학술논문

This changes everything: a critical reflection on the impact of internalized ableist constructs on becoming a disabled mother.
Document Type
Article
Source
Disability & Society. May2024, Vol. 39 Issue 5, p1079-1101. 23p.
Subject
*ATTITUDES toward pregnancy
*WORK
*POSITIVE psychology
*ETHNOLOGY research
*ATTITUDES toward disabilities
*PARENTING
*EXPERIENCE
*PSYCHOLOGY of mothers
*DIARY (Literary form)
*GUILT (Psychology)
*FERTILIZATION in vitro
*DISCRIMINATION against people with disabilities
*SHAME
*DISCRIMINATION (Sociology)
*PEOPLE with disabilities
*EXPERIENTIAL learning
*SOCIAL stigma
*SOCIAL isolation
*PREGNANCY
Language
ISSN
0968-7599
Abstract
The lived experiences of women with disabilities within their mothering role have received little attention in the literature. Even more scant is the perspective of women who become disabled after entering into motherhood. This ethnographic study documents the experiences of a mother, professional, and international researcher who is catapulted into the disableist world and is propelled to suddenly negotiate her newly appointed identities. This critical reflection leads to exposing the internalized ableist discourses and provides the terrain for a resistance identity based on character strengths, resiliency, and purpose. It centers around developing an identity based on mothering within an inter-dependency model. This study contributes to the fields of disability studies, mothering, and positive psychology. The scientific literature has a significant gap in research from the perspective of mothers with acquired disabilities. This article looks at the first author's journey adapting and accepting her new disability while being a single mother. Mothers who have a disability often face strong biased attitudes against their capacity to parent; often, those attitudes come from their own internal discourse. This is called internalized ableism. internalized ableism makes us believe that we may not be good enough because we do not compare to a certain standard; like the standard that mothers should be able to run after their child, which a mother with disability might not be able to do. The first author learned that reflecting on our own journeys can make us more empowered in our roles, such as our role of parent with a disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]