When I was waiting for my first child's arrival, I made the argument that the parental is political. I was argued down by someone who claimed that when people have kids they get insular and narcissistic, caring only about their little family unit to the exclusion of the rest of the world. I can't agree. I think there are many ways that parenting raises political awareness and leads to a concern for the welfare of others--especially the welfare of children not within our families; with other parents' struggle to do a good job under all kinds of economic, social and political duress; with the environmental health of the world at large. But what about activism?
This article in the Washington Post got me to wondering: is being a stay-at-home-parent conducive to activism? Apparently some stay-at-home-moms in the story were better able to get highly involved in county policies towards undocumented immigrants, because their flexible schedules allowed them, for example, to attend county board meetings that happened in the middle of the workday when other concerned citizens would probably be unavailable.
Small children might not be the most helpful assistants on visits to your local political representative to lobby for your cause, but then again...maybe they can be, if they're cute and friendly enough.
What do you think? Has becoming a parent dampened or raised your political interests? Has being a parent led you into more activism? Less? How do you suppose working full-time, part-time, from home or strictly in the home affects your sense of political power?
Image: My daughter's protest sign