| What happened between the time of the
first mothers and the mothers of today? The mother of today does not
usually nurse her baby for many years. In fact, more than half of
mothers never nurse their babies. If they do, many discontinue nursing
after a month or two and most by six months. It is the rare mother who
nurses her baby over a year. In addition, even when babies are nursed
they are usually given formula in a bottle as a supplement.
Mothers no longer sleep with their babies. Babies
sleep alone in their cribs. Mothers do not carry babies all the time.
Most try to carry them as little as possible. Mothers do not always pick
up their babies when they cry. They try to teach their babies that
mother will not pick them up when they cry. They do not seem to want the
baby to know that mother is always there for baby. Instead, it is very
important for the baby to learn that mother cannot always be there. Many
mothers are hardly there at all. They go to work and have someone else
care for their baby. Baby sitters are used when the mother wants to or
has to go somewhere. It seems that babies are not welcome everywhere and
that mothers often do not want their babies to be with them. It is clear
that in our world, unlike the world of the long ago people, babies
interfere in the usual conduct of life.
Time is ever present in the world of today. There
is never enough, so people hoard their time and begrudge it to others.
Mothers and fathers seldom have enough time to do all the things they
have to or want to do, including being with their children. We have
invented "quality time" with children under the pretense that
time with them that is good is better than always being there for them
It makes us feel better about our unavailability. We also, as a people,
strongly believe in right and wrong. We do not perceive child care as an
interactive process where child and parent learn from and about each
other but rather as a regime of correct rules and actions. Parents
decide, often with the advice of a doctor, how often their babies should
be fed, when they should go to sleep and for how long, when they should
give up their bottles, when they should be toilet-trained, when they
should feed and dress themselves, and at what age parents should begin
to spank and punish them. We live in a world of "no time" and
"should", and these compulsions regulate the relationship of
mother and baby.
How did the world lose its spontaneity? How did
the world of mothers and babies get to be filled with "no
time" and "should"? And how did it become a place where
mothers stopped taking care of their babies the way the first mothers
did?
The people who first lived on the Earth did not
live in towns or cities. They lived in the world of nature in small
groups, usually consisting of about fifty people. Today we call the
people who lived a long, long time ago hunter-gatherers because they
obtained their food by hunting animals and by gathering it from the
plants that grew around them. They did not plant crops or farm or raise
animals for food; they did not have to. The land on which they lived
provided them with whatever they needed, and they knew a great deal
about the land, including which plants and roots were good to eat and
where to find them. They also knew how to track animals and how to kill
them. Although the people. killed animals and were afraid of those
animals that could kill them, they did not see animals as enemies nor
did they believe that they were better than the animals. They believed
that they, like the animals, were a part of the land and of what we call
nature. They did not kill animals for the fun of it; they killed them
for food. In this respect they were just like the animals who also only
killed to eat. The people, however, did not only eat the animals they
killed. They also used the skin and fur and bones of the animals to make
things, and in that way they were different than the animals. But they
did not look down upon the animals who were unique and clever in their
own ways. The people of long, long ago did not dominate the world of
nature. They were, as all life, simply a part of it.
What does all this have to do with the first
mothers and how they vanished? Well, first of all, the first mothers
were the way they were because they were a part of nature and lived in
the natural world, and they responded to their babies like the human
animals that they were. Second, they vanished after humans created a new
and different world from the natural one - a man-made world.
What I am going to say now is very important, and
it is also a very hard thing to understand. The people of a long, long
time ago would not have found what I am going to say hard to understand.
They understood it better than I do. In fact, they are the ones who
taught it to me. The reason why it is so hard for people of today to
understand what follows is because we live so differently now that we
don't even have the words for it. The best words that I can think of are
"we" and "one". But it is a little confusing because
today people think of "we" as a bunch of "I"s and
"one" as just an "I". But what I mean by
"we" is that it is a real thing, not a thing made up of
separate "I"s, but a thing unto itself. It's like you are a
whole person even though you have separate parts like eyes and legs and
feet and fingers and inside parts like a heart and stomach and blood.
But even though you have all these separate parts, they all work
together; they act as "one", which is you. Well, the group of
a long, long time ago was made up of all these people with separate
structures but they were a "one" and a "we". That's
why the first mothers were the way they were with their babies. A mother
didn't think of her baby as separate from herself. She and her baby were
"one". She didn't think of herself as separate from the people
with whom she lived nor did the people think of her as separate from
them. They were a "we". And the people did not think of
themselves as separate from the world in which they lived. They were
"one" with it.
In the world we live in now there are only I's.
Sure, people do things together and belong to the same groups, are a
part of the same school, same team, work in the same place, and are part
of a family, but they hardly ever forget about "me". In a
world that, from the moment of birth, treats us as separate, each of us
becomes a "me". Most of what everyone does is for their
"me". That's why the mothers of today take care of
their babies the way they do; the mother is a "me" and so is
her baby. The mother doesn't see her baby as "one" with her;
they aren't a "we". They are two separate people, each doing
their own thing, sometimes together and sometimes not together.
The way the first mothers vanished has to do with
the fact that the world and the people in it changed. It's the story of
how "we" became a bunch of "I"s and "me"s,
how people became separate from each other. How did this happen? Well,
all you have to do is pick up a book about the history of civilization.
If you read between the lines and keep your eyes open as to what was
happening to the people, even though history books are seldom about
ordinary people, it's obvious. But I won't ask you to do that. Since
I've done it already, I'm going to tell you what I learned.
As I said before, the people of long, long ago
lived by hunting and gathering. They lived like this for most of the
time that humans inhabited the Earth, until about twelve thousand years
ago when people began to grow their own food. and invented farming. At
this time, they also began to raise animals for milk and meat. In some
places people continued to hunt and gather in addition to farming, while
in other areas agriculture became the main way of life. After a while
this new way of living began to change how people thought about, and
acted toward, each other. The new world was different than the world of
nature. It was a world that people had created, a world that they wanted
to direct and control. Although they still depended on nature for sun
and rain to grow their crops, they had removed themselves from it.
Nature was no longer a friend, who supplied humans with that which they
needed, but an enemy that too often got in their way. Man and nature
were no longer "one"; nature would now serve man. By keeping
and owning animals, men had to change the animals' nature. Animals would
be trained to obey and to do what men wanted, even if it meant breaking
the animals' spirits. Eventually humans would do that to themselves by
breaking the spirits of their children.
The new way of life took away the people's
freedom. Although the land was used to serve the people, they became
captives of the land. Needing the food their plot of land gave them,
they could not leave it; they could no longer wander. By owning land,
men became owned by the land. Before, no one had owned land; it belonged
to everyone. After agriculture took hold, people began to claim and own
parts of the Earth. They began to divide the planet up with barriers,
fences and laws.
Although everything that I have described took a
long time to happen, the result was that the world became very different
from the way it had been originally. More and more, the groups of people
living together became larger and larger. People stopped sharing.
Instead of everyone having the same, some people had more land, more
food, and more things than others. The people who had more were not
ashamed of having more, as they once would have been. To the contrary,
they felt proud of having more and believed that made them better than
those who had less. The people who had less believed it too. The people
with more used their more to buy and to own the people who had less. The
more land a person had, the more workers he needed to work the land and
to care for the more and more animals he would obtain. Unlike the first
people who did not know about more or less, the people of the world that
men had created invented arithmetic and counting because more and less
had become the way the world was and would be run.
At first, in this new world animals were used to
do the heavy work of farming and building. But as some people began to
have more worth than others and there were more and more people, human
energy became valuable. People began to be used as animals to serve
those who had more. People were no longer equal in importance as they
had once been. The people no longer lived as "one" with a
common purpose. Instead of a "we" they had become a host of
"me"s.
The people began to look at their children
differently too. They were just things that had to be taken care of
until they could be useful. Although they were a burden at first, the
more children born, the better. It was good for a woman to have lots of
children. They belonged, as she did, to her husband. More children meant
more workers. Children, like land and animals, had become property, and
so too had women. Men could have more than one wife. The more wives, the
more children. The values that men had regarding their cattle were
applied to their families.
The trouble with children, however, was that at
first they were babies, and babies had to be cared for. This took time
and energy and a mother couldn't have another baby right away if she was
nursing. But men, being smart, created the wet nurse. The wet nurse was
a woman who was used to breast feed babies that were not her own.
Sometimes she was paid for her services or, if she was a slave, she
could be ordered to serve as a wet nurse. A slave, by the way, was a
person who was owned by another person. The slave, even though he or she
was a person, was not allowed to be a person. Slaves could not do what
they wanted but were told what to do or not do by their owners. They
were property and could be bought and sold. Children could also be sold
into slavery by their parents. Even if children weren't slaves, they
made good servants. One book I read indicated that a good part of the
work of the world was done by children until fairly recently.
Wet nurses not only nursed babies, they also took
care of them. More often than not, a new baby was sent away to live with
the wet nurse. After two or three years {and sometimes even longer}, the
baby, now a child, would return home and soon after be sent away to
school or to work for someone else. As you can see, taking care of
children was considered a burden to parents. It was better to assign
this chore to servants or slaves so that the mother could pursue more
important activities. Poor people were usually stuck with the burden of
caring for their own children as they could not afford servants or
slaves.
The wet nurses and other servants who cared for
babies and children usually weren't very nice to them. That was because
the new people, unlike the first people, were a cruel people, not only
to children but to each other. People always become cruel when their
world is divided into "more" and "less" and when
power and fear govern their interaction. The people no longer responded
to children with tenderness and concern but with anger at their
requirement of care. Their caretakers would give them alcohol and drugs
so they would sleep a lot and not require attention. Children were
beaten and punished and forced to behave the way adults wanted. They
were treated like slaves or like the animals people owned. They were
domesticated and trained to serve their masters. They were also sent out
to work as servants or to work at trades at an early age. It's funny,
not funny like something you would laugh at but strange or crazy, that
in the new world things got reversed. Instead of children being cared
for by grown-ups, the children were expected, and made, to care for the
grown-ups.
An even stranger thing happened. Instead of
believing that it was good to be nice to children, people began to
believe that it was good to be cruel to them. Someone came up with an
idea everyone seemed to believe and still believe today that if you were
nice to children and responded to them with tenderness and indulged
their need for nurturing, they would become spoiled and rotten like old
fruit or meat or something. I never did get the meaning of the word
"spoiled" when applied to children even though everyone uses
it and acts as if they know what it means. To me, the word
"spoiled" means useless. Maybe spoiling children means that
they won't be useful if you are nice to them. Maybe in the world humans
made it wasn't important for children to have fun and be happy and enjoy
being children; childhood was instead a time when children were supposed
to be trained to be used when they got older. So I guess being cruel to
children would accustom them to being used, and children who were
spoiled wouldn't let others use them because they expected something
better from people, like concern and consideration. Otherwise it doesn't
seem to make much sense to view children as spoiled. But maybe I've made
it more complicated than it is. Maybe a spoiled child is merely one who
hasn't given up on receiving tenderness from adults.
Well, to get back to my purpose, which was to
explain how the first mothers vanished - it wasn't just men who believed
that being nice to children would spoil or ruin them. Women and mothers
believed it too. So the boys and girls who weren't treated nicely by
their parents, who were sent away to wet-nurses and out to work, and who
were beaten, punished, shamed, and humiliated grew up. When they became
parents they didn't know about tenderness, and they did the same cruel,
uncaring things that had been done to them to their children. After this
happened, generation after generation, century after century, the first
mothers were all gone; they had vanished. In their place were women who
had babies, even more babies than the first mothers. They were also
called mothers, but they were different from the first mothers because
they didn't grow up having mothers like the first mothers. These new
mothers didn't like taking care of babies. They, like everyone else, saw
being a mother as boring, burdensome, menial, worthless, unimportant -
as a job for slaves or servants. Pregnancy, birthing, and caring for
babies had come to be viewed as a hateful torture, that men didn't have
to bear, which was put on women as a curse or punishment. Women no
longer valued their milk or their unique and special role in the
creation and development of new life. They had become like men -
unnecessary after new human life was born.
The world humans had made was very cruel, not only
because people became cruel to each other but because they had lost the
human ways of tenderness. People no longer cared about each other. Their
indifference bred a violent world. With time the world would become less
cruel but not more tender. The new attitude toward children and mothers
would persist into the modern world. The first mothers had vanished and
the goodness which they had imparted to their children through the way
they took care of them had also vanished. The "oneness" of the
first mothers and their babies would be discouraged in the modern world
and seen as a harmful thing to children's growth and as preventing them
from adapting to, and coping with, the real world. Mother and infant
would be viewed as separate "me"s. In the modern world new
ideas and inventions would be developed to keep mothers and babies apart
and separate from each other.
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