Q
QuizBowlNerd
Guest
I sometimes come across things along the lines of “All women are mothers, regardless of whether they have children of their own. Teachers are mothers. Aunts are mothers. Nurses are mothers.” I’ll confess that as someone who is neither very maternal nor called to marriage, this has never really resonated with me. Obviously, everyone’s spirituality is their own business. If someone sees this as a part of who they are, I wish them the joy of it. What I am wondering is, as a Catholic woman, does it have to be part of my identity?
It has always seemed to me that aunts or teachers or mentors or what have you can certainly contribute something to one’s development, but they do so in ways unique to the roles they are playing. The love/insight/perspective of an aunt or a teacher is not and need not be the same as a mother’s. She enriches your life in a different and unique way, and that’s OK. In fact, that’s great. I have also never heard of uncles or male teachers being told this expresses their innate fatherhood or whatnot. Rather, when held by a man, it seems that these roles are taken at face value. Why the difference?
I do not mean to downplay the importance of motherhood. But calling every role a woman plays for the benefit of others by that name seems to me to pigeonhole the diversity of female contributions to the Kingdom–and in the process, to perhaps cheapen motherhood a bit. Am I off-base?
It has always seemed to me that aunts or teachers or mentors or what have you can certainly contribute something to one’s development, but they do so in ways unique to the roles they are playing. The love/insight/perspective of an aunt or a teacher is not and need not be the same as a mother’s. She enriches your life in a different and unique way, and that’s OK. In fact, that’s great. I have also never heard of uncles or male teachers being told this expresses their innate fatherhood or whatnot. Rather, when held by a man, it seems that these roles are taken at face value. Why the difference?
I do not mean to downplay the importance of motherhood. But calling every role a woman plays for the benefit of others by that name seems to me to pigeonhole the diversity of female contributions to the Kingdom–and in the process, to perhaps cheapen motherhood a bit. Am I off-base?