The Baby Group
The Baby Group (pen & ink with pastel) |
The Baby Group
Thinking about Liminality, I knew I wanted to create something positive to illustrate a time of suspended life and ‘waiting’, and sifting through my thoughts I remembered something from many years ago. Something which I suspect has become rarer — or doesn’t now exist at all. The Baby Group.
The Baby Group, I discovered when our firstborn arrived, was a lifeline across that liminal space between becoming a Mum and hopefully returning to work and a career. Of being tied into an existence defined by feeding, nappy changing, and, as the baby grew from a newborn to a little person full of curiosity, constant busyness at a few-months-old level. Where to meet others similarly tied! The relief of grown-up conversation!
I made a quick sketch (above) from the memories. We Mums would meet, maybe weekly, in someone’s home, and, provided with an assortment of rugs and baby toys for our children, and mugs of coffee and plates of biscuits for ourselves, would put the world to rights. We also had permission to rant about sleepless nights, colic, endless uninterpretable crying, and to show off at the same time how wonderfully our offspring were developing.
We bonded over these things. It didn’t matter if you were an Oxford academic, an interior designer, a teacher, a bank clerk, a dental hygienist — we were all sailing in the same boat. How we looked forward to the morning the Baby Group met!
And, later as our children began to grow, there was the Baby-sitting Group — exchanging an evening out with another member, paying her by the hour in milk tokens.
Looking back, that culture has all gone — yet back then nobody ever thought their children might be abused by the sitter, or come to any harm. At the age of 14 our daughter joined the ranks of teenage babysitters — paid, I forget how much — but certainly paid some pocket money.
How the good times seem to have gone, and in today’s culture, somehow trust has disappeared, community has vapourised — along with whatever made for some sort of unspoken rules which, crazily, we thought would keep our little ones safe…
Comments
As for babysitting, doesn't that still happen? A great way for teenagers to earn pocket money and they were always from families one knew. I don't think that culture has all gone... but then I haven't needed to get a baby sitter for at least a decade or two!
As ever with me, I recalled a book, this one being 'Offshore' by Penelope Fitzgerald, where the characters are at an in-between stage of their lives. I drew some pictures of The Thames mud-flats to go with the story and researched ideas about the concept. I have never, surprisingly, related it to the Christian faith so thanks for filling in that gap. A welcome post.