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Guest post: "I am an attachment parent because of my feminism, not in spite of it"

79 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 18/03/2015 15:14

There's a pervading myth about 'Attachment Parents': that we're mostly evangelical and exclusionary, and that we believe there is only one set of rules for decent, wholesome parents to follow. Parenting practises closely associated with AP (babywearing, breastfeeding, bedsharing) all provoke much tortured discussion, too.

Attachment parenting is often said to place huge demands on new mothers (‘how can you ever have a minute to yourself!’ friends have exclaimed) - but I am an attachment parent because I am a feminist, not in spite of it. You may disagree, but I believe that attachment parenting is the most genuinely feminist ‘parenting philosophy’ out there.

It puts the mother first. It recognises how important the role of mother is, and it encourages women to do what feels right for them. It's about getting motherhood truly recognised as an important sphere, not a relegation role or something people do when real life isn't happening. What's more, there's no checklist etched onto the clubhouse door - AP is for anyone who wants to follow their instincts when parenting.

There are those who argue that motherhood shouldn't be put on a pedestal: that the idea that a mother has a unique relationship with her child is regressive; that it puts too much pressure on women, or excludes fathers, or discourages co-parenting. It's not very trendy, when politicians are busy discussing how we can get more women back to work and share the 'burden' of childcare more evenly with men, to argue for an emphasis on the instinctive relationship between mother and child.

It is important, though, because the role of primary care-giver has been undervalued in society in recent history, to women's detriment. Motherhood is held up as the most virtuous and self-sacrificing of roles, but also the lowest in the ranks simultaneously. Our politicians tell us they want to get women back into the workplace after having children, but rather than championing ways for that to happen whilst also honouring the importance of the primary caregiver's role, we're told that cheaper childcare is the only way forward, devaluing our labour again.

Attachment parenting, then, is political. But I also think it's important for emotional wellbeing, too. New parents are continually told about what is dangerous and prohibited. In every aspect of parenting, mothers go against what feels right – and what's easiest for them, more importantly – because it's ‘not what the book said,’ and self-doubt abounds. I wish I'd had someone there, with my first child, to tell me, 'you're not a terrible mother because your child sleeps in your bed'.

Contrary to telling women what to do, attachment parenting takes no stance on how parents should feed, sleep with (or not), carry (or not) or birth their babies. Instead, it advocates for better information to be made available to all parents and parents-to-be about all of their options. It wants women to have the best experience possible in their mothering, and wants us to be free to listen to ourselves.

Of course, no sensible AP advocate would encourage a woman to go against good medical advice - but women, and their mothering instinct, should be given more authority. Whether it's in labour or in the first weeks after birth, women should be treated with dignity - like people who know their own bodies, instead of just observers in their bodies’ processes.

Attachment parenting does what society doesn't: it tells women to take their time in easing into motherhood, to make their children’s infancy as relaxed as possible (for them and for their kids) and to just – if possible – take some time out. This doesn't necessarily mean time away from a beloved career or from your friends - it means just going easy on yourself, letting your body do its thing and making room to discover the new little person in your life without fear about doing this or that right.

Mothers matter – whether they are at home or at work full time outside of the home, whether they breastfeed, or co-sleep or babywear or none of the above. No one needs to prove themselves ‘mum enough’ at any point to make parent-child attachment at the forefront of their parenting.

OP posts:
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Duckdeamon · 18/03/2015 16:47

I co-sleep, breast fed, used slings and so on but don't like the implication here that "attachment parenting" is somehow more natural, feminist or instinctive than any other parenting choices.

I agree that women shouldn't be pressured to do things in a particular way.

I disagree that AP is"takes no stance" on certain things. If that's the case, is it AP to return to work FT after a month and have the baby sleep in a cot?

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museumum · 18/03/2015 16:51

"Contrary to telling women what to do, attachment parenting takes no stance on how parents should feed, sleep with (or not), carry (or not) or birth their babies."

If this is true then AP has a PR problem, because all I have ever read on the subject has advocated co-sleeping and sling use and of course breastfeeding as key components of AP.

I did some of these and didn't do others of them, I did not apply a label of any sort to my approach as it was 'pick and mix'.

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ChaiseLounger · 18/03/2015 16:53

Nothing you have written has anything to do with attachment parenting.

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thatstoast · 18/03/2015 17:04

Nothing you have written has anything to do with attachment parenting.

Or feminism as far as I can see. If the writer identifies as an attachment parent and a feminist then that's fine, of course. I don't think this post shows a strong understanding of either and doesnt make clear why the two are linked. I think it's an interesting starting point though. Hopefully some AP mumsnetters will share their thoughts.

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fredfredsausagehead1 · 18/03/2015 17:08

I agree.

I co slept and breast fed all of my 4 children until they were 3.

So glad I did Smile

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seaoflove · 18/03/2015 17:31

What's more, there's no checklist etched onto the clubhouse door - AP is for anyone who wants to follow their instincts when parenting.

Not my experience. If you aren't (extended) breastfeeding and baby wearing and co-sleeping at the very least, you wouldn't be welcomed into any AP groups either online or in real life!

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Jackieharris · 18/03/2015 17:38

Huh?

Afaik ap = bf, co sleeping, baby wearing etc.

All this 'article' seems to be doing is attempting to deny the above.

Also I totally disagree with the premise. I am a feminist and was a signed up aper. At the time I felt the 2 aligned. However with a few more years perspective I now feel that most ap is completely at odds with feminism.

It has created a generation of 'mummy martyrs' who have no freedom. I honestly believe mothering was easier 25 years ago before all this madness took over.

To me ap is a powerful part of the backlash against feminism (that has also occurred in the last 25 years).

As a mum with DCs with very large age gaps I've experienced this shift personally. There are much greater expectations on mums now than even 10 years ago. It's all very self sacrificing.

No ones' asking men to make these sacrifices.

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26Point2Miles · 18/03/2015 17:48

But what happens when these babies reach 5/8/12/16??

What do you do then? They aren't cutesy and biddable much past 3! There's more to being a mother than the baby stage. Much much more...

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MajesticWhine · 18/03/2015 17:53

Hmm. I tend to think that attachment parenting can be a little oppressive on the mother. The fault in the OP argument is that privileging the important the role of mother is not the same as putting the mother first.

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OwlCapone · 18/03/2015 17:56

Isn't it attachment parenting not attachment mothering? Surely the only thing the father can't do is bredastfeed.

Contrary to telling women what to do, attachment parenting takes no stance on how parents should feed, sleep with (or not), carry (or not) or birth their babies.

I was under the impression tha AP does tell the parents what to do and that is to co sleep and carry your baby etc etc.

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whatisfair · 18/03/2015 17:58

Sorry OP, but I agree with some previous posters - attachment parenting emphatically does make judgements about how attached you should be to your kids: the clue is in the name.

That said, I am a feminist. I work (full time). I have also had large gaps between my kids and I have found some aspects of attachment parenting suit me (cosleeping, for example).

As a philosophy, though, I don't find it very feminist. Your post, and its fixation on ´mothering' is an example of that. If you want to attachment-mother your kid, fine. If you want people to value that as a choice, fine. But, honestly, it is not 'the feminist choice'. Because of feminists, you have that choice. That's a completely different thing.

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bigkidsdidit · 18/03/2015 18:10

This is very different to every proponent of ap I've ever met. They've all been tremendously exclusive and bossy and quite anti-feminist as a group, I've found. Certainly the ap mothers at a group I tried once were very anti mothers working.

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bigkidsdidit · 18/03/2015 18:12

Oh and I agree with Jackie that this is a backlash against feminism. Women returning to work in large numbers? Suddenly, a good mother devotes herself to her children for years and years. Funny that.

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Mintyy · 18/03/2015 18:16

This is all a lot of hot air isn't it?

When you have been a parent for several years you start to get all this hoo-ha about parenting a newborn into perspective. Because as long as a baby is loved and kept healthy they will thrive. Parenting toddlers, primary age children, TEENS and even adults is a whole lot more complicated than parenting an under 1 year old.

I was a sort of attachment parent. I co-slept sometimes and used a sling very often and was a sahm who spent nearly all my time with my children until they ventured off to pre-school (God how I cherished those few child-free hours).

I didn't follow any rules, I didn't align myself with any parenting philosophy, I didn't particularly contemplate my role as mother within the context of my feminism - I just muddled along as best I could like 99% of other parents.

And I still do.

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Artus · 18/03/2015 18:21

What if your instinct as a mother is to have some time alone. To sleep without a child in the bed, to return to a job you value. What if these things "feel right"?

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seaoflove · 18/03/2015 18:24

Indeed Artus! Which is why this definition of attachment parenting as merely "following one's instincts" is pretty wide of the mark.

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ThursdayLast · 18/03/2015 18:42

Ok, I tried to reply to this earlier but couldn't articulate.

I totally disagree with the premise that AP = feminism. Like others posters I feel it is much more rigid and unforgiving to those to choose to follow its 'rules' (of which there are many, don't try and tell us otherwise).

But mostly I fudamentally disagree with the entire concept of 'parenting styles'. The very idea that there even IS such a thing as AP is total bollocks in my eyes.

I breastfed to 16mo, our toddler Tula still gets regular use, and both DP and I co-sleep when necessary, but not routinely. But we did some spoon feeding, some BLW. And DS had a bottle of expressed milk almost every night from around 5 weeks old because I needed to be away from him, and DP needed to bond with him.

Label me?

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26Point2Miles · 18/03/2015 18:45

who are these guest post people anyway? why do they get stickied? I don't get it...

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Joyfulldeathsquad · 18/03/2015 18:50

jackieharris - I agree.

There is 18 years between eldest and youngest and now there are clearly two camps. Self sacrificing mothers and mothers that just have to get on with life. Back when I had dd1 no one gave a shiny shit which 'method' you used.

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Yikesivedoneitagain · 18/03/2015 18:50

Attachment parenting = a made up term loosely on the back of Bowlby's theory; it doesn't mean much at all, and is often used as a way of bolstering the 'AP' parent's choices, in order to denigrate other choices. Oh, and if you read Bowlby and later theorists, it is clear that cultivating a healthy attachment bond is about more than the way you transport the baby etc!

Having said that, I do agree (as I think most would!) that women should be able to choose how they parent without being judged. I was criticised terribly for bf my baby until he was 2.5 - "there's nothing in it for him", they said "you're doing it to fulfil your needs". Well, so bloody what? I do have needs too, to bond with my baby, but was being told to deny these, as it was somehow self-indulgent. As everyone knows it would have been seen as self-indulgent not to bf at all - you can't win!

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motherinferior · 18/03/2015 19:00

Speaking as a lifelong card-carrying feminist I am very, very uncomfortable with the idea that my reproductive organs/potential/capacity define who I am. I don't want to be revered for being a mother. I would like respect for (a) being a woman (b) being a parent - and a full acknowledgement that these two are not automatically linked.

Oh, and I had no bloody instincts at all about my babies and their needs. None whatsoever. Occasionally their father or I tried to observe them, in the manner of Richard Attenborough, to observe a pattern with no success. It was all a bewildering and very unhappy blur, not some kind of soft-focus blissful bonding experience.

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slightlyglitterstained · 18/03/2015 19:00

Agree with previous posters that the OP has nothing to do with feminism, and doesn't appear to describe AP either.

The AP as backlash also rings true - just look at how breastfeeding is trotted out as a reason why parental leave should not be shared, why fathers should not be able to take more of a role in caring for babies, why mothers shouldn't be able to choose to return to work earlier etc etc. All very regressive.

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motherinferior · 18/03/2015 19:01

David Attenborough, obviously. The gorilla man. Though Richard Attenborough in Jurassic Park might be more accurate.

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Mintyy · 18/03/2015 19:04

"Who are these guest post people anyway?"

I often ponder this myself.

Was v embarrassed to read Emma Freud's guest post about doing a danceathon for Comic Relief (I think that's what it was about). She got 1 reply.

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TondelayoSchwarzkopf · 18/03/2015 19:07

I have so many issues with this article and f I wasn't a FT WOHM who breastfeeds and co-sleeps then I would have time to pick them off one by one.

Firstly - attachment parenting puts the child first - NOT the mother - that's the whole point of AP! Hmm

Secondly - feminism 101 is about equality - how does 'the mother does all the work involved in infant care' meet that criteria?

Everything jackie, motherinferior and minty said otherwise. Oh and YY to the point about the relationship between attachment theory and attachment parenting - it's tangential at best.

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