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the breakfast table: An e-mail conversation about the news of the day.

Martha Hirschfield and Hanna Rosin

from: Martha Hirschfield

Nannies, Pacifiers, and Other Hot Topics

Posted Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2001, at 12:15 PM ET

Good morning,

If it's any consolation, your unfortunate error completely escaped my notice.



This "hard-wiring" observation of yours is interesting. Sadly, I seem to have noticed the reverse--I have not had a hankering to lawyer in the last few months. And I've certainly had plenty of opportunities to notice the degree of my disinterest. Possibly the most important legal saga of my lifetime--all the activity surrounding the election--was going on right under my nose. Did I read even one of the Supreme Court's opinions in Gore v. Bush, or Bush v. Gore, or whatever the hell it ended up being called? No. I wasn't even watching CNN obsessively. I was interested, sure, but as a citizen (and as the wife of someone who follows all the obscure ins and outs of such things for a living). Not as a lawyer. To me, work is about being a grown-up. I get up in the morning, put on real clothes, talk to other grown-ups, do things I'm supposed to do, come home, and get paid. What I do is interesting to me, and I'm certainly capable of getting a real charge out of it, but it rarely occupies my mind when I'm not doing it.

I know this should feel like a horrible confession, like some deep personal failing or character flaw, and yet that's not how I experience it. Maybe I'm just good at compartmentalizing. That's what I'd like to think anyway.

As for the nanny thing--the discomfort there is primarily about privacy. Even though anyone we would hire wouldn't live in the house with us, the thought of someone spending the day in my house, day after day, is disquieting. You're talking to someone who lived alone for about eight years, so I definitely have issues with people using my stuff. Then, of course, you introduce the idea of this person alone in my house, with my child, and I just get worried about what goes on. Not Satan worship obviously (with all due respect to the Wiccans out there), but just whether I'd be comfortable with the day-to-day decisions a nanny would make. I mean, if I decide to try to read a book while my baby is crying in my shoulder, that's one thing. But if a nanny does it, I'm not so sure. Maybe I've just surrendered to the cult of professionalism, but there's something reassuring about day care (good day care, that is)--that you're dealing with people who care for children because it's what they want to do with their lives (although I know many nannies fit that description too), and they're doing it in a formalized setting. In the ideal universe, we'd have Mary Poppins take care of Eli until he's about 2 and then we'd have him in a group setting for something less than an entire day, but that's just not feasible.

You've got to do what makes sense to you. I've certainly learned that many issues around parenting require you to listen to your gut.

Which brings me to pacifiers--one of many hot buttons I've stumbled on recently. Short answer is that babies have a physiological need to suck, which may or may not be wholly satisfied by eating. Some babies (such as my little genius) can find their fingers early on and be very happy. Others can't and want to suck even if they're not hungry. The other physiology question of the morning, regarding birth control pills, stumps me too. Don't they just prevent you from ovulating--in which case there's never any fertilized egg to be interfered with? Unless Ashcroft is of the "every sperm is sacred" view, it makes no sense. Is it wrong not to ovulate? Are we supposed to get pregnant with every menstrual cycle?

I did finally get up to speed on this Chavez/Mercado thing, and once again my first reaction is one of pure revenge. You gore our ox, we'll gore yours, and don't talk to me about "changing the tone" in Washington if the score isn't even. No stunning observation here. It just seems to me Chavez has this coming to her since Mercado was living with her in the post-Zoe Baird era. And she's been nominated as labor secretary for Christ's sake.

Is there any other news? Volunteerism on the rise in Brazil (this is front page material?) doesn't cut it with me.

M.

P.S.: My husband has an amusingly medicinal attitude toward wine. Having been informed that it will improve his "good" cholesterol, he makes occasional efforts to measure out a dose of the stuff. Enough to make a serious oenophile weep.

from: Martha Hirschfield

Nannies, Pacifiers, and Other Hot Topics

Posted Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2001, at 12:15 PM ET
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Martha Hirschfield is an attorney, a new mom, and is married to Slate's William Saletan. Hanna Rosin is a Washington Post reporter on maternity leave and is married to Slate's David Plotz, who is Martha Hirschfield's cousin once removed.
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Reader 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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