Marissa forwarded this Washington Post Op/Ed piece from the weekend saying she thought I'd "find this interesting". And how. I've had some interesting interactions with the media in the last year which gave me several moments of pause to consider how the media plays on the inherent insecurity which seems to come with being a mother for ratings and hits on their websites.
E.J. Graff, senior researcher at Brandeis University's Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism, argues the Mommy Wars are a fiction being churned out like a War Machine. The tension between actual stay at home mothers and working mothers has been greatly exaggerated and exploited by the media. They're invested in this myth that mothers hate each other for their choices in the work force.
This is a great read and I almost entirely agree with Graff. However I've heard my stay at home mom friends make some comments about the choices of working mothers which made me bristle a bit. I've heard women say, among friends, "If you didn't want to spend your days with your kids, why did you have them?" I've heard working mothers refer to stay at home mothers as spoiled and a little boring if not downright stupid. These comments do make me believe there is a lingering version of the Mommy Wars which is not entirely media driven. I would entirely agree the media exploits this lingering animosity between women and I also believe the working vs. stay at home debate will die, once we make the work world more friendly for all parents.