Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Sharing Parenting











Who is going to cook? Who is going to wipe the dust? Who is going to stay at home with the sick child? Who is going to come back early to let the baby sitter go? Who is going to prepare the children for school? A general observation of different kinds of societies shows that those activities are one partner’s work. She is the mom who should be responsible for all this.



It is not because man is not able to do them. It is not because parenting is naturally designed this way . On the contrary, the analysis of such an issue is definitely related to social and cultural background. It is for the safe of man’s masculinity, dignity, and superiority that the male partner has not to do anything related to housework. Whether the woman works outside or she is a housewife, some societies are strictly merciless with man who tries to help his wife at home. He is very likely to become an object of mockery, criticism, and sometimes rejection. Are some conservative areas people do not even sit with such a kind of men. Not only manhood societies who adopt such an opinion, even women in so many cultures belittle the man who tries to help his mother or wife at home. Unreliable, weak, his wife’s servant, foolish, poor, and so on and so forth of the degrading descriptions they make for him. Hence, sharing parenting or alternative parenting like what some prefer to call is more limited by social and cultural customs than by natural rules.
Although such a topic might seem a big problem, yet, it is still worth discussing for the sake of a successful matrimonial life. I am not going to focus on relationships in the past since most women did not work. However, within the contemporaneous changes of women status, one may wonder why men are still unwilling to participate in different types of housework. At this level of analysis, I would take off the norms from the list of the reasons because even norms change. I don’t see man’s selfishness among the reasons either. In an article published on Feminist.com by Julie Shield on family and parenting, negotiation is stated as the best means to cope with men’s prejudice on sharing parenting.

Thus, the lack of negotiation between couples will be among the basic reasons I would agree on for such an issue. I don’t know what couples are talking about when they start dating each other. Eventhough nothing would be wrong with keeping all the time cooing at each other, worshipping, or courting one another as it is the nature of love, mature couples would also find sometime to discuss their futuristic responsibilities. Hence, instead of fighting about which of the restaurants they want to go at the weekend or about how much money they have to spend to have a prestigious wedding ceremony, couples would rather sit to negotiate the different ways that may help them make their married life happier. Children’s care and alternative parenting for example, is among the crucial issue that should be discussed before marriage. Indeed, a true successful matrimonial life can even have the woman pumping a bottle of breast milk from her nipples and giving it to the father to feed it to the baby later as he going to work and he is on a day off or an afternoon partime job.



A second reason why man is still unwilling to help with children’s care or housework cleaning refers to the woman’s attitude or what Chester L. Karras (one of Julie Shield’s persons in her article) calls “aspiration level”. Woman, who asks for more since the beginning of the relationship, gets more. Woman who asks for less gets less. I think that men who are in love are usually open to understand and to love their partners’ perceptions of life.



In summary, although sharing parenting seems to be a challenge for men to accept, negotiations between couples in association with the extent of woman’s conviction with her husbands’ help at home may make it easier for both couples.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Allah

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x31i8s_les-miracles-de-l-islam
It is the absolute truth, that is all what one can say to comment on this video.
May God bless you!!!!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

See Her Cigssssssssss!!!





It is apparent that women have the same nicotine dependency like men. It is also clear that the number of female smokers is augmenting quickly between years. What makes it worse is that smoking becomes more popular among young women than elder ones. According to an article published by the American Cancer Society, about 21% of women ages 18 to 44 smoke, but only about 9% of women 65 and over do. As these younger women age and continue to smoke, they will have more smoking-related illness and disability. Reasons that push women towards cigarettes vary between psychological troubles, such as feelings of guilty, disappointment, rejection, and social deterrence like low-paid or unpaid jobs, divorce, or the simple tendency towards a sense of group belonging. When smokers meet at the schoolyard they believe that they have much fun and joyful atmosphere than non-smokers.


It is assumed that tobacco epidemic risks are familiar to all smokers including young or old women. And if there is one explanation why they don’t quite, it may be due to the lack of a strong will. Therefore, I think that sometimes it is worthless to invest time and money publishing ads and making programs to encourage people who are completely conscious of the effects of the cigarettes. In fact, some women in some places may smoke just for the purpose of the prestige. Isn’t that ridiculous?! Hence, why instructing people who are knowledgeable enough about the issue? Why advising women who smoke only, because they are either naïve or stubborn?

However, there is still some kind of person who is neither aware of the smoking risks nor able to ban them even if he/she were aware. It is still possible to say that smoking is imposed on him/her. Obviously, he/she is the little growing baby of the smoking pregnant mother. Research suggests that infants of mothers who smoke during and after pregnancy are 2 to 3 times more likely to die from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) than babies born to non-smoking mothers. Hence, voices of blame should be much more rigid with the category of pregnant women or with those who aim at getting married and having children than with anybody else. Smoking women in this case, are not putting only themselves at risk, but also the life of innocent creatures. It would be even so judicious if children rights organization put obstructions and laws on pregnant smokers.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Monday, June 2, 2008

Profanity in the Street: Tunisia an Instance


http://accurapid.com/journal/16review.htm
http://www.familystyle.com/advscripts/definitions.asp



As it is known, violence is not invariably a physical behavior. It can also be a verbal one, which is sometimes more harmful. Cursing, screaming agressively, and using dirty language are the most common shapes of verbal violence. “Profane language” is another synonym for verbal violence. According to an article of definitions of terms related to family styles published on the Internet, language of profanity refers to the language or gestures that demonstrate irreverence, contempt, or disrespect towards groups of people or religious beliefs. Language or gestures considered coarse, vulgar, obscene or otherwise offensive. It is usually manifested in taking God’s name in vain or using sexually derived words. Some people try to find excuses to such a sort of violence by being in status of anger, loss of control, and even freedom of expression. The worst, however, about this dirty language is that it could be used with relatives, with children, and in public and non- public places. In some cultures, it used to be the monopoly of masculine gender. They were only men who could be forgiven for cursing or screaming with abusive words. Currently, in these same cultures, even women dare to use it the same way men do.

At this level of analysis, I would like to take Tunisia as an example where profane language is frequently heard, especially in the streets. Yes, unfortunately, it is the reality that I cannot deny about my country. Despite all kinds of fine developments that Tunisia is accomplishing, some social behaviors still need to be polished. I can assume that there is no single day in my life where I passed through Avenue Rome, for instance, without hearing at least one dirty word. Once, I was really offended when one of my foreign teachers at the university of April 9th, said that the first word he learnt in Tunisian dialect is a sexual vulgar word (the N-word) for it was the word people say most since he came. Is not that a shame?!


As far as I am concerned, I cannot see but law to clear up our tongue. I think societies allover the world should draw more attention to this disrespectful behavior, basically in public places. I would advocate coercive laws in cases where immoral language is used for I am certain that there are other ways rather than abusive genre through which, expressing anger or cursing can be manifested .” Cursing is not necessarily abusive or aggressive. It can be humorous, playful, and creative.” Claims Zsuzannea Ardo in an article published on April 2001 under the title of Emotion, Taboo, and Language Profanity.