The Silent Mother

Esoteric & Historical Gravidity & Parturition

  • Discourse
    • All Topics
    • Advisement
    • Birth is Beautiful
    • Dirty Secrets
    • History
    • Medical Museums
    • Personal Collection
  • About
    • Author
  • Shop
    • Etsy Shop
    • eBay Shop
  • Publications
    • Occupational Bloggings
    • Further Treatises
  • Resources
  • Contact
    • Donate

Boots On, Under My Desk, Protesting Against Pronatalism

May 15, 2025 By Deena Leave a Comment

Boots on the ground, The Silent Mother, "Boots On, Under My Desk, Protesting Against Pronatalism"

It has been three years since I’ve written a post. Suffice it to say that I fell away from certain things that were important to me while at the same time finding other, new priorities. Anger, frustration, and the current state of affairs here in the US has brought me back. I can’t always be a boots-on-the-ground protestor for women’s rights (and yes, that includes transwomen too). I often feel disheartened by the lack of progress, lets call it “screaming into the void,” made by these protests.

Although there are any number of things that spark my fury and frustration with the current administration, I intend to keep my focus narrow and do what I do best. This next series of posts will focus on pronatalism, because politics invades every aspect of our reproductive and parenting lives. The level of paternalistic control levied by this administration seeps in like tentacles searching for food within the crevices of an undersea coral. In 2025, these tentacles are those of hydra. As individuals we can’t handle all of them at once, but if we tackle them one at a time, we will be successful. Narrowing our focus, being experts in our fields, fighting for one cause, not one hundred, will bring us incrementally to success.

My boots are laced upon my feet, under my desk in my home office. March with me.

Do share this article with your friends.

Filed Under: All Topics, Politics Tagged With: Politics, Pronatalism

Elizabeth Warren’s Plan to Penalize Hospitals Will Not Help Black Mothers

April 25, 2019 By Deena Leave a Comment

Truly, I do like Elizabeth Warren as a Democratic candidate for president in 2020. She’s said a number of things that jive with the direction I’d like to see this country move. However, upon reading this article from CNN this morning, I find that she’s made a statement that sounds really great on paper about reducing maternal mortality among black women. However, when you look at the high level, talking points plan, it falls very short of the mark and smacks of a lack of in depth understanding of the issue of why black mothers die at a rate of four times higher than the rate of their white counterparts.

Photo by Thiago Borges from Pexels

Her approach, according the article is to reward hospitals financially for reducing rates of black maternal mortality while reducing funding and financially penalizing hospitals that don’t reduce rates of black maternal mortality.

This sounds an awful lot like “No Child Left Behind” where failing schools are penalized financially and the best schools are rewarded. This cycle perpetuates the poor schools by not granting them the resources needed to do better. It’s no different with her hospital plan.

Penalizing hospitals will mean they may close their maternity units, thus reducing access to care. Most maternity units cost hospitals money, they aren’t money makers. Many rural hospitals have closed or consolidated their maternity units to urban centers, leaving women with drive times of an hour or more for prenatal care, let alone for birth. Better access to care is imperative.

This country is also short about 100,000 obstetricians. We would do well to have thousands more midwives in this country too, to provide care. Midwives are lower cost and have a different model of care for their patients with better outcomes. More providers isn’t enough of a solution. We need to work with the providers we have currently too.

Warren is correct in that we need better education for all medical providers on the issues of race and medical care. However, this is much deeper than cultural competency. Competency is what Warren showed us – she understands there is an issue and it needs to be fixed. Cultural humility is what is truly needed to cover the complexity of human identity and experience. It includes life long learning, mitigating the power imbalances between patient and provider and the institution needs to change. (credit to Melanie Tervalon and Jann Murray-Garcia) For more information please do watch their video on the topic.

This issue of systemic racism starts well before black women are pregnant and in need of prenatal care and care during childbirth. Our medical system has erroneous beliefs about black women’s bodies that go back generations. Please do read “Medical Bondage: Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology” by Deirdre Cooper Owens if you’d like an in depth, academic history of why and how these beliefs came about and the impact they have currently on black women’s healthcare.

Warren’s response is a gross oversimplification of a problem of endemic racism and weathering in the black community. This penalizing of hospitals won’t solve it. Quite frankly its a panacea. It sounds great, but won’t make the change she’s seeking.

Warren needs to look to the places like the CMQCC and other similar state programs to see what’s working and what’s not. The March for Moms and their team of experts, who have a much deeper understanding of the issues than I do, should be consulted as well. She needs a panel of people who are experts in their fields to consult with and who will initiate evidence based plans to combat maternal mortality specifically among black women.

This issue isn’t as simple as “we’ll charge them money for not making improvements.” See how well that works for the EPA and big polluters. It’s cheaper to pay the fine than to make the change. Making real change, with a multi-factor, nuanced issue like this isn’t easy or straightforward. It will take time, expertise, education and a whole lot of people to admit they have racial biases and are willing to make the change needed.

Warren’s acknowledgement of the issue of black maternal mortality is a good start. However, humility is knowing what you don’t know and where and from whom to seek help. Warren needs help to make real change. I hope she asks for it from the right people.

Become a Patron!
Do share this article with your friends.

Filed Under: All Topics, Politics Tagged With: black mother, maternal mortality, Politics, racism

Arise: Sleeping Beauties No More

November 10, 2016 By Deena 2 Comments

Like Briar Rose, we have been asleep, protected by the thorns and brambles of our self-selected insular communities in which our beliefs and feelings are constantly validated. We ‘unfriend’ or ‘unfollow’ those with whom we disagree – growing our brambles denser over time. We choose the veil of emotional safety rather than take the risk of engaging in conversation with those who believe differently. We protect our fragile egos and assume everything will be all right because we can only see what is within the confines of our homegrown thorns and brambles. Our hubris blinded us, such that we did not see the aura which envelops our American landscape.

Sleeping Beauty, Briar Rose

In the cold, dark pre-dawn hours of Wednesday morning our edifice of thorns and brambles was ripped open with the news of Trump’s victory. We were awakened by an unwanted, unasked for kiss of a harsh new reality.

In our slumber, we dismissively believed that our constructed walls and our thorny attitudes were enough. We rested on our laurels granted to us by our mothers and grandmothers.

Somehow, in the intervening years, we forgot. We forgot what our mothers marched for and what our grandmothers fought for. We forgot that it took a struggle to even be able to wear pants, let alone a pantsuit. We are spoiled, my Gen X compatriots and my Millennial sisters. Our great conceit is that we take for granted the advances made by previous generations of American women.

My own mother was a member of NOW, NCJW, and the ACLU among other groups. She marched as an activist and advocate for women’s rights and equal rights for all. She successfully sued an employer in the 1970’s because her male colleagues were paid more than she was. She not only contributed financially to the groups and movements she supported, but she actively recruited new members and did grassroots work.

Her mother, my grandmother, met my grandfather at a socialist political rally in the late 1940’s. The two of them were politically active liberals for the entirety of their lives. My grandmother wore her pantsuits in the 1930’s and took to local elected offices in the 1960’s. She was brash and loud about her beliefs and worked to move things forward for all of us.

My paternal grandmother worked in Washington in the 1940’s until a pregnancy outside of marriage caused her to lose her job. She was an active member of the Democratic party until her descent into Alzheimer’s. She hosted dinners and rallies at her home and campaigned door to door for the candidates who supported progressive agendas.

Those women of my past worked diligently for the rights we now fear to lose. However, we quietly acquiesced to small injustices made against women including both our reproductive rights and, principally, our equal human rights.

We sat and did nothing as state by state, piecemeal, our rights have been chipped away.

Someone else will fix it. It’s not my job. Let NARAL and Planned Parenthood handle this.

A minor change of wording to a law here and there do little harm, so why fight it?

It’s still OK.  

The small downshift in the number of weeks of pregnancy that abortion is acceptable.

It seems to makes sense, right? We can still have abortions, except for when we can’t.

Hobby Lobby winning their case to not cover birth control for their employees due to their CEO’s religious beliefs.

Well, it sucks, but what are you going to do?

These seemingly small shifts affect someone else, you see, not me. Till it does.

Martin Niemoller first they came.

This death of our rights and our humanity is a death by a thousand cuts.

This is the insidious crawl of misogyny, writhing underneath the sheet of illusory safety draped upon us by men who truly believe they know what is best for women’s bodies.

It is the misogyny enforced with smug arrogance by the women who believe their religion or their tradition grant them the power to impose their way of life upon others.

I put my boots on the ground during March for Women's Lives in DC in April 2003
I put my boots on the ground during March for Women’s Lives in DC in April 2003

Our fore-mothers put their big girl pants on to actively work for change. I call on you, my sisters and compatriots, to cut away your own protective brambles, to move from the perceived safety of your self-constructed segments of reality.

I call on you now – put your money where your mouth is, lace up your boots and work to further progress. Take the risk. Open yourself up to the possibility of making this country a better place for all people.

My boots are already on my feet. I am ready.

Please support The Silent Mother by becoming a patron through Patreon.

Your generous donation allows me to keep writing.

Patreon donation Silent Mother

Do share this article with your friends.

Filed Under: Advisement, All Topics Tagged With: Call to Action, Feminism, Human Rights, Politics, Pro-choice, Reproductive Rights, Women's Rights

Follow Us

Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On InstagramVisit Us On TwitterVisit Us On YoutubeCheck Our FeedVisit Us On Pinterest

Subscribe to The Silent Mother

Receive our blog posts in your in-box so you never miss a thing.


Donate

Please support The Silent Mother through Ko-fi.

Your generous donation allows me to keep writing.

Topics

Altruism Antique Medical Equipment Birth Control Bodily Autonomy Childbirth Childbirth Education Contraception Dear Diary Death Dr. Grantly Dick-Read Education Eugenics Faith Feminism Giving Birth With Confidence Good Girl Historical Fiction History of Pregnancy & Childbirth Human Rights IUD Labor Lamaze Medical Anthropology Medicine Motherhood Natural Childbirth Obstetrics Pain Personal Collection Physician Planned Parenthood Pleasure Politics Preaching Pregnancy Pro-choice Public Health Religion Reproductive Rights science Scopolamine Sexuality Twilight Sleep videos Women's Rights

Copyright © 2025 · Deena Blumenfeld · The Silent Mother

Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On InstagramVisit Us On TwitterVisit Us On YoutubeCheck Our FeedVisit Us On Pinterest