Friday, November 27, 2009

Hitting the Bottle: The rise and fall of the tipsy mommy blogger.

user



By Madeline Holler.

This spring, writer Stephanie Wilder-Taylor dropped a bombshell: she had quit drinking.


A mother of three daughters — 4-year-old Elby and twins toddlers, Matilda and Sadie — Wilder-Taylor wrote on her personal blog Baby on Bored:


"… I really like to drink. I like the way wine softens the edges, smoothes out the line between "their time" and "my time," helps me to feel relaxed, helps me tune out. But I drink too much. I drink seven nights a week. Sometimes just a glass of wine but usually two or even three. I always seem to have some sort of excuse like "today was an exceptionally stressful day so I deserve an extra glass now that it's all done … For me, it's become a nightly compulsion and I'm outing myself to you; all of you: I have a problem."


Moms with a drinking problem are nothing new (Joan Crawford, Betty Ford, Courtney Love, I could go on), but Wilder-Taylor's announcement was such a shocker for four very specific reasons: her two published and one forthcoming books Sippy Cups Are Not for Chardonnay; Naptime is the New Happy Hour; and It's Not Me It's You (subtitled: Subjective Recollections from a Terminally Optimistic, Chronically Sarcastic and Ocassionally Inebriated Woman), and her blog for MommyTrack'd Make Mine a Double: Tales of Twins and Tequila.


Wilder-Taylor liked to drink and had built a reputation on a stiff mix of booze and babies. By giving up alcohol, she was dropping a key ingredient of the persona she had created. She was also exposing the darker side of this parenting generation's signature drink — the always-appropriate cocktail.


This new generation of parents had defined itself, a drink in one hand and a teething ring in the other.
Earlier this decade, Wilder-Taylor had been part of a welcome revolution, one in which moms and dads, rather than big publishers, puritanical doctors and unimaginative magazine editors, were writing the last word on motherhood.


With my first pregnancy and birth in 2001, the go-to information for pregnant and new moms was all What to Expect When You're Expecting directives, such as eating toasted wheat germ on ice cream or asking my husband to sit in a closet to eat a pudding parfait. That and the Girlfriend's Guide to Pregnancy, whose author insisted a necktie and my husband's dress shirts made for kicky maternity wear.


Glossy magazines like Parents, Parenting and American Baby wrote "sleep when the baby sleeps" a thousand different ways. Editors featured page after page of pictorials demonstrating how to do yoga poses with a newborn balanced on my knees. Helpful? I suppose. Relatable? Not in the least.


Flash-forward to my second pregnancy in 2004. Whoa! Now who was in charge? Moms. Swearing, grousing, eye-rolling, totally imperfect moms, who, if the book jackets and titles meant anything, were nursing babies and cocktails — often at the same time.


Wilder-Taylor's Sippy Cups wasn't the first writer to bring parenting and drinking together in an aggressively blasé way. Two years before, Christie Mellor published The Three-Martini Playdate, soon followed by the Three-Martini Family Vacation. The cover of Brett Paesel's 2006 Mommies Who Drink: Sex, Drugs, and Other Distant Memories of an Ordinary Mom, copied Goodnight Moon's line-drawings and color scheme — only the quiet old lady whispering hush was loaded and wearing a lampshade. Somewhere in there, Robert Wilder wrote Daddy Needs a Drink.


So Daddy had a drink. Or two. Mommy did as well.


Alcohol-spiked words flowed, especially online in the most revolutionary form of parental expression: blogs. The "momtini" was coined. Blogger parents went on the Today Show to defend knocking back adult beverages at the end of the day. In "Cosmopolitan Moms," the New York Times featured an affluent suburban Philadelphia playgroup, which met weekly for wine and gross motor development.


This new generation of parents had defined itself, a drink in one hand and a teething ring in the other. The What to Expect books were now oversized coasters, keeping a dozen sweating cocktails from ruining the furniture.

So what does it mean that a defender of drinking-mom culture was admitting she had a problem? Did this casual attitude about parenting and drinking convince new parents they could raise the next generation completely sloshed?


If it did, then readers missed the point, the Three-Martini's Mellor says. Drinking, one of the few enjoyable grown-up activities that parents legally can't share with their young children, is a metaphor.


"No, I am not encouraging my readers to down a fifth of vodka at their toddler's playdate, it's about reclaiming our lives as adults," Mellor wrote in an email. "It used to be that when we had children they became part of the family. Now children are the shining center of the family's universe. I don't think it's helpful to the children, and I don't think it's good for parents either."


Tinkling cocktail parties represented adulthood for Mellor.


"At the time I wrote my first two books, it seemed to be the right metaphor; then suddenly bookstore shelves were groaning under the weight of amusing alcohol-themed parenting books. And now those authors who took their own advice too literally are jumping from the bandwagon to the wagon. The fact is, my books aren't about drinking; they're about not centering your entire life around your children."


Talking about drinking became an easy way to say "parenting is hard and exhausting."
The new mom-lit's trademark parenting juice turned into a dependency for other writers, too. Former Strollerderby blogger Rachael Brownell spent quite a bit of bandwidth preoccupied with drinking and defending parents who drink. She blogged about drinking and parenting, and drinking while parenting, all while she was drinking and blogging and raising three young girls.


"Getting loose makes writing feel rebellious and assures me I'm part of a revolution, where we talk and write about our kids but aren't afraid to assert our artistic, sexual, authentic selves over the din of our old lives falling away," she writes in her forthcoming memoir Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore. Nearly two years ago, like Wilder-Taylor, Brownell joined a 12-step program and gave up alcohol.


In an interview, Brownell said that writing about drinking made her feel a part of a group for the first time as a mother. Not only were writers like Wilder-Taylor talking about drinking, they were talking about being less-than perfect.


"All that language — 'mommy needs a drink' — all those books and blogs — that was someone coming in and letting some air out of this balloon of perfectionism. It wasn't just 'mommy needs a drink,' it's 'mommy needs a drink because the toddlers are talking about rubber bands again.'"


Talking about drinking became a quick and easy or less personal way to say "parenting is hard and exhausting," she said. "But that's not socially acceptable to say. What is acceptable to say is, 'I need a
drink.'"


If more high-profile parents come out as problem-drinkers will this change how we talk about parents and drinking? Can we expect to read Mommies Who Abstain? The Three Mocktini Playdate? Maybe. Still, the stressed-out, swilling mom meme continues.


Consider the recently published coffee-table book, If You Give a Mom a Martini: 100 Ways to Find 10 Blissful Minutes for Yourself. The cover of Chris Mancini's new parenting memoir Pacify Me: A Handbook for the Freaked Out New Dad features a six-pack, a baby bottle and a pacifier.


Nearly 71,500 Facebook users have become fans of "OMG I so need a glass of wine or I'm going to sell my kids." Then again, most of us can just check the streaming status updates, which, if you're FB friends with enough parents, starts looking like a drinks menu toward the later part of the day as everyone starts openly pining for a little "mommy medicine."



Read more here.

Syndication:

From the Community…

Be the first to comment on this post.

leave your comment

You must sign in to post a comment

Sign In for personalized information

New User? Sign Up

Updates Chatter on Shine…

Health Byte

Who doesn't want to look hot at all those holiday parties? ExerciseTV shares how to get in skinny jeans-shape -- and quickly!