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Emily Kramer's avatar

I've been quiet quitting a lot of these gendered things lately and actually -- there are other possibilities that arise when I stop running around creating wonder (for others). This magic making is such an embedded requirement for women and especially moms, as you mention, and I've really been experimenting with whether the world DOES really end without it? If so whose? It turns out that it's not actually the children's world - which is premised to rely so much on this emotional labor, -- though their worlds do need active attention. It's men who suffer most. Though they may say they are fine with lifesavers and a delivery from the sporting goods store, the whole reason we do so much more is that they want it too, but they mostly want to feel entitled to it. That's the very thing that finally broke me; when I realized that kids don't want you to be resentful and tired and under appreciated. That's way worse for them then there being no elves.

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Bridget Wall's avatar

Thanks for sharing - what a time of year it is!

The phrase that has helped me is "traditions are peer pressure from dead people" - I can't remember where I saw it but it rang so true that not every year will look exactly the same and that can be for joyful reasons, not just reasons that are a bummer. And that traditions can be great but they can also be things that you just don't need to do!! It gives my perfectionism perfect teenage side-eye judgement and invites me to take a breath and ask myself if that's what I really want in my life.

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