invisible employee
Last night I attended a friend of a friends work in progress performance at The Flynn Space. It was great to be out. All sorts of people from the theatre community were there. There were 4 actors in the show. Three of them were women my age. None of them had children. Before the show started I met another colleague (who does not have children) and we caught up on our current work lives....where she was teaching and how busy she was. Before we said our goodbyes and returned to our seats she told me how she was acting in a show soon..."I think it's really important to act if you are going to be an acting teacher. I don't want to be one of those teachers who doesn't do what they teach." "No, me neither." I said, after a long pause in which I reflected on the amount of performance opportunities I have had to turn down since having children....how it has been 4 years since I have acted....how nobody knows about all those possible shows that didn't happen and how the requests have stopped coming in. Parenting is so humbling, so ego less. I hate these moments where I feel I am being measured up, whether that is true or not...and there is this whole giant piece of work that I am doing....this thing that keeps me up at night...this constant responsibility that not only consumes my time and energy but my thoughts and concerns, filling me with decisions and a constant sense of responsibility....this amazing act or raising another human being...well, it just doesn't fit into the conversation. It is as if this thing that I am doing with my life right now is invisible....is mundane...is ordinary...it doesn't count. It gets a small acknowledgement in the "so what are doing these days" conversation, if that. "oh, yeah, you are home with your children." Therefore, you are disappearing off the professional charts....falling behind on your resume....missing out on the latest trainings and opportunities....becoming mundane....redundant. Yes, this is my bleak reflection at this moment....I almost cried after this conversation....after this event. It wasn't that I was jealous, it was that I felt that I wasn't fully seen.....I felt misunderstood. As I wipe up the third spill of juice and clean bits of play dough out of my rug and have my baby run away with the toilet paper or pull things out of the trash or scatter the Tupperware that I just put away....I can't help but envision all those childless colleagues of mine just waking up and checking their e-mail and drinking their tea with music on in the background or going for a run or to a yoga class or networking to get their next job and I feel petty and I feel that it just isn't fair.
I love my boys. Honestly, I don't want it any other way. I just wish that this work that I am doing didn't feel so damn invisible and unrecognized. It seems the greatest irony to me that I am working the hardest I have ever worked in my life on the most intense and relentless job and to those without children I am still viewed as "no working" or unemployed". So what do we do to change this? Nobody would deny, logically, that raising children is incredibly important work...yet it still feels so invisible.....why?
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