Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Essential Labor: Mothering As Social Change
Episode Date: October 25, 2022Parents and caregivers are undervalued in the US. The pandemic made that painfully clear. But it doesn't have to be this way. In today's episode, Dr. Becky talks to author Angela Garbes about how pare...nts can lead a revolution to change how caregivers are valued and supported in our society. Upcoming Live Event: https://lp.goodinside.com/podcast-live-event/ Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3cqgG2A Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinside Sign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletter Order Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books. For a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Dr. Becky and this is good inside.
To me parenting is a very hopeful and revolutionary act because I am believing that we can make
the world better even if I'm not actually physically there when it happens.
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Mom, Dr. Becky, and this is GoodInside.
I'm a clinical psychologist, I'm a mom of three, and I'm on a mission to rethink the
way we raise our children.
Angela Garbaz is the author of the book Essential Labor, mothering as social change.
In it, she makes the case that we are undervalued in the US. And how as parents, we will need to
lead the revolution to change that.
I'd love to just start this conversation hearing in your words like, what is this book
all about?
That's a good question. It's about a lot of things to me. I mean, primarily, I'm going to talk
about why I wrote it in sort of like the history of it. So I was actually under contract to write a different book.
I was going to write a book of essays about the body and how, for better or worse, the
body you're born into affects how you move through the world, right?
Like I have a brown body.
My husband has a very thin white body and when we go to like get a mortgage, like he does
the talking because they take him more seriously, right?
So it was gonna be about that,
but anyway, like I had been trying to write it for two years
and it wasn't going very well.
And my deadline was July of 2020.
And by April of 2020,
when I had no daycare, no preschool,
and I had been with my kids like 24-7,
for just like a month, I was like,
oh, there's no way I'm
gonna be able to do this. So I basically pushed my deadline back for a year and was really struggling.
And I felt a lot of loss and grief around that. You know, I missed my work writing, but I also
felt that taking care of my kids, it felt like the most important thing I could be doing,
you know, writing a book or doing anything else didn't matter in comparison, but I was wrestling with these, like, bad
feelings also.
And around that time I was seeing how, you know, we were talking about essential workers.
We were talking about healthcare workers, sanitation workers, right, teachers who are all essential,
but I was working all the time as a parent.
I was like, what about us?
What about me as a mother?
We are all working our butts off, and why aren't we talking about that?
That was the seat of it.
I ended up writing an article for a New York magazine that was taking all of my bad feelings. And noting that, you
know, mother specifically were forced out of the workforce, you know, in September of
2020, 865,000 women left the workforce. And that was because schools remain closed. And,
you know, that idea that we don't have a social safety net, we have mothers, right, who
pick up the slack and who take care of everyone. So, you know, I wrote this article that was just sort of talking about, like, we hear these numbers, but they don't even begin
to scratch the surface of how terrible this is mentally and emotionally for people. And to my
surprise, that article had this like viral life, and Elizabeth Warren retweeted it, and I was like,
oh, I wrote a thing that was all about like all my pain for the last year, but I'm not alone.
And that was kind of really when I was like, okay, I know what I want to write. Like that other book
is gone. The book that I want to write is talking about how, how have we made care work
and mothering and parenting, like we expect it for free. We don't value it socially. We don't value it culturally financially, but we all need it.
We all desperately need it.
It's the work that makes all other work possible.
And when we didn't have childcare, when we didn't have, without people to care, our
society was like, really on its knees.
And people were reeling and were lost.
You know, I wonder for everyone listening.
And especially if you are someone who really identifies
in that caretaking role,
maybe you are a work inside the home parent,
you're a work inside the home mom,
I'm really curious if you've ever said to yourself,
like, I'm an essential worker.
I am an essential worker to my family's functioning,
but also Angela, if you bring out to,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
like to the world's functioning, right?
Like I am an essential worker.
I mean, you know, it's so obvious,
but your title essential labor,
parents who were inside the home during the pandemic,
I don't remember them being included in that list.
And it's interesting with essential workers. I remember when the essential workers were
able to get vaccines first, right? And I remember a lot of people saying, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, now,
like my babysitter is actually eligible, but like me as like a parent staying at home,
like, what about me? And it's just really empowering.
You know, I feel like you and I actually are like
doing the same work.
Like I feel like this more and more of this idea
that caregiving and having this role of a caregiver
as a mother, like there is such power
in our ability to like create a revolution.
I mean, first of all, there's never, historically,
there's never been a revolution without mothers and babies,
right, like, and children, right?
And I agree.
I mean, I think part of writing this book was,
I wrote it for myself because I have stood in front
of the mirror and said, like, I'm an essential worker.
And I encourage people to do that as well,
because it really starts with parents, caregivers,
insisting on that, because society
isn't going to tell us that.
Even though we know it to be true, it is true.
And I think, you know, the revolution,
we need to change on all fronts,
but I think the revolution
is actually a powerful place for it to begin
is for us to think of ourselves that way. It changes a lot. You know, I
tell people like to talk to your like peers, your parents,
right, the people in the trenches, right, with you every
day, like to talk about yourselves that way, we need to
value ourselves in that sense. And that was a journey for me.
And now I'm on this place where I'm like never going to
shut up about it. And I'm going to tell people they need to
do that. There are so many things that I want for our
country. You know, top of mind right now, I'm like, I want people to have bodily autonomy.
We don't have that. That's not guaranteed. And sometimes I think like, I don't know. I
believe that we can get there and have that. I don't know if I'm going to be around. Social change is very
slow. It's meaningful work. I can't think of better work to be doing. But there's no guarantee
that I'm going to live to see the end of white supremacy in America. But my kids, it could
happen when my daughters or my daughters are alive. And my daughters could be part of
that. And I think a lot about parenting as legacy work,
you know, to me it's really important
to leave the world better, like then I showed up,
even if just a little bit, even for just a few people,
and to me parenting is a very hopeful
and revolutionary act because I am believing
that we can make the world better,
even if I'm not actually physically
there when it happens. Yeah, you're changing the blueprint, right? Yeah, and I'm
imparting the values that I have like to my children. And this book is a lot
about how I've had to mother myself. I mean, I have a wonderful mother, a
wonderful parent. I have wonderful parents who have bathed me in so much love, but
they also are human beings who are flawed. They're immigrants who came over and were like,
we're just focused on survival, right? So there were a lot of things like in my own cultural
inheritance too, you know? Like my mother never talked to me really about my body and having like, and valuing
my body beyond aesthetics, right? And I think about a lot of things that I have had to unlearn,
you know, to know that my body is like, I'm enough just as I am. Like, that's a huge thing that I,
I've had, I'm like, I came to that as an adult and I feel like if I can give my daughters that now
or in an early age, like they're ahead of the game, right?
And I just want life to be a little bit easier for them.
Yes, and what you want for your kids,
I always say, if there's one self belief,
I want my kids to go into the world with.
It's I'm the only one in my body,
and I'm the only one who knows how I feel
and what I want.
Yeah.
I feel like that's more important than anything
they'll learn.
And it's actually like a revolutionary idea,
especially for women.
It really is a number one,
but I have wants, that I have wants,
that I know what they are,
that I can put them out there,
and that I know I'm entitled to them.
That's like my birthright as a human being.
Yes, I always think about this,
that babies, right, come out as just a bundle of desire with total
freedom to expression, right?
Like, there's no baby.
It's like, but with that baby over there want the milk now too.
Like, maybe I'm making a big deal out of this.
I don't know.
I'm not like, excuse me.
Yeah.
No, it's not a baby.
It's right there.
Like, it is just that, you know,
that's what leads every essence of their being.
And like, how do we get from there to like here
where, you know, so many caregivers
and yes, so many women, I found, you know,
in my private practice, the single most disorienting question
was, what do you want? And the most women, we know what our wants are
after they haven't been met, but we don't know them proactively because we learned to turn them off.
So early. And the idea of like mothering a social change and the idea of being an important
sturdy, essential worker.
I think puts us back in touch with so much of that power.
And world watch out, because things will happen
when more of us tap into each other.
And this is the next thing I wanna ask you about.
And when we connect with each other
because I feel like in your book,
you talk a lot about community,
the importance of community,
what you learned about community during COVID.
This is always on my mind for caregivers and I'm curious you could speak a little bit about that.
Yeah, well, I mean, I want to go back to the baby, right? The baby who cries and it's not just that,
so we're born with like this capacity to express we're in touch with our desires, right?
And they are met because someone is caring for us and we don't question taking care of a baby.
These helpless people who have done nothing truly to earn our love and affection except
to be a human being. And why does that go away? Why does that expectation of having our
needs met that like to own our desires? Like that goes away. But I think that what we need
to do is lean into that. I think what makes us human is that we are social
and that we are vulnerable.
The state of being a human being
is to exist in a state of needfulness.
And this relates to community
because during the pandemic,
I saw people, we formed a pod.
I actually hate that language,
but I think of the people that we became really close to,
I think of them as my co-family.
The only people we saw indoors
for the better part of a year.
When I see people forming pots, when I see people talking about mutual aid, which is a thing
that has come up, it's part of our, like, the, like, language of today, I saw people create
community fridges, little free libraries, and all of those things, they predated the pandemic,
like our needfulness. we kind of like,
we're moving so quickly that we just pretended like
we were fine, right?
And even though we weren't getting our needs met.
But to me, all of those things is, it's really beautiful.
It's saying, I can't do this alone.
We're not meant to take care of children.
We're not meant to take care of the sick,
the disabled, and our
elders in isolation. We're just not. And if you look through the history of the world,
globally, everywhere, people lived more communally. The home was not the sole province of women.
Men were not expected to go out and earn the wage to support the whole family. We live
in a very distinctly American society
that is, I think, pretty inhumane.
And so what I've learned just is that, yeah,
like no one can do it alone.
And I think it's important as the pandemic moves a little bit
into the room here, like thanks to vaccines.
And that kind of thing, I don't want us to let go of that.
I want us to really double down on community
because I think the pandemic offered a chance
for people to slow down a little bit for better or worse
and spend time with themselves
and kind of confront some things
that maybe we have been avoiding,
which is that yeah, I want more,
I want more connection with people, I want to feel like I belong, I is that, yeah, I want more. I want more connection with people.
I want to feel like I belong.
I want to be accepted.
I want to be able to ask for help and say what I need
and be in touch with my desires, like you were saying.
And I think that that's, I've seen people do that
for each other and for themselves.
That's what I learned in the pandemic,
and I want us to continue doing.
I think it's how we're going to survive.
Hey, so I want to let you in on something that's kind of counterintuitive about parenting.
The most impactful way we can change our parenting actually doesn't involve learning any new parenting strategies.
The most impactful way we can change our parenting is by giving ourselves more resources so we can show up as sturdier,
so we can show up as calm amidst the inevitable chaos.
It's what our kids need from us more than anything else.
This is why I'm doing my mom rage workshop again.
I'm doing it again because it is one of my most popular ones to date.
It's coming up July 19th, but no worries if you can't make it live.
It'll be available as a recording for whenever you have the time.
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in our kids.
Can't wait to see you there at GoodInside.com.
Being a parent is just so hard.
It just is, period.
One of the things I always feel like I need to say, especially with the way I offer some
parenting ideas, is none of I offer kind of some parenting ideas
is like none of these ideas are to make parenting easy. Let me just like like that is not
and I appreciate that. Like there's no, you can't like hack your way out of parenting.
No, but I feel like especially women and mothers, we've so paired our struggles with our like self-blame
and then mothers, we've so paired our struggles with our self-blame and self-deficiency.
We struggle with something and immediately,
it's my fault, something's wrong with me.
If something is wrong with me state,
you don't wanna reach out to others
because you're worried about further rejection.
Usually the things that bring on,
something is wrong with me thoughts
are the things that everyone is so desperate
to connect to each other about, right?
Yes, yes. I think it's really important to name this as because they happen in the home, right?
Because they're, and we've been taught, you know, like the home is private. We don't talk about
the stuff that happens there. Domestic labor, we hide it, right? And we say it's not worth anything.
And it's very inconvenient. We should outsource it. But so I think what happens is we are led to feel. And this is a very natural, I mean,
it's not at this point, it's natural, right?
Everyone feels that, like this is my fault,
but we perceive these things as personal flaws
as opposed to systemic failures.
And that's what I want people to know.
Like in this moment, I'm like,
if nothing else, know this, it's not your fault.
It's because our society doesn't value us and doesn't support us.
It is not your fault.
Anyone who's listening, it's not your fault.
You know, like, and then there's such a big implication of that difference, right?
Because obviously, like, if we put our hands out and look at both hands, you're like,
okay, my left hand is like, this is my fault, something's wrong with me.
And my right hand is, this is a systemic failure.
And I'm angry about that, right?
Like, I just feel like anger is a sign that we need something that we're not getting.
So it's very, very different state.
And then if you think about over and over, this is my fault, something's wrong with me.
What happens?
Like literally what's the movement in my body?
I probably shrink, I freeze and shame, I, you know, go further and further into myself.
Versus, this is a systemic failure and I'm angry about it, right? There's an energizing,
like, activating kind of nature to that. And I would want to go talk to someone about it.
And then probably they'd say back to me, yeah, yeah, give me two, right? And now we have this
thing that you write about to this community. We have power in numbers. We really
have power in connection and power in not feeling alone and power in togetherness. And that
leads to change. So it's really to me, like the, I keep thinking about this as a psychologist.
My mind has been so open in this journey that like there's no such thing as like individual psychology being different than like larger societal,
political change because they're so deeply connected. But that state of as long as we keep it as
our individual psychology, something's wrong with me. For some nobody wins. Like I don't know,
patriarchy wins maybe. I think about that a lot. Like we that kind of shame silence, like it keeps us small.
Yeah. It gives us focus on ourselves, right? Yeah. And who benefits from that? Not us.
Not us. It doesn't like just simply like I feel like I'm just a pragmatist also. I'm like,
does that serve me? Like is that right? Like I was like, there's so many ways to view things.
There's so many potential truths that like, is this a truth that serves me?
And if it's not,
like there's probably another equally truthful version
that's out there.
And the idea that like,
mothering is like essential labor.
This is an important job.
Like you said,
I can't do motherhead alone
because it was never meant to be done alone.
And I have needs around this.
You know?
I mean, I think about how, you know, like it was, it was with Warren.
I remember at the Democratic convention who got up there on the stage and I cried,
which he was like, child care is infrastructure for American families.
We need to be talking about it as such.
But I also want to say, like parenting, mothering,
like I specifically use this word mothering.
And the book is primarily about raising children,
but I am very interested with this expansive idea of care.
We think about motherhood, it's a static noun.
But the action of caregiving, I mean,
the, it's very much a verb.
It's a lot of repetitive action.
It's bending down, it's picking up, it's wiping,
it's cleaning, it's on your knees, it's scrubbing,
it's hugging, it's tending, it's brushing,
it's all of this stuff, it lives in the actions.
And I think about how that stuff is,
mothering to me is actually not gender specific.
It is not parent-specific, even.
I mean, I'm not the first person to say this, you know.
There's a book that I love called Revolutionary Mothering
that talks about how anyone can be involved in mothering,
anyone who is nurturing and affirming life.
And that idea of we can't do this alone,
I rely, just personally, I rely on my husband.
I rely on my mother.
I rely on my father.
I rely on a babysitter.
I rely on childcare providers.
I rely on early childhood educators.
I rely on my extended, like my chosen family,
aunties, right?
Like uncles and it's really wonderful to have connections
with other people, right?
Like this is the thing that America is bad at understanding
and talking about because it's intimate, it's personal,
it doesn't have any particular value
besides making us feel good, but that social nature
and that sort of nurturing is something that exists
in all of us and all of us benefit from it.
And so I really think like this work of caring is community work and it is everyone can be involved and everyone can benefit from it.
You know, I think about the way we're structured is kind of like we all have many parts of us and we all function the best and we have, you know, contact at least with all of them and we all have parts of us that want to care give and that benefit
from sharing with others and connecting with others and learning in the process. That's I think also
like the biggest paradox is I always feel like becoming a parent is like the best opportunity we have
for personal growth. If we allow ourselves to see our triggers and our hard moments with our kids through the lens of
Wow, what is my body telling me rather than like what is wrong with me, right?
Very very different and everyone benefits from that men women
You know people who you know identify in any way not pre-parents non-parents
grandparents, right and that And that's also what, you know, there's like this myth,
I don't know if it's a myth,
or like mothering is like murder dumb versus mothering.
Yeah, yeah, right.
As like, this is my best opportunity to actually like grow
into a sturdier leader.
That's like to me the model of mothering we want.
You know, if I think about the CEO of any company,
you want a sturdier leader.
Like you want someone sturdier,
not someone who's running himself.
Yeah, setting hands on the wheel.
Yeah, exactly.
That's what our kids want too.
They don't want the mother who's running themselves
into the ground and resentful.
I mean, we've had those mothers for too long.
Like, they don't even want that.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's important to wreck,
I mean, I was like, I don't have time
for, you know, this sort of martyrdom.
I should say, like, that's very much what was modeled to me.
I think many of us grew up with that model.
And, and that's what American culture, you know,
mother and sacrifice, suffering and silence, right?
You've become a mother, like, physical pain from childbirth,
like, that's just what you get for becoming a mother,
like it's, and it's worth it because you have
this beautiful child.
And we need to like really talk about the sort of nuances
and all the changes that happen, right?
But yeah, I think that I wanna acknowledge
that it's hard work to get rid of that idea
and to unlearn that and to ban it,
because the call is coming from inside the house too.
So that is real work to do that.
And I think that's, it's so important to say
that it's not easy, but I can't think
of more important work to do, which is both helping ourselves
and helping other people and the next generation.
So one question that is a little bit of an antidoat
to the hard work that is parenting
is the joy in mothering. Yeah, I mean, that's a huge part of this book that I want to talk about.
I don't want to just talk about the hard things. One of the things that we don't discuss enough is
that is the kind of what do we feel in our bodies? Like I'm someone who is very focused on physical pleasure and embodiment.
I think joy is like my right.
And parenting is a lot of judgery and a lot of hard work.
But that sort of intimacy, you know, tending to myself, not just like this, and I don't
mean self-care.
I mean, like taking a nice shower, like going for a dip in the lake,
like that feels really good.
And parenting to me and caring for other people
and caring for my children gives me physical pleasure.
Like, we need to have connections.
Like, this is what fuels us.
And I think that there is so much joy and potential
and part of writing this book was to,
to, to, to, to lean into that, you know, like I,
we're taught to like hate our bodies
or think of our bodies as like very inconvenient
or to think we'd be better off without them, right?
But, um, I mean, I actually love,
I mean, my favorite thing in the world
is to clean ear wax out of my daughter's ears.
Hahaha.
I love it. And it's just like that warmth, that feeling,
like, and it's because, Becky,
it's because my mother did that for me.
And when I think about like my strongest sense memory
from childhood of like feeling held,
feeling like loved, it's not verbal.
You know, it's not my mom being like, I love you.
It was, I can transport myself to this moment
where I would have my hand in my mom's lap
and she would be cleaning my ears.
And that's like what my body knows and remembers.
And like, that's what I want to give to my kids,
what I want to give to other people.
Like, we feeling it in your body,
there is no substitute for that.
Yeah.
And for the parent listening, who's thinking,
that joy in parenting, like that feels so far from where I am
make what you know what you share I
I spend a lot of time in that place or I have a lot of moments like that and you know the last thing that any parent needs is like
something else to do right and so I think
something else to do, right? And so I think it's hard.
I mean, I, in some ways, what I want,
what I want it's all people to do is to,
to the extent that they are able to, to like,
stop thinking.
You know, I think American culture really encourages us
to not trust ourselves.
To like every pregnancy book is like, don't do this,
don't do this, don't do that.
Why would you want tea? Like, don't have sushi, right? It's a lot of it is this like denial of pleasure.
And prioritizing your brain over your body. And I don't want to prioritize one over the other.
I just want to encourage parents to like, let go a little bit, to trust themselves, to tune into their wants,
their desires, and their bodies.
Becoming a more embodied person for me,
and that's something that I've been working on my whole life,
but becoming more embodied and integrating the bottom-up knowledge
with the top-down knowledge has been so crucial for me
in letting go of a lot of things and feeling just good enough
as I am and knowing too, like I'm not gonna do a perfect job
as a parent because I'm just a person and that's okay.
Yeah, yeah.
Just to piggyback on that in terms of so many parents,
I know right now it's so hard to find joy.
So I would go back first to Angela and I started
with in the beginning, just notice
if your first thought is something's wrong with me
versus oh, like maybe there's something systemic
and mothering, right?
That is impacting my experience, right?
And just I always say we just have to make,
you can't beat the voices that come up inside us, so you got to join them.
So just say hi to like the, okay, there's that something as wrong as me thought, like,
oh, something's wrong with me that I can't find joy.
And then I have two kind of concrete things to offer around that.
Number one, I feel like things like joy and happiness, like we focus a little too much
on like cultivating them rather than like, rather than what sets the stage for their emergence.
And I think that's not just a verbal difference. What feelings are crowding out joy versus how can
I find it are different. And usually the feelings that crowd out joy are the list of things,
the lack of support. And so rather than why am I not feeling joy as a parent, you might think,
like, what is something I need to feel,
you know, a little bit less than survival mode?
And what would it be like to ask for that, right?
Is it asking if I have a partner,
or like, hey, I really need you to do bath time?
Is it calling a friend and saying,
I'm doing bath time again, can you send me support?
So I think that's one.
And then the other thing I think that, you know,
I think about a lot is just really,
like, the reminder that two things can be true.
Like, I really can feel like being a mom right now
was really hard and really overwhelming.
And I could while feeling that way,
dance to my favorite song in the show.
Like, I can do both.
Like, I can both can be true.
And then after that shower, I can go back to like, oh, this is the worst.
Like, I can give myself full permission. I don't have to integrate or like balance it out. Like,
I can coexist. And I think even starting with like, I, that is my right. I have the right to two
minutes of joy a day. And if I find those two minutes, and I don't have joy doing that dance,
well, you know what? I'm practicing a muscle. My joy muscle hasn't been flexed,
then like any other muscle,
you gotta flex it a few times before it really kicks in.
So you're in the building to joy phase, right?
The one thing I wanna say is that I also feel like
we don't exist in states of happiness and joy
for like you don't get there and then you're just there.
I think about it as their moments and they are, you know, like parenting is such a slog.
But when I look back, a lot of those bad times are not what I remember.
I remember like when I was down on my hands and knees, I don't like imaginative play,
but I was down on my hands and these are my toddler.
One time when I like chose to meet her there and we were like ma-mah, ma-mah, ma-mah, ma-mah, ma-mah, ma-mah, ma-mah, ma-mah, like in doing sort of like cat poses and
like what you remember are these moments. And I think if you can have a few moments of pure
joy and happiness in your body with your family like I don't know once a day a couple of times a
week like that's not nothing and that is great. You know, and I think getting to that place where you can, yeah, like I'm having
this beautiful moment and five minutes later, like I'm going to be in some sort
of mild battle with my child about clothing or something, right?
Or like that, that's going to happen.
Like two things can be true.
But yeah, your relationship is richer because it's not just work.
It is also something that gives you joy and pleasure.
And I think it's working with like when you're saying that you're like in the you're building to joy
of realizing like it is it's accessible and it takes a little time and it's not like you're you can't
like do joy. It's not like an achievement that you get there and you're like hanging out there forever.
It comes in waves. It's like riding the waves, I guess.
Yes, exactly.
Thank you for this conversation. Thank you for your critical work.
Thank you for putting words to so many
unformulated experiences that people now have more of an understanding around
and look forward to the next time we connect.
This has been great. Thank you for your work and for having me.
Thanks for listening.
To share a story or ask me a question,
go to goodinside.com, backslashpodcast.
You could also write me at podcastatgoodinside.com.
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And one last thing before I let you go.
Let's end by placing our hands on our hearts
and reminding ourselves, even as I struggle,
and even as I have a hard time on the outside, I remain good inside.
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