the breakfast table
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- The Supreme Court Breakfast Table
Should there be a shooting range next to the Supreme Court gift shop?
Walter Dellinger
posted June 27, 2008 - The Supreme Court Breakfast Table
Was it ever Miller time?
Dahlia Lithwick
posted June 26, 2008 - What's the Big Secret?
Continuing the conversation.
Patrick Radden Keefe
posted Aug. 30, 2007 - A Supreme Court Conversation
Everything convservatives should abhor.
Walter Dellinger
posted June 29, 2007 - The Midterm Elections
The blame game, George Allen, and more.
Mark Halperin
posted Nov. 3, 2006 - Search for more the breakfast table articles
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Martha Hirschfield and Hanna Rosin
The Holy Grail of Parenting
Posted Monday, Jan. 8, 2001, at 11:53 AM ETGood morning, Martha. Or is it a rough morning? (Which by now we both recognize as new-mother shorthand for, "How many times were you up last night?") Three for me, which is one more than Noa's usual, but then how can you really have any usual behavior when you've only been alive for a month?
I take it by your e-mail setting up this exchange that you've already conquered the shimmering Holy Grail of parenting: a Schedule. ("We're usually up by 8:30," you explained casually, provoking jealousy and awe from new parents across the land.)
Once I was up and dressed by 7:30 a.m. Now I find it hard to disturb the blissful state of a warm bundle of morning Noa on my chest before 10 a.m. and have to strain to find reasons why I can't stay in bed all day (shame, bed rot, starvation) and then finally drag myself out of bed because, well, nature calls, or in today's case because I have to write this "Breakfast Table."
(Live Schedule crisis: I lift her ever so gently, lay her down in her basket, tiptoe to the computer so I can write my first entry. She's fed, swaddled, kissed--what could be better? Yet somehow she intuits that this is the baby equivalent of a cheater buying his wife roses: I'm being tricked, she thinks, Mommy's about to ignore me. And within minutes Noa begins to squeak, groan, squirm, and finally lets loose.)
OK--I have managed to quiet her by zippering her into my sweater (I'll demonstrate later). I can continue. On to the newspapers. I know the new parent stereotype. We are supposed to skip straight to the Post Families page, scan the paper for car seat recalls, clip Marguerite Kelly's advice column, and save the A section for future papier-mâché projects. I can only tell you that in my case it's worse.
Of course I read that Post Metro story about the D.C. child-care shortage, especially since just Friday Noa became No. 5,771 on that citywide waiting list. And of course I winced when the mother on the Families page described how her precious infant had just morphed into a sullen teen-ager.
But I also find myself reading stories of great national import and wondering only how they will affect her future (the Noa equivalent of "Is it good for the Jews?"). Drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: But what if Noa want to be a zoologist, specializing in penguins? The Mercado controversy: But what if the nanny we like the best turns out to be a Guatemalan who insists we don't pay Social Security?
Of course, I exaggerate. Or at lease I promise you the obsession is temporary. I did have some non-Noa-related thoughts, especially about Mercadogate (or Mercadopuerta). It's amazing how the neo-Bushies are constantly redefining compassionate conservatism. In the early part of the transition, it just meant Republican triangulation, as in stocking the Cabinet with Democrats and arch conservatives. Now it seems to represent some sort of bleeding heart vigilantism:
"They don't ask potential nominees to enumerate every act of compassion," Tucker Eskew said when asked why they didn't know that Linda Chavez gave money to an illegal immigrant who at that moment also happened to be cleaning her house.
Good news for whoever's hiding those Texas fugitives.
But enough about the news. Really what I want to know is: How's Elias? How are you? How are you feeling about going back to work? Leaving him in day care? How much does he weigh these days?
Now I must stop lulling my child back into a stupor and sing her a morning song.
XXOO,
H
The Holy Grail of Parenting
Posted Monday, Jan. 8, 2001, at 11:53 AM ETReader Comments From The Fray:
[Notes from the Fray Editor: A lot of messages about birth control, and about penguins. Great discussion on childcare followed on from Paul Decker's post, below. Some readers--how can we put this?--weren't fully in sympathy with the Breakfast Table's new mothers: others were.]
I quote: "Drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: But what if Noa want to be a zoologist, specializing in penguins?" I suppose we need to cut new mommies some slack, but there aren't any penguins at all in the Arctic. How many hundreds of emails came in with this point? Sigh. Unfortunate, but there it is, the medium makes criticism so much easier. If this were print in the pre-internet era, then you might get two letters pointing out that penguins live down below in the Antarctic and are primarily food for leopard seals and so forth. But now, with Dear Editor only a click-on-reply away, the possibility of gazillions of outraged penguinphiles writing to you at once and crashing your server can't be called a mere possibility, but rather a stone cold certainty, and cold stones naturally brings me back to the odd fascination penguins have with pebbles, which they stack in little heaps. Nearly 15 years ago, when the oldest of the offspring was a newly gooing bundle and I was the only dad in the park with a stroller, I decided to do something once a day in the company of grownups, so as not to go berserk. I wound up taking Intro Chinese. The rest is rock and roll history, and here I am in Beijing, with three and a half years already spent here in a couple of big chunks, and all four sons fluent in Mandarin Chinese-- two in fact taking end of term Chinese tests as I write-- and all because when Martin was born, there was no internet, there was no Breakfast Table, there was no email inbox, there was no Instant Messenger. Congratulations on the birth of your wee one. Says I, father and primary child care provider for nearly a decade and a half, there is nothing better. Nothing comes close.
--Mike Connelly
(To reply, click
here.)
A pacifier is not pure distraction. It has mystical properties. I believe the sucking actually produces changes in the child's neurochemistry. The problem is how to get the damn things away from them. My 2 and three-quarter month old daughter worships her pacifiers--she literally builds shrines to her pacifiers. Help!
--David Edelstein
(To reply, click
here.)
Pacifier elimination is the first cold turkey parenting situation. Later will come unlimited cable TV and internet privileges. Depending on how phone services are billed in your locality, phone call privileges may go the way of the pacifiers for some period of time so that school work can get done on time. If you are lucky to not have free local calling, you can just make them pay for the itemized charges which usually makes them stop calling their friends all night long.
The cute thing about teenagers is that they whine the same way they did as two year olds when you took away the pacifiers.
--Tom R.
(To reply, click
here.)
New mother Hanna has not spent enough time reading trashy women's novels. They often make reference to abortifacients, usually after the heroine gives it up to the hero in some ill-advised fashion, gets pregnant, and tries to keep it a secret. Fun things like wacky combinations of herbs. Even better, the birth control measures! Sponges soaked with vinegar!
As far as the Pill being an abortifacient as well as a preventive measure: it does prevent ovulation, as Momma Hirshfeld points out. However, it provides a backup plan as well. If you do ovulate anyway, the fertilized egg cannot implant into the uterine wall. So, technically, a potentially viable pregnancy is ended. The key word is technically - certain people, such as Ashcroft, will make any argument rather than accept that people should have control over their own bodies. Why do certain Republicans think the government should no power over our monetary decisions, but should have total control over our biological ones?
--Laura
(To reply, click
here.)
Apparently Martha was able to find a place in a decent child care center because of her affiliation with a federal agency. But what of the vast number of other families without access to such resources? Preschool child care is a state issue (except in the federal District of Columbia), but as far as I know, no state is doing anything to support it. Yet, there has been no organized movement to do anything to change this, either by getting state support for private preschools or by any other means (though there are plenty of efforts to get state support for private schools, and they aren't all religious).
I have thought from time to time that raising child care work from its current low-paid ghettoization in the dot-com economy would be a unifying cause that liberals, moderates, and even some conservatives would embrace. It hasn't happened yet, but I haven't given up hope.
--Paul Decker
(To reply, click
here.)
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