Mothers
Posted January 21st, 2012 by Valerie Young
From Your (Wo)manInWashington blog MOTHERS changing the conversation @ www.MothersOughtToHaveEqualRights.org Mothers have a genius for on-the-spot problem solving. Sizing up a looming crisis in a nanosecond, we flip through our mental list of optional responses, then implement, discard, and substitute possible solutions until the crisis is resolved and order restored. Every single day mothers meet [...]
Posted December 24th, 2011 by Ali Smith
I’ve always had what seemed to me to be a healthy mistrust of the outside world. I grew up in New York City in the 1970’s, an era often thought of as “Woody Allen’s New York”, where neurosis reigned supreme and everything was the color brown. Through therapy, philosophy studies and meditation, I’ve been working [...]
Posted December 7th, 2011 by Ali Smith
Today I discovered the most amazing game I can play with my two-year-old son. It’s called “Me Fall Down Too” and here’s how it goes. My son throws himself down on the floor and says “Me fall down!” Then I throw myself down on the floor and I say “Me fall down too!” And here’s [...]
Posted December 2nd, 2011 by Stacy Mason
We all know that moms make great elected leaders, but now hear it from those who know first-hand: Women make up 17 percent of Congress and 24 percent of state legislatures. That puts the US at 69th in the world in the number of women in elected office. The 2012 Project is a national campaign [...]
Posted December 1st, 2011 by Elisha Dunn-Georgiou
Joyce has 11 children. Mary says this casually, as if it’s commonplace. And in her experience as a midwife in Uganda, it is. For women in her community, contraception is largely out of reach. Employment is scarce, so families make ends meet by selling crops from their small gardens. They cannot afford the prices of [...]
Posted November 21st, 2011 by Valerie Young
From Your (Wo)manInWashington blog MOTHERS changing the conversation @ www.MothersOughtToHaveEqualRights.org Prepare to be impressed with yourselves, girls. The US Census Bureau just put out new numbers on maternity leave and employment which show we’ve spent the past 40 years investing wisely in ourselves. First time mothers are more likely to have at least an undergrad [...]
Posted November 8th, 2011 by Kerala Taylor
Raise your hand if you believe that your kids need time and space to play outdoors! Here’s the sad truth: There is a Play Deficit in our country, and it’s harming our children. Too many families don’t have a playground within walking distance of their home. Paranoia is trumping common sense, resulting in sterile, uninspired [...]
Posted November 8th, 2011 by Erin Boles
Before the birth of my first child, my husband and I did ALL the research. We read books on pregnancy, fetal development and the birth process. The desire to bring our child into the safest world we could create for him was really the driving force behind these preparations. We searched for mattresses that weren’t [...]
Posted November 7th, 2011 by Claire Moshenberg
Johnson and Johnson shampoo is iconic. The slender golden bottle with it’s jaunty, nursery room font. The softly lit commercials of happily bathing babies and smiling moms. The formaldehyde-releasing preservative quaternium-15. [1] Hold on. What?! We were shocked when we read a new report by the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics that showed that formaldehyde-releasing chemicals is still in Johnson [...]
Posted November 2nd, 2011 by Miriam Feffer
Turned to your favorite news source lately? You’ve surely noticed that as another election season gathers steam, the so-called “civil” servants jockeying to represent us spend their time trying to pummel each other with barbs and bile. The conversation never seems to turn to vital issues like the safety of the air we breathe or [...]
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