The next few weeks are going to be filled with stuff, lots of good stuff, but still crazy. Things will settle down on April 2. Seriously.

First, tomorrow is the conference I’ve organized. This weekend (through Tues.), I’m headed to Grad School city to meet with my dissertation committee. Mr. Geeky leaves the day after I get back for his own conference. Two days after he leaves is the school talent show, which Geeky Girl is participating in again. A week after that, I’m headed to SXSW Interactive. (Man, am I excited about that!) Things are semi-calm for a couple of weeks until Proposals and intern applications for the annual summer program are due 3 days after I return. I will have to conduct student interviews and decide which proposals to accept by April 15th at the latest. On March 31st, I head to Mt. Holyoke for a workshop on Women’s Public Voices as part of a grant I’m participating in. Oh, and I’m leading a session on blogging at that one.

Writing all that down wears me out. But, I’m really, really excited by it all. Some of these things I pursued on my own, but some I just fell into. I have to say, I really feel like I’m doing what fulfills me. Someone said to me today, “You look really happy and relaxed. What’s going on?” I don’t really know except that I just feel in a groove right now.

I was having an email exchange with some folks about cocomment and I finally got around to signing up for an account. While I was tinkering around, I also ran into Commentosphere. Both sites are an attempt to syndicate everything you say everywhere. A neat idea in theory. I’ve been wanting something like this for a while. Often the comments I make elsewhere are related to things I’m discussing here and maybe people who visit here would be interested in those conversations as well. You can see an example of what cocomment does in my sidebar.

The sucky thing is that neither program works well with Haloscan. Sure, I can manually enter comments from Haloscan into Commentosphere, but I’m just not going to go to all that effort. It appears that Cocomment is working on this issue, so maybe this will work soon. And if any of you more techie people out there have any answers or workarounds, I’d love to hear them.

Geeky Girl is glued to the Olympics right now. We caught her watching them up on Geeky Boy’s tv which gets two channels (not clearly). So we agreed to record some of them for her. When they came on and did the preview of what was going to be on, Geeky Girl shouted, “Hey, Mom, it’s all girls!” Kind of breaks your heart.

Mr. Geeky and I were lamenting that we hadn’t really gotten into the Olympics. We both have fond memories of the 1976 Olympics, how we all watched them as a family and cheered on our favorites. There is something heartening about cheering for someone to achieve their dreams.

I’ve just returned from a rally mostly for Lois Murphy, running for the 6th Congressional District, and Joe Sestak, running in my district, the 7th. One thing that’s interesting about being involved in local politics is realizing that these people are human beings who are not perfect. After both Lois and Joe gave brief speeches, Ed Rendell took the stage. He reframed the debate in some interesting ways. For example, he spoke of seeing spending as investment. He also talked about the immorality of pro-lifers who claim to value human life but then cut funding for WIC, for Medicaid, for education. Say what will about Rendell, he is a good speaker.

I couldn’t find the camera before I left, but I think I saw the back of Eric’s head as he was snapping a photo of Rendell.

Update: It appears Atrios was there.

On the mommy track at Bitch Ph.D.
(can’t get the specific post to link). It’s the latest today.

On the “choices” mothers have for employment: mamazine :: Breeder Cow: If I Were President

I appear in a dream at Running*Cooking*Writing: When bloggers invade your dreams

I’m headed to a political rally later today (after revising chapter 2 and giving it to my local readers–Yay!!!) I’ll see Gov. Rendell and some other dems. Will report back with pictures. In the meantime, entertain yourselves with the links above.

Your #1 Match: INFP

The Idealist

You are creative with a great imagination, living in your own inner world.
Open minded and accepting, you strive for harmony in your important relationships.
It takes a long time for people to get to know you. You are hesitant to let people get close.
But once you care for someone, you do everything you can to help them grow and develop.

You would make an excellent writer, psychologist, or artist.

Your #2 Match: INTP

The Thinker

You are analytical and logical – and on a quest to learn everything you can.
Smart and complex, you always love a new intellectual challenge.
Your biggest pet peeve is people who slow you down with trivial chit chat.
A quiet maverick, you tend to ignore rules and authority whenever you feel like it.

You would make an excellent mathematician, programmer, or professor.

Your #3 Match: ENFP

The Inspirer

You love being around people, and you are deeply committed to your friends.
You are also unconventional, irreverant, and unimpressed by authority and rules.
Incredibly perceptive, you can usually sense if someone has hidden motives.
You use lots of colorful language and expressions. You’re qutie the storyteller!

You would make an excellent entrepreneur, politician, or journalist.

Our Tivo updated last night and added some really cool features. My favorite? Podcasts! I was even able to add my own url. I can’t tell you how cool I think this is. You can also search theater listings and even buy tickets. It’s obviously a deal they’ve cut with Yahoo. I’m sure some Silicon Valley type wrote about this months ago, but it’s much more fun to see it live and in person. I heart Tivo!

That’s all have to say. I hate arranging figures. The stupid program crashes every single time. I shook my fists at the computer, but apparently it didn’t feel threatened enough. Time for food, I guess.

  • Should I work on chapter 2 of the dissertation or go to the grocery store? It’s true we only have peanut m&m’s and coke to eat, but it’s also true that I’ll be a little behind on my (self-imposed) schedule.
  • Should I organize my office so I know where my books and articles actually are or should I do a load of laundry? It’s true that Geeky Boy has taken to digging through the baskets searching for anything remotely clean, but it’s also true that I need to start thinking about the next chapter and to do that, I need to collect everything.
  • If I go to the grocery store, should I buy stuff that’s good for us or stuff that’s easy to make (note that I’m not a skilled enough cook that easy and good for you are one in the same)? It’s true that lately we’ve been surviving on pasta and pizza, but it’s also true that I’m feeling lazy and we’re all blessed with good metabolism.

Update: Decided I could squeeze one more pasta meal out of the ingredients in the cabinet. Ordered groceries online. Now I can focus on the dissertation tomorrow. Aren’t rationalizations grand?

Ironically, before the whole explosion of posts over housework on the internets occurred, I attended a talk about social policies and gender equity. And then, I went to another one. The first talk occurred within the framework of emergence (the idea that simple rules can lead to complex systems). The argument was that social policies, such as one finds in Sweden and Norway, that are meant to “force” gender equity within the household and within the workplace end up reinforcing gender inequity. Why? Because women take advantage of such policies much more often than men. The connection to emergence was that perhaps these top-down policies were not the way to go and that it might be better to try to enact some smaller, incremental actions to gradually change the social landscape.

The second talk was also about policy issues, this time with federal workers. Again, “family-friendly” policies were largely used by women and not men. The speaker hadn’t come to any conclusions yet, since her study was just beginning, but she had conducted some interviews with the women and the key issue was that they were feeling somewhat frantic in their lives. They had long commutes to and from work. They might not see their children in the morning and when they got home, after six usually, they threw together something for dinner, helped with homework, bathed and showered kids and tucked them into bed, all at a kind of whirlwind pace (FYI: some days this is my life). The women took advantage of part-time hours, flex-time, and telecommuting in an attempt to slow down their lives.

During both these talks, there were students in attendance and I have to say, a couple of them scared me a little. One woman said, shouldn’t a woman be able to choose to stay at home and feel satisfied with that and society should feel satisfied with that? And other felt the workplace was too harsh and maybe we shouldn’t ask for these policies or take advantage of them. I’m paraphrasing and probably distorting a little since this was a while ago. First, there’s that word choose. Linda Hirshman threw it around in her essay a lot. Honestly, I don’t think there’s that much choice involved for a great many women. And, the arguments that are being put forth here, here, here, and here also suggest that there are greater societal forces at work that rule out completely free choice. In a sense, all these folks agree with Linda Hirshman that the real issue for gender equity is in the home. I don’t completely disagree with that, but I think there’s more to it.

First of all, Hirshman argues that feminism changed the workplace. Sure, okay, there’s family-friendly policies now. But, as I mentioned above, mostly women use them, not men. Hirshman, and some of the others linked to above would say that’s because women feel the need to do most of the housework. However, I would argue that it’s also true that the workplace hasn’t really changed. That is, in a lot of places (maybe in most places), the culture hasn’t changed. There’s still a premium placed on the number of hours worked (remember Lawrence Summers?) rather than the quality of work done. There’s still an idea that if you’re not in the office, you’re not working. And there’s a premium placed on aggressively climbing the ladder vs. becoming good at your particular position. Among many other things. So, yes, it would help to even things out at home, but you’d still have this problem of the work culture facing both men and women.

And the feminists did nothing about school. Work hours are 9-5. School hours are 8:30-3:00. Anyone see a problem with this? Frankly I’d rather see the work hours cut back rather than extending the school hours, but given our culture’s push for productivity, that’s probably not going to happen. I found out at the second talk that my school district’s entire schedule revolves around the high school football team. Yep, that’s right. School lets out at 2:30 so the football team can practice. As several of us stood around talking about all the issues we faced as working mothers, we all kept saying, “It’s just so complicated.” Because every suggestion we made for fixing the bigger problems ran up against a huge cultural problem. What would stay at home parents of school-aged children do if school let out at 5 instead of 3? Would they end up working? Is this a good thing?

I seriously find myself confronted with the problem of being a working mother within a culture that believes mothers shouldn’t work on a nearly daily basis. Example, tomorrow is a half day. Monday is President’s Day. Thankfully, I have the kind of job with tons of time I can take for whatever reason I want, so I’m taking the day off. In the past, when I haven’t been so lucky, Mr. Geeky has taken on the child care. Not all families have this luxury. Sometimes both parents have jobs with little time off. Another example, Geeky Girl had homework that required her to go outside and collect weather-related things and draw pictures of them and make notes about them. She received this assignment on a Monday. It was due on Friday. Given that we don’t get home until 6 p.m. every night and it’s dark by then, when the hell were we supposed to complete this assignment? Oh, right, between the hours of 3 and 5, when I’m supposed to be home.

It gets tiring to fight these little things. I almost sent a note to the teacher telling her that while I thought the assignment was a good one, she might want to assign it over a weekend when those of us who work might have time to help their children complete it. I have serious issues with homework anyway that are not helped by the fact that we don’t have as much time as we’d like to help with it. With NCLB and the PTA and the School Board who wants high PSSA scores, I’m not going to get very far asking for a reduction in homework or a free class period to do it in or something that might accommodate dual-income families.

Instead of fighting these things, I think, maybe I should think about part-time work or quitting altogether and staying home. Because frankly, I don’t like being tired all the time and I want to raise good children and I think I could do a better job at that if I were around more. And I think that happens to a lot of women (and maybe men, too).

I think parents who stay home should be valued. The work they do is difficult and important. I’d like to see them be economically rewarded as well. But I also agree with Hirshman that society is missing out on some excellent talent because highly-educated women are not working. Unlike Hirshman, though, I don’t blame the women or feminism. I blame society for not making a truly family-friendly (heck, human-friendly) work environment, for having Martha Stewart be our standard of housekeeping, and for having stupid tv shows that have large lazy men sitting around drinking beer while their svelte wives make dinner for them.

A while back, I wrote to Bounce (owned by Procter and Gamble) after seeing yet another commercial where they show only women doing the laundry. I said that they could change the way people view household work by showing men doing the laundry. Their response?

While we agree that the roles of men and women are different today, our ads go through a lot of testing to find the one that is most broadly appealing. We rely on consumer feedback, such as yours, to tell us how effective our ads are. Overall, we want to show a variety of life situations in our ads in order to reach as many people as possible.

Basically, showing women doing the laundry tests well.

I think I have a lot more to say about all of this, but I’m going to stop now. Like I said, something comes up every day. Maybe instead of saving it up for a huge post like this, I should blog the snippets. Quite a thought, huh?

Update: Apparently, I’m obsessed. This was written almost exactly a year ago.