Heather Hewett, "My Sister's Family" (page 3 of 5)
Female Caregiving, Disability, and the Family
Another one of our favorite myths about the family centers around the
figure of the mother, the compassionate, nurturing caregiver who puts
everyone else's needs before her own. As feminists have argued, this
vision does a disservice not only to individual women, but also to their
partners and children. It has placed unreasonable burdens on mothers who
wish to work or who are disinclined to act in a traditional mothering
role, and it has prevented men from developing their own ability to
nurture and share in child-care responsibilities. As feminists such as
Ann Crittenden have argued, our
current socioeconomic system depends, in large part, on families buying
into this powerful ideology of motherhood.[4] Through the labor they
freely perform as caregivers, mothers have absorbed the hidden costs of
capitalism. Yet because child rearing has been pushed into the private
realm, out of sight of the public world of work, we often do not see the
connections. In the same way that female caring for children has been
relegated to the private world (whether the caregivers are mothers,
nannies, or day-care workers), so have the issues surrounding the care
of the elderly, the terminally ill, and the disabled.[5]
Caring for the disabled is an important feminist issue. The
overwhelming majority of caregivers for the disabled population are
female.[6] According to researchers Marty Krauss and Marsha Seltzer,
after mothers, sisters are more likely than brothers to care for their
siblings.[7] Indeed, on
SibNet, an Internet support
group for siblings of individuals with disabilities, the majority of the
participants are, like me, sisters. Outside of close family members, the
two main groups of people who help care for individuals with
disabilities—employed caregivers and human services
professionals—are likely to be women.[8]
(Employed caregivers also
tend to be women of color who are often underpaid and overworked for
their labor, producing inequities that can undermine the compassionate
caring that all individuals, including the disabled, deserve.[9]) My
sister's case is no exception: Aside from my father and my sister's
boss, all her caregivers are women.
The issues facing the disabled and their caregivers are particularly
complex. To begin with, many individuals, such as my sister, need some
level of care for their entire lives. My sister has accomplished what
is, for her, a high level of self-sufficiency (a praiseworthy
accomplishment, and particularly so in a culture that disdains neediness
and esteems independence); but the reality of her life is one of
interdependence. And in order to do things like work and live apart from
my parents, to live "independently," she needs daily help. Not a lot,
perhaps, but enough: a ride to work and to the grocery store, a reminder
to turn off the oven, a helping hand with her bank account. Other
individuals with disabilities need far more assistance than she does;
and given the short supply of compassionate, well-compensated
caregivers, it is no wonder that so many adults with disabilities
continue to live with their parents.[10]
In failing to provide adequate
support to these families, our country places them under a lot of
strain. Many of them live in varying degrees of isolation, creating
conditions under which unhealthy psychological codependencies can
develop between the disabled and their caregivers.
What, then, can feminism offer disabled individuals and their
caregivers—or, perhaps I should say, what can the experience of
disability offer feminism? How can we remedy situations where disabled
individuals are thwarted, caregivers not well compensated, and families
overwhelmed? As many scholars have suggested, the answer partly lies in
placing a higher value on the labor of caregiving. As
Eva Feder Kittay
argues, we need to integrate the principle of care into our concept of
justice.[11] It was equality, after all, that inspired both the feminist
and disability rights movements to stand up for the rights of women and
of individuals with disabilities; and as a result, people like my sister
are finally being seen as full human beings and citizens with equal
rights. The next step, however, is to provide better support for
individuals like my sister—for all individuals—in the
context of the interdependent relationships of family.
What our country needs, in other words, is a vision of family that
acknowledges our complex interdependencies. By listening to and learning
from the experiences of individuals with disabilities and their
families, we can rethink the operating terms and assumptions of social
policies and work toward a society that can nurture all
families—both the ones we are born into and the ones we forge
along the way.
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