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Reply to "Dooce /Heather Armstrong "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I'm 58, so about 10 years older than Dooce, and I remember reading her posts many years ago when my children were little. What some of you young uns might not realize is what a pathbreaker she was when she started her blog. In the mid-2000's, there was no tradition of women even talking publicly about how hard parenting can be, how it affects your identity and self esteem, your marriage. No wine moms. The term 'sanctimommy' hadn't been coined yet. There was no word to describe the ways that some women managed to make you feel bad about yourself when they competed with you on the parenting front. I got married at age 29 and came of age when those terrible articles were everywhere about infertility and 'if you aren't married by the time you are thirty you are more likely to be killed by a terrorist than to have a child.' We were grateful that our husbands 'let us' work, and didn't dare ask for any sort of equal parenting. My girlfriends and I used to joke about our 'stealth jobs' that we did while our kids were in school but never letting on to our kids' teachers that we actually had jobs. We watched that trial on TV of the nanny who killed her charge and watched that scandal where the day care center was accused of conducting ritualized satanic abuse. We were encouraged to believe that we could do it all and have it all. Being a mom was referred to as 'the toughest job you'll ever love.' In short, there was NOWHERE to go to find a voice like hers -- that said things like "some days I wonder if I've made a mistake. it's scary being responsible for these little people, their psyches, etc." or 'I wonder who I am or if I'm ever going to find myself again.' These are sentiments that some of you may have encountered routinely when you had little kids, but at the time Heather was writing, these things were not said. And she said them. and helped us all to feel less alone. To be okay with our imperfections, with being imperfect, with being scared. Her writing meant a lot to a lot of people of my generation. She paved the way for a lot of what you see routinely today on Tik Tok and elsewhere -- the one upping mom (she's awful!), the wealthy lady who doesn't understand what your problem is, etc. Probably this site. Anyway, I'll miss her. [/quote] It would have been so much better if she simply wrote about it all more anonymously and left out photos of her girls and their names. She could have simply gone by Dooce and had an avatar or something. She did something useful and also incredibly destructive. She helped people feel less alone and also helped inspire more moms to exploit their children for fame and fortune.[/quote] People talk about her posting pictures of her kids like it is a massive moral infraction. Good grief. People who post white supremacist stuff online get more grace from some of you. A lot of us posted pictures of our kids on our blogs and wrote about their lives. For me and the vast majority of us the content wasn’t, “here is a personal problem Larla is having,” but things like “Larla tried solids for the first time today.” Having a blog was a wonderful way to not just keep in touch with family and friends but to connect to them more deeply, because I could tell stories about my life. It was a vital creative outlet at a time when I was a new SAHM mom feeling incredibly isolated. Once I heard about people misusing images of children I took them down, and I do think it would have been better had I never put them up. But as for the stories of my kids? I loved those and so do they. They have a great record of their earliest years. Would all this be worse if I found a way to monetize it? I would never do that for all sorts of reasons, but the content would still be there. Lots of us were guilty. One person who comes to mind is a vlogger (and can we just agree that family vlogs are way worse than mommy blogs?) who did a whole episode on her daughter shaving her legs for the first time. And I am sure that some people who loathe Dooce also post pictures of their own kids online. Dooce made big mistakes with her kids really didn’t deserve all the hate. Note: I was not inspired to write by Dooce. I don’t know about her until after I had already started blogging (and yes for the first few years I loved and was very inspired her content). Dooce may have been the first but I don’t think she ultimately made that big of a difference when it comes to how many moms share photos of their kids online. [/quote] What you're not saying is that you didn't monetize your children, and she did. I made money off my blog, a good amount, but that was before I had kids and even then, I was anonymous and registered my site through someone else.[/quote]
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