Guest post: It’s a MAD dad world
If you follow the parent blogging world at all, you can’t have failed to have noticed the launch of the MADs Awards. That stands for Mums And Dads. You can read about them here. Stage 1 was nominations, when anyone could nominate anyone. And we did. Literally hundreds of blogs were nominated. We’re now at Stage 2. The most popular 5 blogs in each category have been named, and we’re all invited to vote on those top 5. Voting closes on 6th June.
When I looked at the list of finalists, I was very struck by the preponderance of Dads. Don’t get me wrong. There are some very fine Daddy bloggers out there, and their presence adds to the parent blogging mix. But I’m honestly a little puzzled why they feature quite so prevalently in the awards. I mean, it can’t be, can it, that they’re really so very much better than the Mummy bloggers?
Do the maths with me, if you will. There are 50 finalists. That’s 5 in each of the 9 categories, and 5 nominated for overall Best Blogger of the Year. Of these, 8 are male. That’s 16%. You’re thinking that’s not a very high percentage? Well, let’s put it against the percentage of Dad bloggers in the parent blogosphere, which I’ve taken to be British Mummy Bloggers. BMB has over 1,300 members now, and there are around 25 Dads. That works out at less than 2%. Is that 2% really so gifted that they deserve the disproportionate 16% of finalist places? If the ratios were proportionate, there would be over 200 Dad members of BMB – nearly 10 times the actual number. And what about this? For the top accolade of Best Blogger of the Year, they are in the majority. Yes, 3 out of the 5 nominees for Best Blogger are Dads. Is it not surprising, in any sphere, if a 2% minority of the population produces 3 out of the 5 candidates for top recognition?
What to make of this? Well, I’d like to be really angry about it, because that would have given the opportunity for a clever title to this post along the lines of “Why I’m truly a MAD finalist”. But I find it hard to be angry, because the awards have been designed very democratically. Bloggers nominated fellow bloggers, so who can we point the finger of sexism at here? It’s at ourselves, isn’t it? And when I look at myself, I can see how that happens. It’s partly the novelty value of a man’s viewpoint in what is predominantly a woman’s world. A Dad blogger arrests the attention, as a woman in the board room does, or a lady doctor used to (did we really call them that?). They stand out simply for being different.
I think it’s more than that, though. I sense in myself something that wants to reward a man for being a good father more than a woman for being a good mother (and I’m not, by that, implying that blogging equates to good parenthood). If I see a father accompanying his child on a school field trip, I feel that he must be a good dad, as he’s taken a day off work to do so. If I see a mother who has a full-time job on a field trip, do I feel the same? I don’t think I do. How often have I read in the blogosphere of a mum who is going away for a week-end on her own, and there’ll be a comment “How lovely that your partner is so supportive and is happy to look after the children on his own for a whole week-end”. Do we feel the same way when a husband goes away? I don’t think we do. I know a lot of this stuff is wrapped up in practicalities, bread-winning, role patterns and daily norms, and of course it may be a bigger hurdle for the woman to let go of her parental responsibilities and duties than for the man to step up to them (I’ll put my hand up to that one.) But at an emotional level, I think we love to love a man who’s being a father, more than we allow ourselves to love ourselves for being mothers.
It’s the same syndrome by which men who are chefs or primary school teachers seem to do so well in those careers. It’s almost as if we’re so flattered that these individuals will enter our women’s world, that we want to reward them with our favour. I know it’s more complicated than that. Those men may typically have more time to devote to their careers, or may be more ambitious, or may value promotion and publicity more than their female colleagues. But I do also sense that there’s some kind of self-destruct button that we women press, to allow them to thrive so successfully. It seems we get all star-struck by the dads in our female midst, and assume that their voices are more worth listening to than our own, and that their achievements are more valuable.
It’s interesting to see which other categories the men fared well in. There’s 1 nominated for Best Writer, 2 for Most Innovative Blog, and 2 for Funniest Blog. Am I reading too much into these to see them as representing the characteristics that we admire in men? Perhaps. I don’t want to get carried away here. I hesitated to write this post. It’s going to sound awfully like sour grapes if I don’t win, isn’t it? That’s why I’m publishing it now, before we know who the winners are. Of course I’d love it if you voted for me, but I hope this post will persuade you to do so on the basis of my writing, not my gender – because that would miss the point rather, wouldn’t it?
Iota Manhattan blogs at Not Wrong, Just Different and is a UK-to-US transplant. She describes herself as “an erstwhile civil servant, then fundraiser (arts and voluntary sector). Now Mum/Mom at home.” She likes reading, going to the cinema and a good cup of tea.
You’ve read my mind! Exactly what I was thinking. I’m not sure what the answer is, but I have a theory which is when men do something they want to do it really well and they’re more competitive than many women. For all we know, the shortlisted daddy bloggers could have been better at getting support to be nominated. We know men are often more comfortable with promoting themselves than women, it happens in the workplace. I agree with the novelty factor as well, the fact there are far fewer daddy bloggers gives them a sense of uniqueness. How about analysing the Tots 100 for the male / female split? And top spots versus lower positions? Not that I’m giving you any work to do. Great post.
.-= Emily O´s last blog ..Until we do something about prostitution, women will keep on dying =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:37 AM
@Emily O, I think a lot of it probably is in the self-promotion. I hadn’t thought of that.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Great post. I’ll start by saying that there are some very deserving MADs finalists, male and female. There are however a few finalists, male and female that I don’t rate at all. Some I’d never heard of before these awards (surprising as I read a lot of blogs) and it’s my belief that they are probably finalists as a result of astute social media campaigning or possibly because they work for large organisations. Perhaps men (and some women) are more comfortable asking people to ‘vote for me’? Yes, it’s democratic, but I expect the finalists would be different if only bloggers were allowed to nominate.
“it may be a bigger hurdle for the woman to let go of her parental responsibilities and duties than for the man to step up to them (I’ll put my hand up to that one.)” I’ll have to put my hand up to that one too.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:38 AM
@Female MADs Finalist, I wonder who you are (you could always email me and tell me). Interesting thought about only allowing bloggers to nominate. Yes, I think that would produce a different result. But I also like the idea of the awards being totally open to all passers-by.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Very interesting points Iota. And I agree with everything you say. I also suspect – and since I’m not a tweeter, and make very little use of social meja other than blogging, have absolutely no way of backing this up – that the blogging Dafia (surely no need to translate this?) are, as Emily suggests, a lot better at promoting themselves than some of their female counterparts. Not that I don’t read their blogs and enjoy them, I do (see this week’s British Mummy Blogger ning recommended reading for evidence of that). I just think, like you do, that the figures don’t really add up…
.-= Potty Mummy´s last blog ..British Mummy Blogger of the Week =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:38 AM
@Potty Mummy, Dafia – that’s a great word. No, the figures don’t add up.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Thanks for a great post, and also I’ve just discovered this blog and will come back often! I think that one underlying assumption has to be that it’s harder for a man to do his duty as a father than it is for a woman to do her duty as a mother. It’s supposed to be ‘natural’ for a woman. But not only do we cheat ourselves when we make that assumption – being a mother is bloody hard work is what it is – but we’re cheating fathers too, by making them feel that they’ll get bonus points if they do their jobs as parents but basically, no one expects them to.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:44 AM
@Sandrine, Yes, being a mother is just as hard as being a father, I think.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Oh my goodness, I can’t believe I didn’t notice that. But it’s true isn’t it. Well well well….
Great post Iota. For what it’s worth, I think best writer has got your name written all over it. x
.-= Gappy´s last blog ..Pornification =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:39 AM
@Gappy, You’re too kind…
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Very interesting. I actually wasn’t aware, I confess to going over and voting for the blogs I like and not spending a whole lot of time checking out the others. I only read one dad blog, out of about 50 blogs I track in my reader, I guess they don’t really appeal to me for some reason.
I like your analysis. I recall a birthday party I had for my daughter, I was sitting with a glass of wine when my husband Picked up my daughter, ascertained she needed a clean diaper, so carried her off for a change, without asking fir my opinion, assistance or the location of the diapers. The mums sitting with me gasped and declared my husband amazing. I was baffled and told them so. It drives me nuts when men are feted for just doing their fair share of family life.
.-= Geekymummy´s last blog ..A gothic childens tale? =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:46 AM
@Geekymummy, Diaper-changing should definitely be a shared duty!
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Well said, Iota! I couldn’t agree with you more on each and every point.
Not only are men generally more comfortable with self promotion and better at it, but sadly I think many women are more comfortable and accustomed to putting men into a the more prominent role and stepping back into one of a ‘supportive’ nature. So we can be ‘liked’.
And isn’t it funny how not only do we ‘reward’ men for doing what is traditionally ‘women’s work’, but many women spend an awful lot of time judging other women for trying to break out of narrow societal confines (sexual, workplace, familial etc).
I’ll be voting for you. This post just confirms it.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:39 AM
@mothership, Yes, we like to be liked, and being supportive is one ticket to that. And we’re so judgmental of each other, which is such a waste of energy.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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I’m not sure whether to be ashamed or proud (of my “gender-blindness” that I hadn’t noticed that.
But I think you’re right, and, as ever, you put it very well. I can’t comment on the MADs finalists, although I too have suspected some self-promotion (although why shouldn’t people self-promote, no-one was going around saying that David Cameron and his like shouldn’t be asking for our votes…?), but I do think this raises some interesting questions, not about men, but about women.
Because it is us, isn’t it? We just assume that it is “our place” to do this stuff. The laundry, the nappies, the blogging… and when a man does it, we gasp in awe. Now you could say that’s because we all have an inherently low opinion of men, so we think it’s astonishing when they can do something, anything, even vaguely competently, but I suspect that it’s actually because we don’t really value ourselves. We don’t big ourselves up enough for doing an amazing job, or for just doing the job at all.
And clearly we should.
.-= Harriet´s last blog ..The Gallery – On friendship, love and loyalty =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:47 AM
@Harriet, I think you’re right. We don’t value ourselves enough, which is silly, because we would be happier if we did, and we’d be better mothers too.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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I think that the daddy bloggers are more well known compared to the women because there are so few of them. It’s hard to describe, but when you come across a Dad blog, you tend to follow it because it’s unusual in a world of mummy blogs. A mummy blog has to stand out more with content rather than simply by virtue of the sex of the writer. Does this make sense? It does to me.
.-= Working Mum´s last blog ..Husband’s Birthday Update =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:40 AM
@Working Mum, I’m sure you’re right. The dad bloggers stand out because they’re different. But I think that’s only part of the story.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Iota, you are rock-solid on this one. Thanks for posting.
.-= Kelly´s last blog ..famiglia e paisano (the latter as in the screwtop wine) =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:41 AM
@Kelly, Thanks!
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Amen. And bravo.
.-= Mwa´s last blog ..Shame on me, times four =-.
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Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:41 AM
@Mwa, Thanks very much.
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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OK, hands up those who assume Iota is a woman.
love
Josephine (that came out first as Josephone, whereas I think Josephemail would be better)
[Reply]
Iota Manhattan Reply:
June 2nd, 2010 at 4:43 AM
@someonesmrs, Surely I would be Iotus if I was a man?
.-= Iota Manhattan´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Iota – you could be neuter plural? (Ooh, get me.)
.-= Expat Mum´s last blog ..A little taste of America =-.
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Iota Reply:
June 3rd, 2010 at 4:36 AM
@Expat Mum, I could! I could be lots of Iotums. And Expat Mum could be neuter singular.
.-= Iota´s last blog ..It’s a MAD dad world =-.
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Expat Mum Reply:
June 6th, 2010 at 12:04 AM
@Iota, – I wish!!!
.-= Expat Mum´s last blog ..Miami Vice =-.
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All too true. V good points, v well made. Sometimes I think I don’t help myself by feeling that everything to do with OUR child is up to me to sort out. Bathtime, storytime, bedtime, babysitters. (Actually, make that babysitter in the singular.) It’s borne of the fact that I b/f for so long I think. But still…..
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