Gia Pilgrim Charles

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What I wanted, more than anything, was to know and be myself, to feel as though I fully inhabited and had my body. But all the ideas about how I should act as a mother—how I should respond to my children’s near-constant requests for snacks, their demands for attention, their volatile emotions, their hands down my shirt or smushing my face—felt like insects crawling on me.
Touched Out: Motherhood, Misogyny, Consent, and Control
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