Mothers are being hunted out of house and home

Mon, Jun 25, 2012, 01:00

   

SURELY NOW is the time to assess what we’ve done to domestic life in the past 40 years. We’ve lost a lot of common sense, in everything from our food to the way we site our houses. In our rush to get out of the house, we were driven straight into the maw of consumerism. We turned to professionals for the smallest personal skills. We stopped valuing unquantifiable things.

Last year, at the University of Minnesota, the Dalai Lama spoke about compassion and warm-heartedness, altruism being one of the cornerstones of Buddhism. “My warm-heartedness originally came from my mother,” he said. “She was undoubtedly one of the kindest people I have ever known.”

Why should this surprise us, that the Dalai Lama learned kindness first and foremost not from glamorous and mysterious monks, but from his mammy? Diki Tsering was a poor peasant farmer who had 16 children, of whom seven survived.

Goodness, that Cherie Blair is brave. Last week she launched herself into the war of working mother versus stay-at-home mother which, like a bog fire, smoulders eternally beneath the surface of everyday life.

Cherie Blair criticised young women whose ambition it is, she said, “To marry a rich husband and retire.” She said, “You hear these yummy mummies talk about being the best possible mother and they put all their effort into their children. I also want to be the best possible mother, but I know that my job as a mother includes bringing my children up so actually they can live without me.”

Cherie Blair made these remarks at Fortune magazine’s Most Powerful Women event. Speaking at the Lidl magazine Least Powerful Women event – which is held daily on my telephone – the Least Powerful Women were not impressed. First of all, they wanted to know, what is it with lawyers? In November 2005 our former president Mary Robinson made a similar statement – in this case about American women holding master’s degrees “copping out”, as she saw it, by staying at home.

Part of Robinson’s worry about these young women was that, she said, “They are not seeking to have society adjust to let them continue to fulfil their potential.” In other words, in the face of their battle to have the iron-clad routines and prejudices of the workplace altered to suit women with domestic lives, these women with master’s degrees simply folded the old career tent and slipped away from the working world, like a paid babysitter in the night.

For Robinson and Blair this represents a shameful waste of an Ivy League education and some very impressive brains. For the rest of us it represents . . . life. The Least Powerful Women would like to point out that not everyone, male or female, is a laser-focused lawyer. And the point should also be made that Blair demonstrates a touching belief in the working world and the good that is routinely done there. Is it really more valuable to spend your daylight hours pushing paper on commercial cases for clients who already have enough money, or to be there when your children get home from school? This is a live and agonising question for a lot of people, most of whom are female.