Dare to err: Are we glorifying mothers?

When, many years ago, I read the Funerales de la Mamá Grande by Nobel Prize Gabriel García Márquez, the figure of the ‘Big Mama’ – the “absolute sovereign of the Kingdom of Macondo” – didn’t sound like a hyperbole to me. I had already lived in Colombian towns where mothers were idolized and motherhood overrated to extremes.

Idolization of the mother figure, presented as a glorification of the feminine, is rather an inheritance from patriarchal times. Historically, overstretched images of female beauty or saintly motherhood, a strategy used to cover up oppression, has contributed to patriarchy burying women’s voices and dominating social action to the benefit of men and detriment of women.

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The idealization of motherhood that leads to believe a mother needs to be perfect, is more hurtful than useful. It should be okay to make mistakes.

The more I traveled and met people, the more I witnessed how among Hispanics, moms respond to the supermom myth by overdoing their maternal role.

We don’t have to go very far to find the overprotective, the intrusive, the co-dependent or the abusive mothers. And maybe, because we were immerse in that culture, all of us have traces of each of these. Mea culpa! I confess my sins.

Many Latino mothers revolve exclusively around their offspring, and their ‘care’ can become asphyxiating – which explains why it’s not infrequent to find dependent “adult children” in our culture.

We also often find mothers overwhelmed with guilt, blaming themselves for their children’s shortcomings, feeling pushed to behave up to impossible expectations about what motherhood ‘should’ be.

If we were totally truthful to ourselves, Mother’s Day could each year be the perfect timing to examine unfinished business with moms, assess our current relationship with them and even quit seeking the impossible ideal of a mother that only exists in our minds.

  • ‘Good-enough’ mothers

To help average moms overcome guilt and shame about not being perfect, English psychoanalyst and pediatrician Donald Winnicott coined the term “good-enough mothers” in 1953.

Those were the days when psychology research started to support earlier Freudian thoughts that interactions between mother and child during the early years are central to the development of the child’s inner world.

Mothers, paralyzed with uncertainty about the extent to which their deficits could affect their progeny, flooded pediatricians’ offices.

Providentially, psychology also discovered that it’s the frustrations stemming from mother’s impossibility to attend her child’s every need what really challenges the child,  forcing him in turn to adapt to reality.

So, in a way, what Winnicott was telling moms was: dare to err. Your children might even learn to appreciate those mistakes as opportunities to mature and grow!

I’ve seen mothers making sacrifices that children should acknowledge and praise. Many mothers proffer unconditional love; their hearts easily healing from wounds caused by insensitive accusations or blaming by their offspring, made in a moment of rage for example.

Exemplary women, who forgive faults that only their mother’s heart could forgive, also exist. And, yes, many moms are available when things go oops! for their children.

But there are also dark sides to this story.

  • ‘Good children’ and ‘not good-enough’ mothers

Let’s take the times of the infamous Colombian narco Pablo Escobar, when sicarios openly justified their horrible crimes as means to meet the terms of their ‘duties’ as good sons. They were determined to take their moms out of poverty! Sadly enough, many of these mothers gladly and gratefully received dirty money avoiding to ask where it came from, as if ignoring the truth would made the misdeeds right!

These moms were awfully permissive. It’s difficult to believe that Pablo Escobar’s mother herself never thought of his son as a criminal.

History also offers many cases of mothers who used their children for profit. Far from being ‘good enough’ mothers, these moms – maybe forced by poverty and lack of methods for birth control -exploited their children. This was common in the early days of industrialization, when parents gave up their 5-year-olds to sweatshops for survival. These children worked 16 hours in a row; tied with chains and whipped to force them to work beyond their capacity.

Even to this day, millions of children are exploited in the world.

  • Not all moms are created equal

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Although motherhood is and should be something special, it is unrealistic to expect it will go without fault. This expectation, if anything, is what causes the most trouble. (Shutterstock photos)

It’s easy to see that motherhood is in no way the same for all moms. While some rave on their experience, others may have trouble bonding with their child.

Many women decide to hand on their child’s care on to another person so they can carry on with their careers. Some openly neglect their children out of lack of knowledge about their parental role, lack of energy, mental illness or deficient love. And there are even moms who consistently say and do terrible things to their children, scarring their lives forever.

But in all truth, we have all been marked in some way by our mother’s mistakes. Moms are human! They will never be up to our idealistic expectations.

  • The consequences of prizing maternity too highly

I wish that we could from an early age understand that mothers can’t (won’t) be perfect.

Myths about mothers that continue lingering in our society, on one hand promote adoration of mothers and on the other hand allow for all the blame mothers take for the weaknesses and shortcoming of their offspring.

Another troublesome aspect of valuing maternity too high is that women who decide they won’t have children, tend to be seen as unsuccessful. Pressure comes from their families and friends. The choice of not having children seems unbelievable in a world that thinks a woman finds realization in maternity.

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  • Sandra

    Agreed! We live in a society obsessed with the “perfect mother”, whatever that it. I think it is an overcompensation to the oppression women were under for so long and then the feminist movement… now women feel they have to be this super woman that does it all… but since that is not possible, then there’s a lot of guilt and frustration all the time. Also, if you decide not to have children, you might as well hit someone in the head. But the fact that you can have children. does not mean you should or should want to. But this is something hard to swallow for many mommy obsessed ladies. I admire mothers and all they do… it’s amazing, but I think moms, especially in the country, need to take it easy on themselves and enjoy more, stress less over their perfection at motherhood!

  • http://twitter.com/lorrainecladish Lorraine C. Ladish

    I, for one, admire those who decide not to be mothers and go through with it. I always knew I did, and I’m glad I did. I am working on Mother’s Day, when I’m “supposed” to be kicking back with my kids, which I will in a bit. But also, I am a writer, and that’s the mom these kids have, so … even though sometimes I am riddled by guilt – which seems to be natural in today’s world – I do not put my own wants and needs aside all the time, since I know that my kids will learn to pursue their passions by example. Women who don’t have kids are not unsuccessful by any means. But it has become a hot topic, yes …. and all women, mothers or not, are worse off for it!

    • Sandra

      Tell me about it! I’m the only one from both my high school and college class that does not have kids. They look at me with either pity or amazement that I don’t want to have them. I’ve had also those who really want a baby but cannot have them tell me I am ungrateful for not taking the opportunity. And like that, so many reactions like it is a sin that I chose this lifestyle! I think motherhood is amazing, I had the best mom, and I love kids. Maybe in the future I’ll change my mind. But I hate feeling like I am failing my gender by not having babies lol

    • scasab

      My feelings about that have evolved also. I continue to think that maternity is a privilege and I am blessed with the daughter I have (I hoped I had at least three more like her!). I have enjoyed every facet of her life, and accepted the growing pains as something natural for her, and for me. I did think that the most natural thing for women was to be mothers but life has changed so much for all of us! I do advocate for freedom in all of its expressions. Therefore, we need to respect each persons choices.

  • http://www.elianatardio.com Eliana Tardio

    you are so right Silvia, it is crazy how guilty we grow thinking that we have to be perfect to be good. Thanks for this great piece!

    • scasab

      Thanks for reading Eliana! Glad you agree.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Veronique-de-Miguel/1765210684 Veronique de Miguel

    This is a great article all moms should read. I agree that super-mother role we accept is a heavy burden to carry along. The perfect mother does not exist, as it doesn’t exist the perfect woman or the perfect child. Thanx!!!!!!!!