The Juggle of Working Motherhood, Trapped at House

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The Juggle of Working Motherhood, Trapped at House

As quickly as she started planning to work at home, Saba Lurie knew she would want to make main changes in how she operates her personal psychother


As quickly as she started planning to work at home, Saba Lurie knew she would want to make main changes in how she operates her personal psychotherapy apply, from counseling sufferers by means of a display screen to managing her workers remotely.

She additionally shortly realized that, as a result of her husband earns a better wage, the majority of the home work would fall on her.

The aggravations added up shortly: Her toilet turned an emergency workplace. “It’s the one place I can shut the door and lock it,” she stated. Her husband, unaccustomed to balancing his workday schedule with hers, forgot to inform her about a few of his convention calls, leaving Ms. Lurie scrambling to determine tips on how to are likely to their two daughters, ages four and 1.

Her apply, which she spent years constructing, has been pushed apart.

“The duty to deal is on me,” Ms. Lurie stated. And plenty of of her shoppers have advised her the identical factor. “What I’m listening to is that we as girls are going to be those to set boundaries or set up a plan.”

Ms. Lurie and her shoppers are a part of a technology {of professional} girls who had organized their home lives, nonetheless precariously, to allow full-time careers and parenthood. They’re dealing with this disaster within the midst of high-intensity parenting years, and an important second for rising and establishing their work. Now, capable of arrange store remotely, however with colleges closed and baby care gone, the pandemic is forcing them to confront the bruising actuality of gender dynamics because the nation is trapped at dwelling.

In interviews with greater than a dozen girls who work as attorneys, writers, architects, academics, nurses and nonprofit directors, many stated that they had been grateful to have some baby care assist pre-quarantine, and that they might work at home. However they’ve been barely shocked to be taught that they’re anticipated to prepare and handle each home want for his or her household, whereas sustaining a full-time skilled profession as a part of a twin profession couple.

It was feminism of earlier generations, in any case, that declared “the private is political.” So the truth that the disaster hit after stinging political defeats for feminine presidential candidates provides to the uncomfortable reckoning for a lot of Democratic girls — even when they’d determined themselves that essentially the most viable method to defeat President Trump was to assist a male candidate.

“It is kind of a slap in the face, we’re doing all of this and yet we have so little representation,” she said.

While the political disappointment may be most acute among liberal women, the bargain is bipartisan. Indeed, it is the kind of “lean in” feminism embraced by people like Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter — whose 2017 book “Women Who Work” essentially told women to get enough help to do it all — that is facing perhaps one of the most jarring shifts. It’s also an economic struggle, long clear in the lives of women who earn lower wages, that feminist political leaders have criticized for years.

“It’s like our economy is this house of cards for women and it is just toppling down,” says Cecile Richards, a founder of SuperMajority, a new political organization aimed at energizing female voters. “All of the structural problems that we’ve all known intellectually you can now see in pretty much every woman’s daily life.”

“I hope we rethink a lot of structures after this,” said Candace Valenzuela, a Democratic congressional candidate from the suburbs of Dallas. “My hope is that coming out of this crisis we rethink compensation for both women and for people who traditionally get minimum-wage work.”

Until March, Ms. Valenzuela spent hours calling donors from her campaign headquarters. Now, she is at home caring for her sons, ages 4 and 1. Her mother-in-law, who lives with the family and often helps with the children, has fallen ill, and though it is uncertain if the coronavirus is the culprit, she is quarantined in a different part of the house. With space at a premium, Ms. Valenzuela cleared her curling iron off the counter, brought in a yoga ball and turned her bathroom into a makeshift office for the foreseeable future.

Ms. Valenzuela considers herself lucky because her children are young enough that she is avoiding home-school. And her husband had already taken on much of the household duties since she began her campaign last year. Still, she said: “The way we’ve been able to MacGyver a career as a woman is completely under attack by a global pandemic.”

The crisis has become a moment for some to reconsider how much progress has taken place on a societal level.

Ms. Lurie, the therapist, recalled the day she voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016, holding her year-old daughter. Since then, she said, “it has just been having to recalibrate, recalibrate and recalibrate. What I promised my daughters isn’t something I can deliver and that’s such a painful thing to consider.”

Dori Howard, who helps run a women’s co-working space in Los Angeles, said she viewed the pandemic as sending feminism back to the “1950s with women stuck at home.”

“Of course their husbands make more money than they do — because of the wage gap,” Ms. Howard said. “It’s a cycle of despair.”

Aireka Muse, a television writer in Los Angeles who gave birth to her first child six months ago, has taken to working on her latest project from her parked car. The other day, she said, when she walked back up to the family’s one-bedroom apartment, her husband asked, “When are you going to be done?”

“For him there was a limit to the time and a box for being more responsible for our child,” she said. “But me taking care of my son is not circumstantial. I’m never going to be done — there’s always going to be another project and there is always going to be my son.”

Ms. Muse has some hope that the quarantine experience — and the up-close look at parenting, professional work and keeping everyone fed and healthy — could shift some men’s perspectives, especially those who identify as feminist but might not be first in line to call the pediatrician.

“At least for my husband, they are more hyperaware of the work that their wives have been doing, and something has got to give,” she said. “Instead of just running on automatic pilot, I wonder if it is eye-opening for them?”

Late last month, Representative Katie Porter, a freshman Democrat from California, found herself trying to self-quarantine in her bedroom after exposure to the virus, while spending around seven hours each day on conference calls. At the same time, Ms. Porter, a single mother to three school-aged children, was trying to keep up with the distance learning requirements for three different grades.

“When the email says, ‘Make sure your student does A,’ I don’t even know which student they’re talking about,” she said. “It was overwhelming.”

Amy Pompeii, 46, has managed to juggle working as a nurse at Ohio State’s Wexner Medical Center with being a single mother since her husband died nearly a decade ago. With her daughter, a college sophomore, now at home, Ms. Pompeii has help to care for her 10-year-old son.

“A lot of my co-workers do not have that luxury,” she said. So far, the hospital where she works has not been inundated with patients battling the virus, but her children still worry. “We are all under a very stressful situation, but the men I work with, for the most part, they go home and decompress, do something to clear their mind,” Ms. Pompeii said. “We don’t get to do that.”

In therapy sessions with his clients over the past few weeks, Avi Klein has heard all sorts of domestic frustrations — a divorced father desperate to see more of his children, a high-salaried husband who is trying to carve out time for his wife’s graduate studies, and women whose less flexible jobs are taking precedence over their partners’. But among heterosexual couples, the most common scenario is that women are taking on the emotional and care-taking labor, according to Mr. Klein, whose client base is male and whose own wife takes care of their three children while he runs his practice out of the family’s home in New Paltz, N.Y.

Mostly, Mr. Klein said, people remain in survival mode: “What everyone is doing is impossible and crazy.” But whenever the chaos subsides, he said, “this has to reshape our views of gender in a meaningful way.”

“To spend this much time at home, to have this experience of taking care of a family will change us,” he added. “We will have to all have a better sense of what we are asking our partners to do.”



www.nytimes.com