, μην ψαρώνεις
Fluffy έγραψε: 25 Αύγ 2021, 12:22 Στον καπιταλισμό κυριαρχεί η αντίληψη της κυρίαρχης τάξης, γιαυτό είναι και κυρίαρχη.
Άβαταρ μέλους
hellegennes
Δημοσιεύσεις: 45100
Εγγραφή: 01 Απρ 2018, 00:17

Re: Παρατηρητήριο πολιτικής ορθότητας, SJW και Woke culture

Μη αναγνωσμένη δημοσίευση από hellegennes »

Green Dragon έγραψε: 01 Αύγ 2023, 16:55
Jimmy81 έγραψε: 28 Ιούλ 2023, 19:36 Διδακτικό βίντεο ενάντια στην χοντροφοβία. Για να μάθουμε να είμαστε ευγενικοί και πολιτισμένοι με τους συνανθρώπους μας όπως κι αν είναι. :8)

Χοντροφοβία :giggle:

Βλακείες, ισχύουν οι κοινωνικές κατευθύνσεις που ίσχυαν πάντα, να είσai δηλαδή ευγενικός και διακριτικός. Οι κανόνες όμως δεν λένε να μην γυρνάς κωμωδίες που έχουν αστεία με χοντρούς, αυτά τα λένε κάποιοι κομπλεξικοί που χρειάζονται ψυχολόγο και όχι 'αγώνες κατά των διακρίσεων'.

:smt023 Naughty Professor :smt023
:goodpost:
Ξημέρωσε.
Α, τι ωραία που είναι!
Ήρθε η ώρα να κοιμηθώ.
Κι αν είμαι τυχερός,
θα με ξυπνήσουν μια Δευτέρα παρουσία κατά την θρησκεία.
Μα δεν ξέρω αν και τότε να σηκωθώ θελήσω.
Απάντηση
  • Παραπλήσια Θέματα
    Απαντήσεις
    Προβολές
    Τελευταία δημοσίευση

Επιστροφή στο “Κοινωνικά θέματα”