Written as a guest blogger for the Gdiapers blog Diaper therapy
Before I had a baby I thought the hardest part would be the
diaper changes, or possibly the feedings, nothing could've prepared me for what
was to trump my biggest baddest fears…..other parents.
From the day I stepped out of that Sierra Vista hospital
with Madison ive been subject to one of the following responses by other
parents:
1)
Where is the mother? (This is the overwhelmingly
largest question im asked)
2)
You’re taking her out by yourself?
3)
Do you need me to hold the baby for you while
you do (whatever im currently attempting to do)
Even worse than the above three, just yesterday I heard the
cringe worthy “GOOD JOB DAD!!” because I had dared to take her out in her push
car. At times it’s enough to make me
want to throw in the towel and not leave the house until she is able to drive,
or at the very least tote around a female companion to quell the constant
stares, questions, and assumptions.
Perhaps the most irritating time was when I was at the
airport flying alone with her at approximately the age of 9 months. In a thick
creole accent the bag check guy asked “Where’s the mama??” to which I replied “It’s
just her and myself this trip”. His reply: “Yeah, likely story”, as if a male
is incapable of taking care of a baby.
At first I used to offer an explanation, that my husband and
I had adopted her so there is no “mother”, or rather that I was the one who
filled that role, but that became too time consuming. Next I began to just say,
“I’m the mother”, which of course opens a whole other line of questions and
stares. So now I just smile and nod and leave it at that, it works well for me
as people really don’t need to know my life story.
And when I stop to dissect why questions 1, 2, and 3 are so bothersome,
aside from the obvious that I have to answer the same question yet again, I can
scarcely blame the people asking the question. Nosey-ness is a bad trait,
however it’s a trait we as humans are all cursed with, so I cannot hold that
against them. Its that people assume a male can’t put his bumbling aside for a
few hours a day in order to take their child out.
There is another layer to the story and one that is not
completely lost on me even in my day to day irritations with the outside
world. Stereotypes, however bad they may
be, usually have a root in reality and the truth is many men would NOT be good
at of taking care of a baby, but then again neither would many women. The sexism that tells women that they are baby
machines and incapable of anything else, is the same sexism that tells men they
are laugh-worthy, bumbling idiots and are only good for bringing home the bacon….or
in my case, the vegetarian strips.
Moral of the story? Sexism hurts us all. Don’t assume next
time you see a man with a baby and a
cart of groceries that the mom is home sick in bed and he is ‘stuck’ with the
kids for the afternoon. Maybe he is the caregiver in the family, or maybe he Is the ONLY family the child has.
Before you ask him about his life story or ask (as a complete stranger) to hold
his baby so he doesn't spill his beer all over it, or drop it in front of a
moving car, you just enjoy the sight of someone breaking gender stereotypes.
A simple smile will do.