Reviews

The Most Important Job In The World by Gina Rushton

tildahlia's review

Go to review page

3.0

No real beef with this book - it was thoughtful and well researched but struggled to maintain my attention. It took me a long time to get through it. It did feel like some rich nuggets of wisdom/insight surrounded by a lot of pontification padding. I don’t want to invoke the cliche but for me, this probably could have been an essay or remained the cluster or articles it was clearly based on. That said - Rushton is sensitive to the difficult nature of the material and makes a genuine attempt to come at the complexity head on.

reneeduffey's review

Go to review page

challenging informative reflective slow-paced

4.0

bike's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0


from the book:

"How can we ever win a program that socializes the cost of bringing children into the world if so many liberals still see the desire to have kids as something like a timeshare in Vegas - a costly, foolish, and tacky investment mostly for the rubes"? .... There is a personal and political cost to deciding parenthood is an indulgence (p82)

The UK restricts some benefits payments to first two kids in a family!!!! (p83)

matresence but not word for not having ids. How does cateogrically deciing you will not have children and then experiencing not having children transform you?

women....the person who must start and finish hard conversations

"This guys doesn't actually know me, so it isn't me he thinks he's falling in love with, he just likes how I make him feel" This sense that your value is in your output, not in your personhood, feeds the comparison to mothering. Hayley describes feeling like a kind of hybrid mother-therapist

It wasn't until I found myself in a relationship with a man who wanted but didn't need me that I had to admit how much glory I'd found in my smallness, how much value I'd placed on my expertise. I was wholly unprepared to give up a role that I might not have agreed to be cast in but now excelled at. It threw me off balance and made me feel confused and insecure. If he didn't need me, why did he want me? I had to learn how to trust that I was not defined by what I did for my partner, but for who I was - a scary proposition for a good listener with an arsenal of recipes but a fairly low reserve of self-esteem. 

Is it fair to produce, primarily for myself, a human object of hope to live on a planet I have done little to care for and maintain? Am I drawn not just to their nowness but the sparkle of their newness?

What if having a child wouldn't be a disaster? What if actually I was an imperfect person with a lot of love to give?

...argues that normal models of decision making theory simpley can't be applied to the decision of whether or not to have a child. Unlike other choices where we can assume and assign vlaue to different outcomes based on our preferences, this question deals with what she calls a "transformative experience" one that changes the values and preferences you held before making the decision.....The subjective unpredictiabliity attending the act of having one's first child makes the story about family planning into little more than pleasnt fiction.


Is there anything that so quickly confirms what you love and fear most about the world and yourself, like the question of whether or not have children?

meggles's review

Go to review page

challenging emotional hopeful informative medium-paced

4.5

hannahagus's review

Go to review page

5.0

I finished this book in a weekend. It was such an enlightening read, and included so many important discussions on what it means to be a mother in our society. I loved every minute of it.

keniriemer's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative reflective slow-paced

3.0

jaelynwratchford's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

made me cry. felt like i was a part of a womanhood connection i’ve been craving, sharing the stories of so many women. will forever recommend to everyone i know. gina’s writing is absolutely beautiful.

miaj_99's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional informative reflective

5.0

sarah15's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging emotional reflective medium-paced

5.0

beccreads's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging dark emotional informative reflective slow-paced

3.5