Добавить новость
ru24.net
News in English
Июль
2024

No Matter Their Finances, There's 1 Thing All Mums Stress About

0

The first night after we brought our son home from the hospital was a long, rocky one. Every 20-30 minutes, he woke, screaming, and, in a groggy haze, I brought him to my breast precisely as the lactation consultant and all the nurses had instructed me. But after a few moments, he would unlatch his tiny mouth and throw his head back to shriek. His face turned bright red with all the effort he was expending. It was clear that I was failing in my primal duty to feed my baby. I was terrified: How would we make it ’til morning? I was also filled with shame. 

We eventually figured out how to meet my son’s need for nourishment. He is now a lanky 15-year-old, and I have to crane my neck in order to make eye contact with him. But I still hold a vivid memory of that night, and the fear that arose from not having the food my child needed.

The work of feeding our children is central to parenting at every stage, and if we struggle, or are criticised, it cuts deep. In researching her book, “How The Other Half Eats,” sociologist Priya Fielding-Singh interviewed parents and children from 75 families, observing four of these families in depth, to learn about how parents decide what to feed their children.

Predictably, she discovered sharp differences between low-income and high-income families. But she also found a through line. While their circumstances were worlds apart, the mothers (the overwhelming majority of her subjects identified as such) were driven to see themselves as “good” moms in a culture that promotes what Fielding-Singh calls “intensive mothering,” which positions moms as pretty much solely responsible for keeping their kids healthy and happy and well-fed.

“Mothers across society, across racial, ethnic groups, across socioeconomic status, all have the same motivation, which is to feel like good mothers,” Fielding-Singh told HuffPost. 

What made a mother feel like she was doing a good job, Fielding-Singh found, depended greatly on her circumstances. Most of the lower-income moms she spoke with had endured at least one occasion, like my night with my newborn, in which their child was inconsolably hungry. In the book, she recounts in painful detail how one mother held a crying baby all night long because she didn’t have enough money to buy more infant formula.

These experiences made an impact, influencing moms to prioritise preventing their kids’ hunger over limiting grams of sugar or fat. They bought foods they knew their children would readily eat, whether or not these were the most nutritious options. 

All parents want their children’s bellies full, but the ramifications of this depend on families’ resources. In wealthier households, it makes sense to throw away plates of uneaten broccoli in the name of introducing a new food to your child five, 10 or more times to train their palate. But if you only have a few dollars to get through the end of the week, ramen noodles may be your safest bet for full tummies and a good night’s sleep.

“Mothers across society, across racial, ethnic groups, across socioeconomic status, all have the same motivation, which is to feel like good mothers,” Fielding-Singh told HuffPost. 

At the same time, the value that a food has for families is far more complex than its total calories. Food also wields symbolic weight. Fielding-Singh found that some wealthier families were faithful to certain brands that felt healthier or more wholesome to them, even when this wasn’t always the case ingredients-wise. One upper middle-class mom wouldn’t buy her kids Oreos, but regularly purchased Trader Joe’s Jo-Jo’s, which are almost almost identical, nutritionally.

When it came to so-called “junk”food, families all had the same understanding of which foods were healthier and which ones were less so. But the symbolic value of these foods shifted greatly between rich families and poor ones. Fielding-Singh chronicled the ways that the wealthy families she observed parented from a place of abundance. They were able to say “yes” to so many of their kids’ requests: music lessons, summer camps, clothes. In this context, moms “had the ability to say no without it being so emotionally distressing.” 

Faced with a bag of Cheetos, a wealthy mom “found it annoying to have to say no, but it didn’t make her doubt whether she was a good mom to deny these requests,” Fielding-Singh said.  

Lower-income moms, however, parented from a place of scarcity. “They had to, on the regular, repeatedly say no to their kids’ requests because they did not have the resources to provide them. They had to say no to vacations. They had to say no to money for new clothes. They had to say no to summer camps,” she explained. All of this takes a toll on how a parent feels, whether or not they can conceive of themselves as a “good” mom.

“Parenting, in a way where you have to say no all the time to your kids’ requests because you can’t provide them, not because you don’t want to, but because you literally cannot, is extremely emotionally distressing,” Fielding-Singh said. 

“Junk” food, which most children request from their parents regularly thanks to intensive and strategic marketing, is everywhere. And it’s cheap. It’s one request that low-income parents can say “yes” to. 

The nutritional impact of these foods was less of a concern, Fielding-Singh explained, because moms’ goal was to “emotionally and psychologically nourish their children through these foods.” Saying yes was a way of “making sure that their kids felt cared for and seen and heard by their parents,” she said.

Some moms’ financial burdens make these small splurges all the more meaningful. One mom didn’t have enough money to fix the AC in her car, but she had enough cash to buy Frappuccinos for herself and her daughter on a hot day, bringing them a moment of relief and enjoyment together. The purchase might not have been “rational,” but it made a different kind of sense. 

Wealthy families ... parented from a place of abundance. They were able to say 'yes' to so many of their kids’ requests: music lessons, summer camps, clothes. Lower-income moms, however, parented from a place of scarcity.

All of the moms Fielding-Singh interviewed and observed felt the pressure of what she calls “intensive mothering.” The phrase was coined in the 1990s by sociologist Sharon Hays to describe the “unattainably high standards to which mothers in this country are held, specifying that moms need to be children’s primary caregivers, that they should be self-sacrificing, that mothering as an act should be labor-intensive and resource-demanding,” Fielding-Singh said. 

Not only is this “an extremely high bar,” she continued, but it is “also a moving target.” The wealthy moms who came closest to providing their kids with a nutritional ideal still felt they were falling short on the job. 

“The reality is that for most moms, their kids’ diets are not what they would like them to be. They’re not what they would aspire to, and they’re not what society tells them is the ultimate, the optimised diet for their children.”

The mothers in the book all take on the emotional labor of accounting for the distance between the ideal and the reality. Higher-income moms, Fielding-Singh found, tended to focus on the areas in which they saw themselves as lacking. She calls this “upscaling.” They raised expectations for themselves, creating more anxiety. 

Lower-income moms, on the other hand, tended to downplay their hardship, comparing themselves to others who had it worse, or times in which money had been even tighter for their families. They told stories of hope, finding triumph in adversity the same way they found enough money for treats between the couch cushions. 

“Lower income mothers can be seen as not caring or complacent about their children’s diets,” Fielding-Singh said. “It’s actually not that at all. It’s that they’ve found a way to navigate the extreme challenges of treating their kids within a context of, often, deprivation, and also be able to keep going each day, keep putting one foot in front of the other.” 

Relief for mothers of all socioeconomic levels could come from a less intensive form of mothering that is not “completely individualised and privatised,” Fielding-Singh said. 

“We have a really toxic food environment that all of us have to navigate every single day. And it’s on mothers to navigate that environment for their children ... the private and the public sector are not making this easier, they’re not taking on any of the burden. They’re not shouldering any of the load.”

Companies could alter their products, as well as their marketing. Parents cannot be held entirely to blame when their children ask for foods that are aggressively marketed to them and carefully formulated to make them want more.

Nutritionist Jennifer Anderson calls these “hyperpalatable” foods — foods like Cheetos and Oreos. These “foods that have been engineered for us to get a bigger dopamine hit than if they had not been engineered ... are the foods that we’re going to that are going to override our hunger and fullness cues,” Anderson told HuffPost.

She uses Cheez-its as an example. These (delicious) salty crackers are specifically crafted to deliver a burst of flavour that drops off quickly — leaving you wanting another hit. A parent on a tight budget, she explained, even one who has miraculously found the time to cook their kids a meal from scratch, can hardly compete with these highly processed foods that are so widely available.

“After you ate a bag of Cheetos, your mom’s homemade meatloaf is just not as good,” Anderson told HuffPost. And once a child has had one bag of Cheetos, they’ll probably be asking for more. The addictive nature of the food is, in and of itself, a kind of marketing strategy, she explained. 

What’s needed to help families eat better, she believes, is structural change to address issues such as “the food industry dumping food marketing on children in lower-income areas.” 

Policy changes that take some of the weight off mothers and acknowledge our collective role as a society in feeding children a healthy diet might include universal free school breakfast and lunch programs and subsidies and incentives to make fruits and vegetables more affordable. Indirectly, other kinds of support for parents such as paid leave and universal health care would also contribute to bettering kids’ diets. 

In her book’s concluding chapter, Fielding-Singh writes: “The point is simple. When parents are cared for by society, they can best support their kids.”




Moscow.media
Частные объявления сегодня





Rss.plus



Подписывайтесь на наши Telegram каналы!

Заместитель управляющего Отделением Фонда пенсионного и социального страхования Российской Федерации по г. Москве и Московской области Алексей Путин: «Клиентоцентричность - наш приоритет»

Портативный ТСД корпоративного класса Saotron RT-T70

Команда подмосковного главка Росгвардии завоевала серебро в соревнованиях по гиревому спорту Спартакиады «Динамо»


Пегас сделал заявление по новым турам по России на эту зиму, включив в них авиаперелёт

Литературные пристрастия Виктории и Дэвида Бекхэмов: супруги читают триллеры одного автора

Романтика знаков зодиака

Музыкальный спектакль «Я тебе верю!» в декабре в «Колизей – Арена»


Navy veteran’s defamation suit against CNN inches towards trial as judge hears motions for summary judgment

Lennox Lewis Has No Doubt How Anthony Joshua vs Daniel Dubois Rematch Goes: “He’ll Go After Him”

An Idaho health department isn’t allowed to give COVID-19 vaccines anymore. Experts say it’s a first

FA Cup second round draw: Date, start time, live stream FREE, ball numbers and TV channel


Невидимые слезы фильма «Москва слезам не верит»

Всемирный день городов: «Грузовичкоф» расширяет горизонты

Беспроводной сканер штрих-кодов SAOTRON P05i промышленного класса

В Екатеринбурге по программе КРТ снесут еще два бомбоубежища


Stressing out waiting for Dragon Age: The Veilguard to download? Here's some Dragon Age ASMR to help mellow your mood

World's biggest modding site announces new paid mods policies, with caveats—'as long as it isn't to the detriment of the free modding ecosystem'

Return of the Phantom, which is basically The Phantom of the Opera but with time travel, is free on GOG

Мафия-НН: Это было что-то не вообразимое, убойное и со стуласшибательно!



"Спартак" всухую обыграл ЦСКА в матче с тремя удалениями

Музыкальный менеджер. Менеджер музыкальной группы. Музыкальный менеджер директор.

Молдаване у посольства в Москве начали скандировать лозунги против Санду

Завершился фестиваль-форум «Российская креативная неделя — Дальний Восток»: итоги и перспективы




Подписывайтесь на наши Telegram каналы!

Обзор автомобиля «Москвич» 3

Заместитель управляющего Отделением Фонда пенсионного и социального страхования Российской Федерации по г. Москве и Московской области Алексей Путин: «Клиентоцентричность - наш приоритет»

Избирательный штаб Санду начал праздновать победу на выборах


Известный российский теннисист оставил кровавое пятно после того, как поранился ракеткой на корте

Подмосковные футболисты стали серебряными призерами Второй футбольной лиги

Теория фикций: москвич возглавил почти две тысячи компаний

Захарова призвала МВД Эстонии не вмешиваться в дела Эстонской православной церкви


Теннисист Медведев заявил, что поражение на "Мастерсе" ударило по уверенности

Теннисная школа экс третьей ракетки мира Петровой открылась в Татарстане

Кудерметова вышла во второй круг турнира категории WTA 250 в Мериде

Корнеева проиграла Сёнмез и не смогла выйти в финал турнира WTA в Мериде


Планов громадье. Как Хрущев грезил о Большом Владивостоке

Теория фикций: москвич возглавил почти две тысячи компаний

Канье Уэст запланировал провести концерт в Санкт-Петербурге в ноябре

Фильм «Огниво» возглавил кинопрокат в России


Музыкальные новости

Музыкант Александр Градский родился 75 лет назад

Тина Канделаки предложила Евгению Петросяну стать постоянным резидентом Comedy Club

Кинчев заявил, что «в сердцах» написал заявление о переносе концертов

Конкурс-фестиваль ударных инструментов пройдёт в Петербурге



"Спартак" всухую обыграл ЦСКА в матче с тремя удалениями

Завершился фестиваль-форум «Российская креативная неделя — Дальний Восток»: итоги и перспективы

Футболисты «Спартака» и ЦСКА устроили массовую драку на поле

Музыкальный менеджер. Менеджер музыкальной группы. Музыкальный менеджер директор.


Вдовец Анастасии Заворотнюк впервые после смерти актрисы вышел на лед

Футболисты ЦСКА и «Спартака» устроили массовую драку во время матча

Конкурс-фестиваль ударных инструментов пройдёт в Петербурге

«Зенит» — «Динамо» Махачкала — 2:1. Видеообзор матча РПЛ


Москвич рассказал, что устроивший ДТП в центре водитель Honda ехал со скоростью свыше 100 км/ч

Столичных водителей призвали пересесть на общественный транспорт из-за снегопада

Появилось видео смертельной аварии с такси в центре Москвы

Двое людей пострадали в ДТП на пересечении Керамического проезда и Дубнинской улицы


Запланировано возложение цветов Путиным в День народного единства


Нет вакцины: чем опасна «детская» инфекция — скарлатина




«До летального исхода риска не будет»: как псевдокосметологи калечат клиентов

Риски для обеих сторон: кто такие ипотечные доноры и почему опасно использовать эту схему

Россиянка не могла есть и пить из-за редкого заболевания

Врач перечислила продукты, от которых мужчинам стоит отказаться


Ермак вновь назвал набившие оскомину "условия для переговоров": как последние прислужники Зеленского игнорируют огромные потери Киева

NYT: Зеленский измотан и обеспокоен из-за неудач ВСУ


Росгвардейцы обеспечили правопорядок на футбольных матчах Российской Премьер-Лиги в Москве

Медина забил в ворота ЦСКА самый поздний гол «Спартака» со времен Веллитона

"Спартак" всухую обыграл ЦСКА в матче с тремя удалениями

Футболисты «Спартака» и ЦСКА устроили массовую драку на поле


Побег Алексеева: из "райского сада" Борреля в "Райский сад" Лукашенко

Лукашенко прокомментировал начало избирательной кампании в Белоруссии



Собянин: В ближайшие годы в Москве будет построено еще 200 объектов образования

Сергей Собянин сообщил о планах строительства школ и детских садов

Сергей Собянин подвел итоги московского Фестиваля колледжей

Собянин рассказал о возрождении легендарного стадиона «Локомотив» в Люблине


Эксперт назвал реновацию в Москве важным шагом на пути к экологической модернизации

Новый житель в Московском зоопарке: родился детеныш бурой гиены

Школьники из Дмитрова поучаствовали в уборке набережной канала имени Москвы


Главные новости дня, 3 ноября 2024 года

В Австралии умер самый большой крокодил в мире

Планов громадье. Как Хрущев грезил о Большом Владивостоке

Захарова призвала МВД Эстонии не вмешиваться в дела Эстонской православной церкви


Архангельск принимает всероссийские соревнования по судомодельному спорту

Названы спикеры марафона «Знание.Первые»

Форумы «Семья Поморья» прошли на юге Архангельской области

Президентская библиотека — ко Дню народного единства


Выставка-экспозиция «За веру и Отечество»

Историческая хроника «Нас много держава одна» ко Дню народного единства

Литературно-игровая программа «Волшебство осеннего Крыма»

Час Отечества «Русь могучая, Русь единая».


Захарова призвала МВД Эстонии не вмешиваться в дела Эстонской православной церкви

Генерал Росгвардии Мирзаев попался на 140-миллионном «откате»

Теория фикций: москвич возглавил почти две тысячи компаний

Планов громадье. Как Хрущев грезил о Большом Владивостоке












Спорт в России и мире

Новости спорта


Новости тенниса
Арина Соболенко

Неймар назвал белорусскую теннисистку Арину Соболенко королевой






Подмосковные футболисты стали серебряными призерами Второй футбольной лиги

Генерал Росгвардии Мирзаев попался на 140-миллионном «откате»

Главные новости дня, 3 ноября 2024 года

В Австралии умер самый большой крокодил в мире