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Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Babylune

Notes on Motherhood from Elsewhere

July 25, 2006 by kate baggott  
Filed under Baby Care, Finances

Travellers Bulgaria (Travellers - Thomas Cook)
Kate, how much does one diaper costs in Germany?” My sister-in-law asked me other day.

The reflex among linguists would be to correct her grammar. How much do diapers cost in Germany? But there is no mistake.

Here in Bulgaria, pharmacies sell diapers one at a time. This is not a throw-away society and in the interests of economy, most children here are raised mostly on a routine of cloth diapers coupled with elimination training. Plus, when spending hot, hot summers in the villages, where life is more relaxed, most babies are allowed to play in the shade completely naked. Pampers, as all disposable diapers are called here, are used mostly when traveling or visiting someone where a leak would be very unwelcome. Convenience is not a big priority here. People operate according to need rather than ease.

There are a lot of other differences in how children are cared for. I think the biggest single difference is the role of grandmothers in a child’s life. In socialist times, most women retired at 55. They were needed to help care for their grandchildren while their daughters and daughters-in-law worked. Now, under the free economy, retirement at 55 is not an option for most grandmothers. That doesn’t mean they aren’t still the primary caregivers of young children. After leaving their “career position” many women take part-time jobs as shop assistants or start small businesses to supplement their meager pensions. A former electrical engineer I met at the playground with her grandson, now runs a book and stationary shop with one of her former colleagues.

The grandchildren, at least in the summertime, go to work with their babas. On market days, the children sit on little chairs beside their grandmothers, chatting to customers, reading, and demanding treats.

In the rural villages, while grandparents grow vegetables and raise animals that feed the entire family, children run a little more freely, greeting each other, stopping in to view events at other houses, in other gardens, playing in nature, taking afternoon naps and demanding treats from the village shops.

Not everything is different. At the Internet Cafe where I write every morning, the attendant is also a mother. Her son, who looks to be about 16 months-old, comes to visit with his grandmother during their walk every morning. 

Mother and child are always just delighted to see each other.

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Comments

9 Responses to “Notes on Motherhood from Elsewhere”
  1. MamaDuck says:

    Wow, quite a reality check!

  2. kbaggott says:

    You said it Mamaduck. It’s actually refreshing to be around people who buy what they need and only what they need.

  3. Kailani says:

    Wow . . . it’s amazing how different things are around the world. Thank you for sheding some light on a whole different culture. It was very informative!

    Here via Carnival of Family Life.

  4. Jennifer says:

    Very cool. I do like the idea of a less wasteful community and I always like to see how other mamas work. Very nice post :)

Trackbacks

Check out what others are saying about this post...
  1. [...] We are just back from a little side trip to Chiflik here in Bulgaria with my sister-in-law and her family. We swam every day in mineral water-filled swimming pools (including at the one pictured at the Hotel Diva although we didn’t stay there this time) much to the delight of babies, children, dad and mothers. [...]

  2. [...] Traditionally, Bulgarian children spend the summer vacation with their baba and diado in the family village. That seems to be true of half-Bulgarian and the children of Bulgarian immigrants too. On our flight back yesterday, there were four unaccompanied minors seated around us. At one point, about an hour before landing, all of them came to visit us and take turns playing with the baby. [...]

  3. [...] and feel like you’re from a different planet than the other mothers? I believe firmly that mothers need each other, but sometimes I just can’t relate to how other people [...]

  4. Babylune says:

    [...] advantage, though, is that we get to learn from how other people live. For me, watching how women mother in other countries is an opportunity I don’t want to miss. Technorati Tags: motherhood in [...]



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