Remembering The Dangers Of Routine...
Can the problem that has no name be somehow related
to the domestic routine of the housewife? When a woman
tries to put the problem into words, she often merely
describes the daily life she leads. What is there in
this recital of comfortable domestic detail that could
possibly cause such a feeling of desperation? Is she
trapped simply by the enormous demands of her role as
modern housewife: wife, mistress, mother, nurse, consumer,
cook, chauffeur, expert on interior decoration child
care, appliance repair, furniture refinishing, nutrition,
and education? Her day is fragmented as she rushes from
dishwasher to washing machine to telephone to dryer
to station wagon to supermarket, and delivers Johnny
to the Little League field, takes Janey to dancing class,
gets the lawnmower fixed and meets the 6:45. She can
never spend more than 15 minutes on any one thing; she
has no time to read books, only magazines; even if she
had time, she has lost the power to concentrate. At
the end of the day, she is so terribly tired that sometimes
her husband has to take over and put the children to
bed. Thus terrible tiredness took so many women to doctors
in the 1950’s that one decided to investigate
it. He found, surprisingly, that his patients suffering
from “housewife’s fatigue’ slept more
than an adult needed to sleep -as much as ten hours
a day- and that the actual energy they expended on housework
did not tax their capacity. The real problem must be
something else, he decided-perhaps boredom. Some doctors
told their women patients they must get out of the house
for a day, treat themselves to a movie in town. Others
prescribed tranquilizers. Many suburban housewives were
taking tranquilizers like cough drops. You wake up in
the morning, and you feel as if there’s no point
in going on another day like this. So you take a tranquilizer
because it makes you not care so much that it’s
pointless.” It is easy to see the concrete details
that trap the suburban housewife, the continual demands
on her time. But the chains that bind her in her trap
are chains in her own mind and spirit. They are chains
made up of mistaken ideas and misinterpreted facts,
of incomplete truths and unreal choices. They are not
easily seen and not easily shaken off. How can any woman
see the whole truth within the bounds of her own life?
How can she believe that voice inside herself, when
it denies the conventional, accepted truths by which
she has been living? And yet the women I have talked
to, who are finally listening to that inner voice, seem
in some incredible way to be groping through to a truth
that has defied the experts. I think the experts in
a great many fields have been holding pieces of that
truth under their microscopes for a long time without
realizing it. I found pieces of it in certain new research
and theoretical developments in psychological, social
and biological science whose implications for women
seem never to have been examined. I found many clues
by talking to suburban doctors, gynecologists, obstetricians,
child-guidance clinicians, pediatricians, high-school
guidance counselors, college professors, marriage counselors,
psychiatrists and ministers-questioning them not on
their theories, but on their actual experience in treating
American women. I became aware of a growing body of
evidence, much of which has not been reported publicly
because it does not fit current modes of thought about
women—evidence which throws into question the
standards of feminine normality, feminine adjustment,
feminine fulfillment, and feminine maturity by which
most women are still trying to live. I began to see
in a strange new light the American return to early
marriage and the large families that are causing the
population explosion; the recent movement to natural
childbirth and breastfeeding; suburban conformity, and
the new neuroses, character pathologies and sexual problems
being reported by the doctors. I began to see new dimensions
to old problems that have long been taken for granted
among women: menstrual difficulties, sexual frigidity,
promiscuity, pregnancy fears, childbirth depression,
the high incidence of emotional breakdown and suicide
among women in their twenties and thirties, the menopause
crises, the so-called passivity and immaturity of American
men, the discrepancy between women’s tested intellectual
abilities in childhood and their adult achievement,
the changing incidence of adult sexual orgasm in American
women, and persistent problems in psychotherapy and
in women’s education. If I am right, the problem
that has no name stirring in the minds of so many American
women today is not a matter of loss of femininity or
too much education, or the demands of domesticity. It
is far more important than anyone recognizes. It is
the key to these other new and old problems which have
been torturing women and their husbands and children,
and puzzling their doctors and educators for years.
It may well be the key to our future as a nation and
a culture. We can no longer ignore that voice within
women that says: “I want something more than my
husband and my children and my home.”
from Betty Frieden’s The Feminine Mystique Published
in early 1960s Ms. Freiden died last week...