How Employers Make It Impossible For Working Women To Breastfeed
Many low-wage workers are confined to filthy bathrooms, can’t get breaks and even lose their jobs trying to pump.
Many low-wage workers are confined to filthy bathrooms, can’t get breaks and even lose their jobs trying to pump.
Dave Jamieson HuffPost Sep 2019 30min Permalink
A story of two births.
Leslie Jamison The Atlantic Aug 2019 30min Permalink
Everything seemed routine. The technician finished up and left the room. The soundtrack of our baby’s heartbeat played an upbeat tempo in the background. A few minutes went by and the technician came back, letting us know she would take a few more pictures of his head for a clearer look. That sounded reasonable. She left again, this time for longer, and when she returned a doctor wearing a white lab coat walked in behind her looking very serious and shut the door.
Missy Kurzweil Jezebel Feb 2019 20min Permalink
I went through puberty at age 2.
Patrick Burleigh New York Jan 2019 25min Permalink
Why does prenatal care ignore the topic altogether?
Chelsea Conaboy Boston Globe Magazine Jul 2018 15min Permalink
The stark realities of nature and nuture.
Allison Kubu Longleaf Review Jun 2018 15min Permalink
How a perfect vision of mother hood hurts moms.
Claire Howorth Time Oct 2017 15min Permalink
On the interminable two weeks between a bad sonogram and the end of a pregnancy.
Jessica Grose Lenny Feb 2017 10min Permalink
On the magic of mother’s milk, which changes daily to meet the baby’s needs and can even start fighting an infection before anyone knows the kid is sick.
Angela Garbes The Stranger Aug 2015 10min Permalink
“Fuck everything, I thought. Bring on the cascading interventions. And they came.”
Meaghan O'Connell Longreads Nov 2014 55min Permalink
A mother struggles to cope when a child is born with albinism.
Emily Urquhart The Walrus Apr 2013 25min Permalink
“For every other kid in the room, the science experiment probably amounts to just another classroom activity, but for the Nashes the project is a reminder of Molly’s own fight for life and the controversial cutting-edge medicine that saved her.”
Amanda M. Faison 5280 Aug 2005 Permalink