4.6.4 AWHN Conference 6 2010 Chancellor 6:
Lesbians negotiating parenting Overcoming biologically based cultural prescriptions of parental and household roles
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4.6.4 Rhonda Brown
1. Lesbians negotiating parenting
Overcoming biologically based cultural
prescriptions of parental and household roles
Rhonda Brown
Senior Lecturer
School of Nursing and Midwifery
2. Lesbians parenting
• Lesbians bring children into their relationships
to instant families
• Plan to have children in their relationships
• Parent and plan to have children as solo
parents
• They are creative and flexible ‘do family’ and
negotiate parenting relationships
• I will focus on the instant family and planned
lesbian families from 25 Victoria families
3. Forming families outside the
mainstream
• Must overcome socially and culturally
constructed scripts of mothering and parenting
• The decision to have children, or enter
relationship with children, inevitably involve
negotiation of relationships and roles
• These decisions will impact on family concept,
family functioning and parental roles (Baetens, 2002)
• Concepts not well defined for lesbians
4. Breaking the mould
• Outside gendered understandings of parenting allows
for greater flexibility and creativity in choices in family
structures and parenting arrangements
• More choices - who will give birth, sharing domestic
labour, time spent inside and outside the home, who to
involve
• Have more egalitarian couple and parenting
relationship – because they are not bound by
traditional and gendered roles -although birth
mother’s spend more time doing childcare
5. Achieving egalitarian relationships is not
without its challenges
• Must overcome socially and biologically constructed
scrips which influence their own ideas about
motherhood and parenting
• It takes a conscious and deliberate effort to counter
these scripts that otherwise prescribe role relationships
(Dalton & Bielby, 2000, p. 41)
6. Parenting Intention & Organising
Parenting
• Parenting intention is a significant factor in how family
and parenting is organised
• ‘Parenting intention’ - the negotiated role and desired
level of involvement of each of couple
• Also extends to the desired and negotiated level of
involvement of biological fathers
• Parenting intention varies across families and across
different types of family
• Beyond ‘intention’ is parenting ‘organisation’ when
they consolidate family life and how parenting and
domestic labour is negotiated and plays out
7. Forming the instant family
• When children are brought to the relationship couples
will be negotiating parenting from the beginning of
their couple relationship - there is little time to be a
couple
• They have not planned to have children, the birth
mother’s partner may never have imagined having
children or birth mothers imagined sharing parenting
• They need to negotiate the level of involvement the
new partner will have in parenting and her relationship
with the children, which may also involve negotiating
with the children and their non resident parent
8. Negotiating step-parenting with another
woman
• High expectations that women will take on a
‘mothering’ role in heterosexual stepfamilies, but
different when there is already a mother
• Some expected to or expected to take on a role in
parenting, some did not want to, some thought their
partners expected too much or too little, some
involved in parenting activities but not considered
parent
• Maureen
• Liz, Susan, Nikki, Peta
9. Step parenting
• Striving for and achieving equality in their
relationships, not necessarily in parenting
• The younger the children the more likely the partner
would be involved
• Expectations greater for women than men - expected
to be caring and nurturing, at the very least understand
the significance of the mother/child relationship
• Involving another woman could be perceived as a
potential threat because the children already had a
mother
• Led to some difficulties negotiating a role and place in
the family
10. Planning and having children
• Begin from a more equal position as planned together
• Face similar issues to any prospective parents - how it
will affect their relationship, financial concerns,
whether they will be good parents
• Have more choices - will both be birth mothers, who
will get pregnant first, how they will create their family
with a known or unknown donor, the level he will be
involved in the family
11. Will also face different challenges to
other couples
• More likely to encounter varied attitudes about their
decision to parent, confronted with their own and
others’ attitudes and beliefs about lesbian mothers
• Challenges regarding rights, responsibilities, social and
legal status as a family
• More need to negotiation of roles without scripts
• NBMs some (7 or 13) ambivalence about having
children –motherhood and being lesbians seemed at
odds, hadn’t imagined having children
– Mauve and Janet
• Spend a long time a long time planning and
considering their options
12. Parenting intention in planned lesbian
families
• Once decision made likely that intention was to share
parenting equally than in step families where the role
of the non birth mother was not always clearly defined
(11 of 13)
• In two non birth mothers remained ambivalent until
after their child was born - Libby
13. Motivation for being equally involved
• To ensure a clear place for non birth mothers in their
children’s lives not only for within their family but so
they would also be recognised as mothers outside the
family
• Non birth mothers seeking to facilitate bonding with
their children
14. Overcoming traditional prescribed roles
• Doing more cuddling and settling – “cuddle momma”,
night feeds
• Taking on more childcare on weekends
• Changing paid work arrangements to spend more time
at home
• Choice of language mummy and mummy, mummy
and mumma, choice of the same surname
• Flexible work arrangements so they could both spend
more time at home
• Taking on the primary caregiver ‘at home’ role
15. Striving for equality not without its
challenges
• Need to negotiate and re-negotiate roles as the needs
of children changed
• Needed to overcome biological roles e.g. dependence
on birth mother for breast feeding could undermine a
sense of equality
• Needing to overcome assumptions about mothering
16. Overcoming social assumptions
• Parenting organised around particular interests rather
than prescribe roles
• Showing children women can meet the family needs –
domestic tasks, childcare, home maintenance, working
in paid workforce
• Sharing the time spent at home and in the paid
workforce
• Presenting publically as a family
• Equality does not mean sharing all household tasks
and childcare responsibilities equally
17. Overcoming socially constructed scripts
of fatherhood
• Creative ways of involving donors and fathers
• Level of contact determined by ‘parenting’ intention,
role and place in the family
• Language played a part - donor dad, biological father, friend,
uncle, Mike, father (more likely to be in stepfamilies)
• Few involved in parenting in planned families, more
likely in step families
• Facilitated social rather than parenting relationships
• Separated biology and the caring practices of
parenting – this distinction is more likely in planned
rather than step families
18. In Summary
• Mothers in de novo families did strive for and believed
they are achieving equality within their relationships
• Couples in stepfamilies strive for and achieve equality
within their relationships but not necessarily in
parenting
• Non-birth mothers worked hard at being involved as
equally as possible in the planning, nurturing and
caring for children
• Being involved as equally as possible was not only
important to secure the NBMs place within their family,
but also so others in the outside recognised them as
mothers
Editor's Notes
e.g. Maureen was expected to take on a mothering role in her lesbian relationship as she had in her previous heterosexual step family, but her partner was more hesitant
e.g. Liz didn’t want her partner to have a role with her children, Susan expected her partner would, Nikki’s partner did have a role in some parenting activities but not considered a parent
Janet: Maeve was much stronger, had a much stronger feeling that she wanted to be a birth mother. I was a bit ambivalent about that and certainly in the period leading up to us actually making the decision we had some fairly difficult times, the most difficult times of our relationship, um and um that was partly me running from the idea, being pretty scared about it, about us actually having our own kids …
And then I just, you know, in the delivery room … and look I just, [I had] this moment with him, where, you know? That’s what I mean. Suddenly there’s the person and, you know, there’s a being, there’s a newborn baby. And you know which kind of grows and becomes more and more a part of things. And, so, um, gosh I was just trying to remember. It was, but it was quite big anyway. So I was just sort of holding him and I actually, um sort of in my heart made this promise to take care of him … yeah, which wasn’t something that I kind of thought about. It was just kind of what happened for me, really. That was kind of inspired by him.
Beth:So yeah I want to be yeah, be as equally involved. Because I am not the biological mother for me it means more to actually um, I mean not that I wouldn’t, but you know, make sure that I am in there doing as much as I can … I need to get in there and bond with this child as much as I can, you know, so I won’t be on the outer, and so it won’t just be bonded to Maggie.
Ella was challenged by her own assumptions of motherhood
Ella:Consequently I had assumptions that I had, that I really wasn’t aware of that … because I was a mother, because I’m a woman I’m a mother, therefore, babies bond with their mothers therefore, Elizabeth would bond with me in the same sense that she would bond with Sally. That clearly wasn’t the case in our scenario. Elizabeth was very attached to breastfeeding, didn’t really finish until she was two and a half.