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Opinion

I had a baby in the year of #MeToo and Harvey Weinstein

As the horrors unfolded, I couldn’t stop thinking about what it would all mean for my new baby, writes Alona Ferber

December 20, 2017 15:03
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4 min read

The year that a US president who boasts of “grabbing women by the pussy” was inaugurated, the year that women (and some men) from Hollywood to Silicon Valley said ya basta to unacceptable sexual behaviour, the year that #metoo saw people across the globe share so many stories of harassment and assault, just happened to be the year I gave birth to my daughter.

She was born in early July, a few months into the steady trickle of stories that has gathered momentum from Uber through Harvey Weinstein. I was knee deep in my loved-up newborn bubble, not reading much news, not really engaging on social media, but it was pretty much impossible not to notice the unfolding. And - as if the cultural baggage of the mythological Jewish mother were not a heavy enough load already - as it unfolded, I couldn’t stop thinking about what it would all mean for my baby.

Parents are only too aware of the potential difficulties facing their precious offspring in the future. Jewish mother stereotypes aside, anxiety and worry are key parts of parenthood. For girls, dangers have a very specific hue, and the events of 2017 cast them into stark pink and blue.

What woman isn't a "me too"? Who hasn't been on the receiving end of an unwanted touch, look, or word – or worse? There I am, 16-years-old or so, working as a waitress. Whenever I go into the café’s kitchen, the cooks say things that make me feel horribly uncomfortable. I pretend to understand the joke, but I know it has something to do with my being young and female. There I am a few years earlier, standing on the tube, when a man starts rubbing himself on my leg. I can still remember his face. Like many women, there's more where that came from.