Essential Labor Quotes
Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
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Angela Garbes3,024 ratings, 3.80 average rating, 355 reviews
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Essential Labor Quotes
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“I'm not trying to romanticize or fetishize the past, but the simple fact is that for centuries, throughout the world, we lived communally. Having individual families siloed off from one another behind fences, out of sight and out of mind, is a relatively recent social structure that we accept. This model has been forced upon us, at a steep cost to parents and children.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
“Doing this requires knowledge of the history of mothering and care work—how they came to be seen as naturally female, which is to say invisible and undervalued.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
“When you become a mother, you engender life, endless possibilities. Mothering is creative in a very literal sense—it is cultivating all that potential, bringing a small person into consciousness.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
“I want more friends, more casual impromptu hangs, more dropping by with dinner, more walking and talking and advice sessions, more kids underfoot, more asking for and saying what we need, more hands to carry heavy boxes, more laughing and cackling and snorting, more children farting at the dinner table, more of what makes life messy, less painful, more sweet. I want to give and receive, to always be swapping Tupperware and food, all of us crowded together like curvy lumpen mangoes in a baking dish.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
“I never really wanted to be a professional; all I knew was that I wanted whatever I did to matter. I believe writing matters, of course, but nothing has ever felt more real to me than the work of caring. That energy and effort to maintain—ourselves, our loved ones, our community—has always felt substantial, true, visceral, and, yes, real to me. I don’t believe care work has to wreck us. This labor can be shared, social, collective—and transformative.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
“Mothering is creative in a very literal sense—it is cultivating all that potential, bringing a small person into consciousness.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
“I grew up with maids, Angela,” my mother says, dismissing the idea that it was a difficult decision. “They hear everything you say.” She wanted privacy, she says, and she wanted to be accountable to the family she was building with my father: “Whatever mistakes I made, whatever happens to my kids, it’s my responsibility.” She adds that she “didn’t want to be responsible for another persons.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
“We are caught between how we were raised and how we really want to live.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
“Mothering is sensual—endemic to the body and bringing both profound joy and fulfillment. It cultivates and nurtures a child’s life force and essence. It is labor that can bestow a primal sense of satisfaction to children and caregivers alike.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
“Hearing “I love you” is nothing compared to feeling it, your body absorbing the message from another. Before we learn verbal language, we communicate through our bodies. The only way a young child can comprehend love is physically.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
“As the poet Cathy Park Hong writes, “one characteristic of racism is that children are treated like adults and adults are treated like children. . .”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
“understanding of freedom that we must rediscover. The words free and friend are derived from the Indo-European friya, which means “beloved.” Freedom, Birdsong writes, was originally “the idea that together we can ensure that we have all the things we need—love, food, shelter, safety.” Freedom is not an individual effort, but a collective one. “Being free,” writes Birdsong, “is achieved through being connected.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
“In modern American culture, that sort of tight-knit community structure seems increasingly rare. For centuries, extended personal networks have been eroded, replaced with privatized jobs and small, isolated kin units. “The extended family and relationships that could sustain families were transformed and professionalized,” write Patel and Moore.3 A lack of shared responsibility and interconnectedness makes it difficult to find solutions for needs more easily addressed in community, such as childcare, meal preparation, and household maintenance. It leads to isolation and an every-family-for-themselves mentality. It leaves parents feeling common domestic strains as personal problems rather than structural ones.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change – A National Bestseller Manifesto on Caregiving, Equity, and the Filipino-American Experience
“More than in any other human relationship, overwhelmingly more, motherhood means being instantly interruptible,” wrote Tillie Olsen in 1968.”
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
― Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change
