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Two Moms and a Weed-Wacker

So I’ll admit this up front: I’ve never been a big fan of Mother’s Day or Father’s Day. In my Jewish home growing up, they were really just two days to feel a little more guilty than we did the rest of the year. And after we lost my mother to breast cancer in ’04, Mother’s Day was just another day to get through.

Then I became a mother, a gift for which I am ever grateful. But let me quickly dispel the notion that for two-mom families, Mother’s Day is double the fun. It’s not—because unless your kids are old enough to wait on you, there’s nobody to do the grunt work. You either have to split the day in half or take turns celebrating odd and even years, which doesn’t work because nobody can ever remember who got last year. Or you can just spend the day feigning generosity and secretly feeling resentful that nobody is serving you breakfast in bed. Any which way you slice it, it’s not even half the fun Hallmark said it would be.

And then there’s Father’s Day. Our girls are still pretty young—six and three—so we haven’t had much of an issue with it, but in the back of my mind, the fear has lurked: Will they have the wherewithal to respond to any insensitive comments? Will they feel like they’re missing out, in the way that I always wanted a pony?

Adding to my concerns is the fact that ours is one of very few LGBT families at Golda Och Academy, the Jewish day school formerly known as Solomon Schechter, where our six-year-old, Maya, is finishing up kindergarten. We knew that going in, but since the school was welcoming and the dual curriculum means a lot to us, we decided to go ahead with it. Our strategy was to be hyper-vigilant and proactive about educating parents and teachers about our family, and correct stereotypes when necessary. All year, I’ve laid in figurative wait, like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Gay-Mom, ready to rescue our daughter from the clutches of heterosexist tyranny. But no such incidents have been reported or otherwise noted. So far, Maya has felt just like everybody else, only with two moms instead of one. Plus, she knows how to say, “it’s foggy out” in Hebrew.

But I'll admit I’ve felt a bit of extra trepidation leading up to Father’s Day. What if poor Maya had to spend all day reading quietly in the corner while the rest of the kids made sequin-covered cards and handcrafted paperweights for their dads? Instead, I got a surprising phone call from my daughter’s Hebrew teacher who wanted to discuss the Father’s Day art project the students were scheduled to make this week. She was concerned that Maya might feel left out and offered to lobby that the project be renamed “Yom Hamishpacha,” or Family Day, as it is celebrated in Israel. I thanked her for her concern and for being so solicitous and said that my daughter had two living grandfathers and either one would be delighted to receive the gift. In the end, just like on Mother’s Day, Maya had double the work. It’s a lucky thing that girl loves a glue stick.

Some will undoubtedly consider this teacher’s offer to be overly P.C. Why deprive other children of the opportunity to celebrate their fathers simply because she doesn’t have one? I personally know lots of wonderful, loving dads who more than deserve a day of praise for all they do and I certainly plan to call my own dear father on Sunday morning to tell him I love him and wish him a good round of golf.

On the other hand, do we really need a designated day to express gratitude to our parents? Isn’t it just a day of penance we offer in exchange for a year of neglect, kind of like going to confession? And if the day causes more pain to those who can’t celebrate it than joy to those who can, should it even exist? Because let’s face it, folks—not every Mother’s Day or Father’s Day is happy. And I don’t mean for my children, who are lucky enough to have two living, loving parents. I mean for those who have lost a parent, like my late brother’s four young children after his brief but brave battle with cancer a decade ago. Or all the children who have suffered abuse or neglect at the hands of a parent or whose parents disowned them after they came out as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgendered, or for any other reason. I’m thinking of those parents who have lived through the worst tragedy of all—the loss of a child—and for whom this day will never, ever be the same.

And then there is the rampant commercialization that seems to squash the intended depth and meaning from every holiday that has ever made it onto the calendar. In little known fact, the mother of Mother’s Day, Anna Jarvis, disavowed her own creation for this very reason. After her own mother died in 1905, Jarvis crusaded tirelessly to have Mother’s Day nationally recognized as a solemn day of appreciation for mothers, living or not. In 1914, she got her wish when President Woodrow Wilson signed a congressional resolution designating the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day. But by 1923, seeing the giddy, commercial monster it had become, she renounced the holiday, and spent the rest of her life and her family’s fortune fighting to dismantle it. She lamented that she’d “wanted it to be a day of sentiment, not a day of profit,” and called printed greeting cards “a poor excuse for the letter you are too lazy to write.” But, of course, the nascent gift and greeting card industry marched enthusiastically past her, strengthening as it went. Once her trademark was coopted, she never stood a chance.

So what, then? Replace Mother’s Day and Father’s Day with National Caregiver Day? Ban these days outright? Lobby for the separation of parenthood and state so that no schoolchildren are ever again forced to cut out construction-paper hearts for Grandma Sylvia when secretly they despise her? 

Perhaps a bit extreme. Instead, I propose we widen the scope of these days. By all means, let’s take our dads and husbands to brunch and buy them Home Depot appliances and fancy tie clips. (Or, for those gay dads out there, Le Creuset and theater tickets. And possibly fancy tie clips.) Let’s tell them we love them and appreciate them, not just on the third Sunday in June, but every day.

And then let’s also make room in the tent for those whose Father’s Day might be marked by sadness, grief or regret. Let’s reach out to them with a compassionate word and let them know we see them, too. I teared up after my conversation with Maya’s teacher, not because she’d offered to reinvent the holiday, but because I knew my child’s unique experience was being recognized. That may well be the gift with the lowest price tag and the farthest reach.

So for all those celebrating, a very happy Father’s Day to you! And for those who are just trying to get through it, remember tomorrow is another day. And those cordless weed-wackers will probably still be on sale at Home Depot.

Deborah Goldstein

9:58 am on Friday, June 15, 2012

I love the idea of Family Day! Well-meaning shop keepers and neighbors wish us a happy day, and I smile and thank them much as I do those who wish me a Merry Christmas in December. Thanks for the thoughtful post and the nod to Anna Jarvis!

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Kim Possible

9:58 am on Friday, June 15, 2012

Having inadequate (though live) parents who rarely bother to acknowledge my birthday, I always had a hate on for these holidays that said I should bow & thank them for existing. Imagine my joy in becoming a mom and facing the Two Mom problem so well described here. I wanted "awesome primary caregiver" day all to myself. Or for it to be abolished. How can we Occupy Mother's Day & make it something else?

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Ellen

10:31 am on Friday, June 15, 2012

This made me laugh and cry at the same time. Thanks.

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Jan

12:25 pm on Friday, June 15, 2012

I agree, abolish it and appreciate your parents (and spouse) every day! Hate the commercial nature of the whole thing!

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Michael Suchman

10:48 am on Saturday, June 16, 2012

And for those of us with dogs rather than kids who still have to buy mother's day cards for our sisters/sisters-in-law or father's day cards for our brothers/brothers-in-law and get nothing in return, it is really unfair. My dog could walk at around a week old, slept through the night at 8 weeks old, could be left alone for a few hours at 2 months old, can you say that about kids? When my dogs are sick, I worry, I rush them to the doctor. I make sure they are fed, clean, well behaved and friendly to people. They love me unconditionally and I love them and would do anything for them. If that isn't being a father I don't know what is. Yet no one ever thinks to get me a card or gift on Father's day.

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Karen Banda

2:00 pm on Saturday, June 16, 2012

Michael, happy Father's Day! You are indeed a dad in every sense of the word. People who know and love animals and appreciate others who do have no problem acknowledging "parental responsibilities" and wishing each other Happy Father or Mother's Day. Too many people who do get the cards and gifts don't care for their own children as well as pet parents do. I

montclairdad

6:17 pm on Saturday, June 16, 2012

Wait, gay dads don't like brunch and Home Depot appliances? Why not?

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Eddy B

11:25 pm on Sunday, June 17, 2012

Great article. I love Father's Day and had a meaningful and joyous one today with my Dad and with my kids. I understand that it puts people in non-traditional families and with deceased parents in an awkward position. But banning or diluting it would undermine the joy and family togetherness it can bring -- even to non-traditional families as CJ shows in this article (making gifts to grandfathers). CJ, your kids will be older one day and will make you breakfast in bed and will carry that memory with them forever. Maybe Mother's Day, maybe Father's Day, but holidays bring spice to life and you can always tell your kids you want a real, homemade card, not one from Hallmark.

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Abbey Road

11:25 pm on Sunday, June 17, 2012

Thank you CJ, I loved this post. It reminded me of a lovely card I got last mother's day - it was so special because it came from my grown step daughter and step grandaughter many states away and the first acknowledgement of me as part of their lives after nearly fifteen years. This "holiday" can be an opportunity sometimes. Peace.

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Alicia R. Camlibel, Ph.D., LPC

9:01 pm on Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Nicely written article. It is so true that Father's Day just like Mother's Day and many holidays are marked with not only sadness but stress, regret, lonliness, etc and that we all need to be aware of this and remember that few people have the Hallmark family that is depicted on cards and commercials. I think that we need to remember to approach these holidays as an opportunity to be together as a family whether it be a biological one or a chosen one and thank the people who love us and support us no matter what.

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TCG

10:45 am on Wednesday, June 20, 2012

My only thought on this is a simple one. Amidst all the hustle and bustle of our daily lives, can we please ask our local leagues, teams and coaches to stop scheduling games, practices, recitals, etc on Mother's and Father's Day? These are days during which mom and/or dad ought to have the option to truly do whatever they want with or without their families. God knows we are all overscheduled as it is. How about a break on the two days invented to provide us exactly that - a break?

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Elizabeth Moore

12:23 am on Thursday, June 21, 2012

Wow, so thoughtful and well-written. Can personally appreciate this since my dad is deceased, but before that was also absent for many years. Thanks for voicing the feelings many of us have.

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mark haefeli

12:40 pm on Friday, June 22, 2012

Equating the natural biological order for the inherent desire of a father, with the fantasy of wanting a pony, is outrageous!

No one suggests that anyone need participate in designated, or traditional, holiday's. It's all in the interpretation.

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Monk

8:10 am on Saturday, June 23, 2012

Does no one else see the contradiction when some distinctive group — the LGBT crowd in this instance — (1) wants to be accepted for who they are and then (2) proposes that some institution — Mother's Day or Father's Day here — be changed into something more universal and less distinct?

Taken to its logical conclusion, this thinking would result in one Universal Everything Day.

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