Today was the Mother's Day service at my church. I went so I could sing this lovely song, "Requiem," by Eliza Gilkyson. Four of us (SSAA) sang with piano accompaniment. Some people cried, so I would call the performance a success. Here's a video of Gilkyson singing it with her daughter. Even if you don't read further, have a listen.
Probably I would have skipped out today if I hadn't been asked to sing, because the rest of the service was about Mother's Day how anybody who nurtures somebody can be called a mother or how any nurturing can be called mothering or something like that. Instead of the offensive, idealized, Hallmark concept of mothers we used to honor at the Mother's Day service, in the past 10 years or so we have so diluted and expanded the definition of the word mother so that it includes anyone who has ever nurtured another person, and even if we had to nurture ourselves. Whew. That's pretty much everybody. And yet, I hope we can agree not everybody is a mother.
I've been pretty vocal about my feelings on the issue, so I don't have a problem writing about it, even knowing that lot of people disagree with me and find me callous and insensitive. Who the fuck knows? They could be right. If I'm insensitive, I don't know it right? That's what the word means. I wonder if other churches do the same thing, for the same reasons, or if we're just special.
The problem first started for us years ago when the women's group did a special Mother's Day service. It kicked ass. We had people laughing and crying and singing the praises of their mothers even if they hated their mothers. It was such a wonderful service some of the dads in the church felt left out because they didn't get a service like that for Father's Day. "Do one then," we told them. "Nobody's stopping you."
They said it wasn't the same if they had to do it for themselves. Hmmm. That sure sounds familiar. Eventually the dads suggested they do the MD service for us and we do the FD service for them. We did that a couple of years and it worked out pretty well. We all felt duly honored -- those of us who were moms and dads.
But equality for the dads wasn't the only problem with the Mother's Day service. Other people had their own reasons for wanting something different, for wanting to be included even if they weren't actually mothers.
Some women didn't want a service to only honor women who had children because they didn't have kids. Either they wanted kids and couldn't have them or they just didn't choose to. So on the one hand, it was insensitive to point out that some women are mothers and some aren't or couldn't be and were sad about it. And on the other hand, the Mother's Day service suggested that women should be mothers or they were incomplete, and not all women want to be mothers so we shouldn't make a big deal of being a mom.
So language was added to reflect the nurturing women do even if they aren't mothers. And language was added to acknowledge that women don't have to be mothers, and they don't have to be mothers to be nurturers, which is the same as mothering.
(My insensitive response: Not everybody can be or wants to be a mother. It's only one day out of 365, and it's called Mother's Day, not Mothering Day. We can acknowledge and lift up the ways we all take care of each other any other day of the year, but if we're going to have a MD service, it should be about moms. Just for that one day. And it's not insensitive to say that some women are moms and some are not. That's just a fact. However, if the Mother's Day service brings up grief over those issues, that's something that's already there. The service didn't cause it.)
But some men were also upset that they weren't included. They said they were divorced or single and they mothered their kids too. So the language was changed to include anybody of any gender who nurtured (nurture=mother) kids.
(My insensitive response: Men can't be mothers. They don't have uteruses and they don't have vaginas. They can't breastfeed. They do have penises though. A parent who has a penis is a father. It's just that simple. So nurture away dads. The world could use a hell of a lot more nurturing from dads, but that's the topic of another post. Changing a diaper and feeding a kid doesn't make a person with a penis a mother. The day for that person is called Father's Day. Glad to celebrate it with you in June.
Look, I did everything except bring home the big, fat paycheck when LtColEx was flying all over keeping the world safe from terrorists and mad dictators. He was gone for months .... hell, he was gone for a year and a half once. I changed out the guts of toilets (yes, I know what a ballcock is), mowed the grass, shoveled the driveway, put 3000 miles on his brand new red Firebird before he ever got to drive it, and even joined the Boy Scouts, but I wasn't a dad. I'm a woman. No matter what "manly" chores I did, I didn't grow a penis and become a father (or replace LtColEx as the kids' dad). I'm OK with that. I just don't understand why men want to get credit for being both just because they were the primary parent all or some of the time for their kids.)
Another reason some people didn't like the Mother's Day service was because they didn't like their mothers. The same can be true for the FD service. Some people just don't have anything good to say about their mothers.
(My insensitive response: Moms aren't perfect and some are really fucking hideously bad. It's a fact. And nobody has to honor a shitty mom. If you've got someone who was the mom of your heart and wasn't your bio-mom, replace "mother" with that person in your mind. Just don't insist that all of us do the same. Filling a service with language that like "anybody who nurtured you" takes the meaning out of the word "mother." It just does. Do it for yourself if you need a replacement mom.)
And finally, some people didn't/don't like the MD service because they're still grieving over losing their mothers. Or they're grieving over losing a child. The service simply hurts.
(My insensitive response: Grief is inevitable with loss. The service doesn't cause the grief. It just opens the place where grief lives to the air. I remember how Father's Day felt for many years after my dad died. He died when I was in my mid-20's, and our relationship had been difficult. We loved each other, but we weren't close. And his death devastated me. I remember how much I wanted to avoid Father's Day and did, but it wasn't the day that caused the grief. The grief was there already.
The kids in our church have a common blessing, and one part of it is, "Here you find the hands of friends." If you can't share your grief and your tears in a place where you find the hands of friends, where can you share it? And sharing grief during a celebration is OK. It may hurt like hell, but it's OK. You won't be the only one. It won't bring a loved one back, but it's still OK to grieve with your spiritual family. But if you really can't stand it, it's also OK to skip that service and find something to do that feels better.)
The kids in our church have a common blessing, and one part of it is, "Here you find the hands of friends." If you can't share your grief and your tears in a place where you find the hands of friends, where can you share it? And sharing grief during a celebration is OK. It may hurt like hell, but it's OK. You won't be the only one. It won't bring a loved one back, but it's still OK to grieve with your spiritual family. But if you really can't stand it, it's also OK to skip that service and find something to do that feels better.)
I understand wanting to be sensitive to people's concerns. I really do. I just don't agree that they are good reasons for avoiding the reality that some of us are mothers. Pure and simple.
And while some people take issue with Mother's Day, a hell of a lot of people love honoring their mothers on a special day. They give them gifts and cards and take them out to dinner and do extra-special, caring things for them. Some people take advantage of Mother's Day to show Mom a lot of love, maybe to give back a little. Some people even get a fucking tattoo! And what if those people simply want to celebrate their mothers? Is that such a bad thing? Are those reasons that people don't want to celebrate the traditional definition of "mother" really more important? Evidently so.
They are the reasons we now have a service where the kids were shown a really cute slideshow of animals of one species nursing animals of another species, and then at the end were told that "all sorts of people can do the work mothers do." To tell the truth, I don't have problem with the concept or the slideshow, and stories were wonderful; I just don't want to see it on Mother's Day as an implication that mothers can be replaced, especially by another animal.
Those are also the reasons the language of today's service was so carefully wrought so as not to imply that mothers are the only people who are mothers. And why we were told to go forth and honor the nurturers and the mother figures in our lives, and that some of them might even be fathers. What? Fathers? No. Calling everybody, even men, mothers dilutes the meaning of Mother's Day until it has no meaning.
The idea that anybody can do what I did as a mother, that anybody can or could ever take my place, is bullshit. I'm a mother to two people, although I've touched other lives and I've nurtured and cared for and loved many other kids and will continue to do so. I suppose I've even mothered other people; I can't count the number of my kids' friends who call me "Mom." I love that they do that, but we all know I'm not really their mom.
I'm only a mother to those two people -- Drake and Elvira. They share my DNA* and they came out of my vagina and I am their only mother. It's the most special, unique relationship I can possibly have with another human being. Nobody can replace me -- not another person and certainly not another animal. This and only this is the role in which nobody can replace me.
I
know Mother's Day can be a difficult day; it's not all hearts and flowers and dinner at a nice restaurant. I struggled today with certain
issues myself, things I wouldn't write about here. My heart aches for my
friends and family members who have lost a mother or grandmother, and
who are still missing her and grieving for her. Nobody can take her
place, and nobody can change the memories she left behind. I don't look
forward to the day when I face that loss myself.
Those are my thoughts on Mother's Day tonight. I accept that some people don't agree with me and I lost that battle years ago. Whatever. They're wrong.
Am I a callous insensitive whiner? (Only on this issue please.) How do you celebrate Mother's Day in your church? Do you even celebrate it at all?
Am I a callous insensitive whiner? (Only on this issue please.) How do you celebrate Mother's Day in your church? Do you even celebrate it at all?
* Mothers who adopted, consider yourself included. I'm not trying to narrow the definition of "mother" to only those who give birth to their children. I'm not that insensitive.
Totally agree - I am irritated just hearing about it. I don't think it's insensitive to expect adults to own their own negativity, grief, whatever. This post reminds me of the dharma story about the person who wants to protect his feet, so tries to cover the whole earth with leather. Oh, Pema Chodron tells it in this 2 min video - one of my favorites. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=buTrsK_ZkvA
ReplyDeleteI love the video, Amy. Of course, it doesn't escape my notice that I'm also expressing negativity here. It can become pretty circular. :-)
DeleteExcellent points, all of them. I don't attend church regularly, but the last time I went to my husband's church on Mother's Day the Episcopal priest didn't acknowledge mothers at all. Apparently they go by the Book (of Common Prayer). As for Mother's Day, I was a shitty daughter, my mother died way too young and I didn't get to make up for my behavior toward her, and I was a shitty mom. I am trying to make up for that, but Mother's Day is not a day of celebration around here. I got the obligatory phone calls, which is probably what I deserve.
ReplyDelete{{{{Debbi}}}} Maybe the Episcopals have it right. Let people celebrate if they want, but don't force it in the church.
DeleteWell, it's about fucking time! I couldn't agree with you more. I was in the sanctuary after the service and a female friend came over to me and said "so, what did you think of that?" and I said "I'm pissed!" she laughed and said "I knew you would be". I am NOT a mother to ANYONE. I completely respect mothers and they deserve their time in the spotlight ALONE. This is not a day to include anyone else into the definition of mother or mothering. When I show love and affection to my son I am FATHERING him. To say that the only way a father can show he cares is if he somehow acts like a mother is so fucking offensive I can't even tell you. I kept my feelings nice and quiet after the service out of respect but I can assure you that they are going to hear about it from me. How can they be teaching children,and reinforcing to adults,such a shallow demeaning stereotype of men? I can just imagine the fathers day service: anytime someone yells at you for no reason they too are fathering, anytime someone tells you to get them another beer they too are fathering, anytime someone falls asleep in a rocker-recliner with the tv on they too are fathering. So, here's a novel idea, let's just honor mothers on mothers day and quit being such weak assholes and trying to include everyone. Epic Fail!
ReplyDeleteVapor, I can understand your strong feelings. And your point is well made that the assumptions people make sometimes about the roles mothers and fathers play -- at least at the stereotype level -- are unfair to both sexes. It's impossible to live up to the perfection we expect of mothers, and it's not fair to paint loving, nurturing dads as assholes.
DeleteI'm glad to know fathers like you. You give the dads a good name. :-)
PS, Vapor. I didn't realize I was upset (OK, I may have rolled my eyes a few times) until a friend asked me after the service what was pissing me off. I said nothing was. He laughed and said I was lying. And that's when I realized I really was pissed off, just like he said. I also rashly said I should write about it and kind of made a commitment to do so. I probably wouldn't have written this post if I hadn't talked about doing it.
DeleteThis is a great post. I often struggle with the issues UUs have in trying to be inclusive, but the fact is that we simply can't be everything to everyone all the time.
ReplyDeleteNo, but we certainly try -- one individual at a time. It makes me tired. Sometimes I think people just need to be heard, but we don't always have to try to change things to please them.
DeleteGood points.
ReplyDeleteI don't really understand when single mothers/fathers want to celebrate the other parent's holiday. Like you said, you can't change genders, and even if you do both person's jobs (which who is to really say which job is the mother's and which is the father's once you get past conception and birth), you are still either a mother or a father if you have a kid.
And not celebrating because you have lost a loved parent doesn't make sense... honor their memory on that day (or grieve on your own), don't ask others not to celebrate their living or deceased parent on that day.
It doesn't make sense to me either. Although I have to admit, I don't celebrate Father's Day myself because I have no reason to. But when I've participated in Father's Day services at church, I have no problem celebrating my friends who are fathers and honoring them for the wonderful job they do fathering their kids.
DeleteI am not a mother.
ReplyDeleteYes, I probably was more than 50% care giver to my children, but they have a mother. Let mother's have their day.
I love my UU church, but I tire of the way we water down everything out of fear that it might make someone unhappy.
I've been loud about that for years, Diplomat. I don't suppose I can say I've given up after just writing this post, but for the most part, I don't try to change that aspect of our culture anymore. It just makes me look like an asshole to try.
DeleteGreat post (I always read them, just don't respond) and great responses. I really like Vapor's response. And, in keeping with a few others here, I too am tired of the "let's not offend anyone, so let's be as milquetoast as possible" UU stuff. One reason why I'm not there much any longer.
ReplyDeleteI wish you were there more often though, Dawn. I miss you. Those of us who are intense need to stick together!
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