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Devon Corneal

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Maternity Leave And Marissa Mayer

Posted: 07/18/2012 10:38 am

I try to avoid getting too involved with technology news. Frankly, it all seems like voodoo magic to me. Yet, I couldn't help but perk up when I heard that Yahoo! hired a pregnant woman, Marissa Mayer, as its new CEO. I know the pregnant thing is temporary, and I should be focusing on her qualifications, experience and voodoo credentials, but the fact that a pregnant woman was just hired to run a large publicly traded company seems damn revolutionary to me. This was a moment.

Then she burst my bubble.

"My maternity leave will be a few weeks long and I'll work throughout it."

I normally smile indulgently at statements like this, remembering my own ignorance. I try to repay the kindness my neighbor showed me when she didn't laugh at my giddy descriptions of the "to do" list I intended to conquer during my maternity leave. I was clueless and she knew it, but she didn't hold it against me. Instead, she brought us dinner and decorated our house when we came home from the hospital.

I'm less generous when the mother-to-be is setting the tone for the company she's about to lead, when she casually dismisses the value of maternity leave by suggesting that a few weeks working from home is all that's required, and fails to acknowledge the impact her choice might have on others.

Mayer is entitled to live her life in any way she sees fit (and given her wealth and position, she has the enviable opportunity to do just that). Maybe she doesn't want more than a few weeks away from the office. Maybe this is one of those "once in a lifetime" opportunities for which you sacrifice. Maybe she's telling Wall Street what it wants to hear as she prepares to take on what has proven to be a thankless (and high turnover) job. I'll never know. Whatever her reasons, part of me is cheering for her from the sidelines, hoping she can balance it all, that her status as a mother won't alter her opportunities, her ambitions, her passions or the drive that got her to where she is. Another part of me is shaking my head, wishing I could be a fly on the wall during the third week of her son's life when she's getting ready to go back to work.

Because, as anyone who has given birth knows, maternity leave exists because You. Just. Had. A. Baby. Despite nine months of preparation, new mothers are always shocked by this fact. No one is prepared for the speed with which your world shifts or the fact that nothing will ever be the same again. Maternity leave isn't a luxury (or it shouldn't be). It isn't a vacation during which women eat bonbons, watch TV and hit the spa. It isn't restful, peaceful or relaxing. It's a necessary time to reorient, heal, figure things out and learn how to keep this little person you just gave birth to alive.

I was lucky. I was entitled to three months of paid maternity leave and was able to take an extra month unpaid vacation. I needed every second of it. Maternity leave was four months of long days and nights when my body felt like it belonged to someone else (it did), when sleep seemed like an illusion or far off memory (it was), and when my autonomy was stripped away and replaced with responsibility (lots of responsibility).

No matter how easy your birth is, there's a reason doctors tell women not to exercise for six weeks after having a baby. It's because your body is a mess. Uncomplicated deliveries are bloody, exhausting affairs. You don't just pop out a baby and go home. C-sections or episiotomies add a whole new level of discomfort and recovery. My shifting hormones enlarged my breasts to porn star proportions and put me on an emotional roller coaster. I had to learn how to breastfeed, how to endure sleep deprivation, and how to reconnect with a body that no longer looked liked I'd swallowed two basketballs, but didn't look anything like the one I had before I got pregnant. Maternity leave is boot camp without the hope of dropping out. It is days of hell and nights of zombie-like going through the motions.

But maternity leave wasn't just important so I could learn to take care of myself (which I wasn't very good at, frankly). It was about having time to learn to take care of my son. We figured out feedings and naps together. I discovered what his cries meant, when he needed to sleep, when he wanted to be held. I made sure he was getting enough to eat (measured by an admittedly Type-A chart that now serves as a reminder that when he was ten days old, my son nursed every hour for TWO DAYS straight). I changed diapers until my hands chapped. I did countless loads of laundry. I answered doors with my breast exposed, and didn't realize it until after my visitor had left. More troubling, I did not care.

Maternity leave was an all too brief respite from my professional life that gave me time to focus on my child and my family. It was an opportunity to get to know my husband as a parent. It was also the hardest thing I've ever done, except for going back to work when my leave was over.

The night before I returned to the office, I put my son to bed and walked into the master bedroom. I curled up on the bed and sobbed for three hours. My eyes were swollen shut and I couldn't speak. I used an entire box of tissues. My husband patted my back comfortingly and held me until I drenched his shirt with snot (I ran out of tissues). Even with the exhaustion, the days of numbing feedings and the lack of adult conversation, leaving my son felt like a betrayal and an abandonment.

It was brutal, not because every moment of my leave was full of sunshine and roses, but because my maternity leave had given me exactly what I wanted. Time with my son. Time to get lost in the soft whorls of his hair as I watched him nurse. Peaceful moments listening to him sigh as he slept. The chance to see his first smile. Afternoons pushing a stroller in the park watching his eyes grow big when a bird flew by. Seeing him respond to my voice.

In between the challenges, there was bliss.

I did go back to work, and as the days and weeks passed, I learned to appreciate my job again. Most days I'm fine dropping Little Dude at preschool and starting my morning commute. We are both happy with our respective routines, but I am grateful that I had the time at home that I did. I know that not everyone has real choices or an employer who supports women (and their families) by providing paid maternity leave. Not every one gets that, but they should.

I don't know what Marissa Mayer will ultimately do, and probably she doesn't either. Infants have a funny way of changing even our most firmly held beliefs and plans. I don't judge her for embracing her job -- I hope she's a success. I just want to make sure that her blithe decision to take a truncated, working "maternity leave" won't be held up as the paradigm or used to pressure other women to follow suit. We all deserve better than that. Mayer is now a high-profile working mom and I, for one, expect a lot from her.

 

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I try to avoid getting too involved with technology news. Frankly, it all seems like voodoo magic to me. Yet, I couldn't help but perk up when I heard that Yahoo! hired a pregnant woman, Marissa Mayer...
I try to avoid getting too involved with technology news. Frankly, it all seems like voodoo magic to me. Yet, I couldn't help but perk up when I heard that Yahoo! hired a pregnant woman, Marissa Mayer...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shanda Smalls
~June 12, 1967 - Loving vs Virginia ~ Equality
06:17 PM on 08/25/2012
Just seemed like the father was seriously missing from the description of the changing world...it is this fear I have about becoming a mother. In today's word women seem are carrying two huge roles primary caregiver and career woman. After reading this article it made me more scared and apprehensive about motherhood =-(
03:31 PM on 08/16/2012
I don't see why anyone is judging her. Everyone's experience is different. And do remember she is a CEO, I'm extremely sure she can get a live-in nanny and maybe her relatives will be around too to give support. I all depends on your support, and its 2012, there is a lot of info to get you prepared to be a first time mom, I relied on Google and my brains and a positive attitude, after all I wanted a baby and did it when I believed I was ready. I also had great support, my mother-in-law, mother, husband. I was on my own for a while, it was stressful, but I did log on to the internet, reply emails, researched and worked a bit when I wanted to. Somethings terrified me but I still did it, lived through it, stayed happy despite a colicky baby and much more. So having a baby may not be a cake-walk but its a choice (for most mid-upper class women) and a change which if decided to embark upon one should not look at as a disablement but a part of life which you fit in with the rest of your life. if you can't fit it in, then maybe you may want to be a stay at home mom. Nothing wrong with that. She's just showing that she can be a CEO and a mother at the same time.
11:52 AM on 07/27/2012
I think it's interesting that this issue of maternity leave focuses solely on women who are middle to upper class. Maternity leave is a luxury. It shouldn't be. It should be a right, but as it is, it is a luxury. There are millions of lower and working class mothers who do not get that luxury. I remember being 9 months pregnant with my daughter and at the grocery store checking out. The cashier and I had followed each others' pregnancies, as we were due around the same time. She told me that she had given birth to her daughter two weeks earlier. I was shocked. She expressed that she didn't get maternity leave and would risk losing her job if she took off any more time. My heart ached for her. I said all that to say that Marissa Mayer isn't setting any standards. This standard already exists for millions of women in this country.
10:43 PM on 07/23/2012
My wife stayed at home with our kids for a couple of years and she is still able to be successful in the workplace. She contemplated going back earlier, but in the end she knew she would never regret spending more time with our infant children.
03:20 PM on 07/23/2012
No time to wade through 194 comments, so forgive me if my thought has been voiced repeatedly:
I don't want to judge her for whether or not she goes back to work in 3 days, 3 weeks or 3 months. I don't want to judge her about whether or not she'll have a staff of 10 to help.

I guess I am more concerned with the fact that we, as moms, feel like we have to choose between being hugely successful or our families. Men generally don't. I think it's a real failure of companies to make their female employees feel that way. And why are those women who leave their career for a while to be with their children essentially demoted if they get hired again?

Why can't we shoot for the stars even if we spend our days reading "Goodnight Moon?"
12:28 AM on 07/23/2012
Everyone is forgetting that she isn't the one who will be up with her baby at night. Her hired help will be with him around the clock (which I am sure includes the daytime feedings, etc. since she will be so busy working). She will miss out on so much of what it means to be a mom; her loss. Great article, could not agree more.
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damomb01
Yes, I breastfeed...easy, economical & oh so good!
01:48 PM on 07/21/2012
I've heard in Canada they are offered 2 years maternity leave! As a mother of four (6 with my step-children), I must say that 6 weeks maternity leave is just NOT ENOUGH...especially if you are breastfeeding! I'm not trying to imply that bf'ing moms deserve more time, but it is recommended that a baby nurses for at least one year - if possible. People wonder why there are not more women bf'ing but don't stop to look at some of the reasons for the failure rate. Milk supply is barely well established at 6 weeks...a first time mom is likely not to even have the "hang of" bf'ing yet.

As "hard" as our country works (we take fewer vacation days than most countries) you'd think we could figure out the basics.
10:00 PM on 07/22/2012
Yep. It took six weeks for me to get the hang of nursing. Well, 5.5 really. Hoping this time it goes faster. I'm glad I stuck it out because I made it to 13.5 months.
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03:41 PM on 08/13/2012
In Canada, maternity leave is a year, we get %55 of our salary and an employer has to hold the mother's position until mat leave is over.

I definitely agree that 6 weeks isn't enough! It took me a couple months to really get into a breastfeeding rhythm and I wouldn't have been able to do it had I not been with my daughter 24/7 - also took at least 2 months to not feel like a zombie all the time.
11:24 AM on 09/05/2012
I am just coming off maternity leave. I live in British Columbia, Canada. In total we get a year leave. We get 3 mos maternity leave (that can be used only by the mom), and the remainder is defined as paternity leave. It can be used by either parent so if the mom chooses to go back to work, dad can stay home. We do not get 55% of our salary. The government defines mat leave as a type of unemployment and we are paid from the pool of funds collected nationally for Unemployment Insurance. Everyone pays in to it. Employers and employees. We get capped at a max even if it does not equal 55% of your salary. In my case it did not, and we had to live on a pretty strict budget.
I am so grateful for what I have. I have had 2 children and I can't imagine what it would have been like if I had only a few weeks, or even months before I had to return to work.
09:21 AM on 07/21/2012
I've waited to express my opinion on this subject because women who have never had babies have never HAD babies. I know that she doesn't know that she may not be able to sit comfortably three weeks after delivery; or that three weeks is about the time that the absence of sleep really starts to play tricks with your mind and emotions; or that she might be so blue by this point, it will be hard to get out of bed. I know that she doesn't know, you can plan everything out perfectly. You can have all the tests. All can be fine right up until and even beyond delivery and then ... it all falls apart. This has happened to me twice.

I know her ability to plan and organize helped her ascend to her current position. What she has failed to learn is that no one controls life. We just have to live it. If she is as ambitious as a mother as she is in business, she'll learn this quickly.

I don't believe the words she says to the public today will be the ones she can live with moving forward. My hope is that her experience will better inform companies about women, babies and their medical and mental health needs postpartum and how new moms can still make a difference to corporations.
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SDpianomom
faith, values, truth, logic
10:45 PM on 07/20/2012
Mayer isn't like the average mom on maternity leave. She can afford nannies, housekeepers, drivers, etc. When she does go back to work she could have the nanny watch the baby in a nursery next to her office.
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JenniferWest
The Best is Yet to Come!
09:56 PM on 07/20/2012
My friends in Germany get 12 months maternity leave and they get to return to their jobs after! Fathers get leave as well. They also have reasonably priced subsidized day care. And Mother's often work part-time. They are better able to balance having a career and being a mother. I on the other hand could go back to my full-time position after 6 WEEKS leave (compensated by NY disability payments). My Daughter is headed for Kindergarten in the fall and I'm looking forward to working again.... But I feel so lucky I've been able to spend precious time with her.
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lensamy
Humpty Dumpty was pushed.
09:51 PM on 07/20/2012
I wish this lady the best, but some many thing can change after the baby is born. My mom used to be a mid level executive when she had me, although the actual child birth was easy the next few weeks she experienced was she described as a very nasty post partum depression. She was not only coping with the physical changes, a baby plus feeling gloomy all the time, she was planning to be out for a month and end up taking 3 more. The bottom line only time will tell.
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dancerctry
I love Gardening and Decorating
01:57 PM on 07/20/2012
CEO probably = nanny. A Nanny/sahd who will be bonding with her son while she's working during her Maternatiy Leave setting presidence for what his life will be like, Mommy's working but my Nanny/SAHD takes great care of me. She won't know much about her son but will think she does. She won't know secrets but will know he takes karate or plays baseball. She won't know him and their lack of bond will effect their relationship. He won't respond well when he's older when she tries to parent him. They won't understand each other either. Or she'll hold him in her arms and find herself not working during her leave and bonding with him but as a CEO there are too many responsibilities that take up too much of her time for her to really know him. I do believe employed parents can be excellent parents but only if they have the kind of job that allows for family time. That's not the case with top executives. It's the nature of the job.
11:58 AM on 07/27/2012
What is wrong with a SAHD raising his child? Why isn't a working father held to the same standard as a working mother? No one ever talks about a man who works or judges him for not being present or not knowing his children. It's expected that that is the other parent - the mother's - job, that this child will eassentially be raised by one parent. If this child has a SAHD, then what really is the difference?
12:25 PM on 07/20/2012
Perfect article. Exactly how this working mom feels! Rooting for Marissa! She's one lucky working mom to have the options, resources and support she has!
10:09 AM on 07/20/2012
I couldn't have said it better myself, and I hope more women (and men) start sharing these types of stories. Maternity leave is so important to all involved, and I hope that corporate American starts realizing this. There needs to be a change if we want happier, focused & more productive career women who also happen to be mothers. I was a mess emotionally and physically when I went back to work. 3 months was certainly not enough time to make such a quick adjustment from full time mom to full time work.There also needs to be a change where family starts to come first & as much as I celebrate her achievements and fully believe that this is 100% her choice and decision to be made, I'm hopeful this trend does not become the norm or expected. Thank you again for sharing what you went through because this is the norm & I hope it stays that way (or gets even better)!
07:41 AM on 07/20/2012
What would really thrill me would be a company that hired a woman after she had been home with kids for a few years. That would be true progress for women.