All Content from Business Insider 09月23日
多代同堂的成长经历:女性智慧塑造的人生观
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本文作者分享了在一个由多位女性组成的大家庭中成长的独特经历。作者的母亲、祖母和几位姑姑共同生活在一个三居室的房子里,她们教会作者“忙碌”并非生活的全部,并如何在共享空间中找到自我。文章强调了这些女性懂得如何给予彼此和孩子空间,如何在有限的条件下保持自我,以及她们对生活的热爱和对孩子的深情。作者从这些女性身上学到了珍贵的人生哲学,例如拥抱“无所事事”的时光,不被角色定义,以及在爱与陪伴中找到真正的快乐。

🏠 **温馨的大家庭环境**: 作者在一个由母亲、祖母和几位姑姑组成的大家庭中长大,尽管空间有限,但女性们总能巧妙地为彼此和孩子创造出独处的时光和舒适的空间,形成了既有亲密陪伴又不失个人自由的独特生活模式。

🧘 **“慢生活”的智慧**: 在这个女性主导的家庭中,作者观察到她们并不崇尚“忙碌”,而是懂得享受“无所事事”的乐趣,例如一起看雨、聊天、折衣服、看肥皂剧或玩益智游戏。这种生活态度让作者明白,生活的价值并非仅在于效率和产出,更在于过程中的体验和情感连接。

💖 **独立而完整的女性榜样**: 作者的母亲、祖母和姑姑们在承担母亲、女儿、姐妹等角色的同时,始终保持着鲜明的个性和独立的人格。她们教会作者,即使在为人母后,也不能完全失去自我,而是要珍视并保有作为“自己”的独立性,这为作者在成为单身母亲后提供了重要的精神支撑。

✨ **爱的多重维度**: 文章描绘了家庭成员之间深厚的爱与关怀,这种爱体现在日常的点滴之中,既有对孩子的细致照顾,也有女性之间的相互扶持和情感交流。作者认为,这种纯粹的爱,以及在爱中享受陪伴的时光,是生活中最宝贵的财富。

The author grew up in a multigenerational home.

I did not grow up in a busy household. It was quiet a lot of the time, which shocked friends who visited and saw that our house was littered with moms.

I lived with my own mom, who was a single mom, one aunt who was a someday mom, and my grandmother, who we called Nana, who was an always mom. Another pregnant aunt I shared a bed with for a while, an almost mom. There were other moms who visited, other aunts and cousins, and friends and bridge partners of my Nana's coming over for gossip, plus egg salad sandwiches with the crusts cut off.

The author's grandma with her grandkids.

A revolving door of women and their chatter and the deep joy they took in doing a little bit of nothing together every day. Because none of the women who raised me worshipped at the altar of busy.

My bedroom was never just my bedroom

We lived in a three-bedroom house with one bathroom and a big, unfinished attic. All of our spaces were shared nearly every minute of the day. My bath time as a child was paired up with women doing their makeup side-by-side in front of the big bathroom. My bedroom was never just my bedroom. No one had that luxury apart from my grandparents, who used up two of the three bedrooms. Even they had to share their space. I napped with my Nana, and I played hide-and-seek in my Grandpa's room. There was a front porch that acted as an extra room, where people smoked and talked and ate snacks and watched it rain from our prized white wicker furniture.

And yet there was always time to find yourself a quiet corner. To curl up on the sofa on a winter afternoon with a book in a room where four other people had found their own quiet little nook for the same reason. There was always time to watch it rain in this house of women. Always time to stop and talk, or to fold laundry and watch soap operas. Or iron shirts and shout out the answers to "Jeopardy."

The author writing in the living room of her multigenerational home.

Household chores were never the point. They were the things they had to do quickly and haphazardly to get back to their lives. Running a bored cloth over the bathtub before collapsing on my Nana's bed to talk about the neighbors.

Everyone knew how to give each other space

My mom, my aunts, and my Nana knew how to give each other space and even us space when space did not exist in any real way. They knew how to set boundaries, to prioritize, to return to themselves, before anyone knew that these were things. They stood shoulder-to-shoulder in the kitchen to wash dishes before settling down for the real business of playing cards all night. They took care of us kids with deep affection but almost accidentally. Like they were bringing us along on a fun ride. Like we were all kids together.

The other mothers I knew as a little girl always seemed busy, almost glamorously so. I recognized my friends' moms by their retreating backs, by the click of their shoes on their linoleum floors, or their hand resting on the bedroom door, asking us the same questions from faces turned away to their next chore. Always the same questions: How was school? Were we hungry? What time were we getting picked up? Did one of you wear your dirty shoes in the front parlor? Their homes uniformly smelled of evergreen-scented cleaning solutions or cooking, or more often than not, both.

The author credits the women in her life for teaching her valuable life lessons.

Our house smelled of Chanel No. 5 and cigarettes and lipstick. That particularly tinny scent of a teapot left on the stove to steep far too long. Dust mites in the carpet. Feet, I think I recognize that now. Or perhaps it was the smell of dozens of shoes piled high in the front hallway. It smelled of good things, too. In the summer, the open windows brought in great whiffs of the lilac bush outside. It was strongest in the evening, when Nana and I would play chip rummy for hours and hours at the table. Too hot for dinner on those days, just cheese and crackers and cold cans of Tab to sustain us.

They were who they were

They loved us, all the kids. They thought we were funny and weird and a good time. But I doubt any of us felt like life revolved around us. Because our mothers never disappeared into their roles. They retained who they were through motherhood, through sisterhood, through caring for other people. Everything about these women was sharp and clear. And exactly them.

By the time I was 30, I had become a single mom of four little boys. I looked to these women to be my example, to sustain me, to keep me from losing myself. They taught me how to embrace doing absolutely nothing with my day, to refuse to disappear into my roles, to be me before any of my titles: mother, daughter, partner.

They taught me to watch it rain on a porch, to eat cheese and crackers for dinner, and to deeply luxuriate in the company of the women I love because they were pure love.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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大家庭 女性成长 生活哲学 单身母亲 Multigenerational Living Female Upbringing Life Philosophy Single Motherhood
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