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The
following article appeared in the Washington Post in January, 2006 and can be
accessed directly using the following link:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/25/AR2006012501161.html
Women's
Group Creates a
Space for the Life of the Mind
40-Year
Series Was Started by Stay-at-Home Moms
By Cari Shane Parven
Special to the
Washington Post Thursday, January 26, 2006
Almost nothing can get in the way of Hilary Barnes
Hoopes' attendance at a special Wednesday morning
speakers series. It is there, in a Bethesda church,
that she listens to experts, politicians and authors
talk about a range of topics, from childho od obesity
to quilting to Paleolithic cave paintings.
Hoopes, a mother of 7-year-old twins
and
a
4-year-old, not only has the opportunity to hear
nationally recognized speakers, she also connects
intellectually with other women, many of them
stay-at-home moms.
"I don't miss it, I can't miss it," said Hoopes, 38,
an adjunct professor of museum education at George
Washington University. "I've been here every
Wednesday for the past year. I don't even bother
checking to see who the speaker is."
Many of
the 130 members, who come from across the area, find
it hard to stay away.
Some describe the group
as an "intellectual jump-start" or "academic
retreat."
For others
it's a "sanity pill" or a "sacred hour." What everyone does agree on is that
it is a break from a day that otherwise can be all about kids or work.
"It's a lifesaving force when you think you're brain-dead," said Cathy Bamji,
43, a Silver Spring mother of two school-age children who worked previously
as a consultant. "When you're caught up in a 2-year-old's world and a
4-year-old's language, you get intellectual stimulation, a support group,
friendship and an adult perspective."
"These women know about female
generational angst," said author Iris Krasnow, a four-time speaker at the
Wednesday Morning Group and an American University journalism professor. "A
lot of them have shelved, tailored their careers to do wifedom, child care,
motherhood."
The Wednesday Morning Group has been offering a venue
for academic discussion for 44 years and has grown into a popular series
that attracts prominent figures who speak for free. A baby-sitting co-op is
a favorite feature for parents of younger children. Most of the attendees
are stay-at-home moms, and 60 percent have advanced degrees. About 45
percent of the members are women who work outside the home.
"It's
obvious that we met a huge need for women," said Wanda Van Goor, 78, of
Chevy Chase, who helped start the group. "It was [initially] all about my
own needs, but it's obvious that we met a huge need for all women."
"It's incredible that it's lasted," said Roz
Hiebert, 76, of Rockville, another founding member who in the early 1960s
had four children under 7.
In 1962, Van Goor and Hiebert and another
mother, all members of Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church in Bethesda,
started the Wednesday Morning Group, innocently enough, as a get-together
for women with college educations who opted to stay at home with their
children. These women were not looking for a play group for their kids; they
were looking for something for themselves, and for them that meant
intellectual stimulation.
"I told my husband that one day he would
walk into the house and find me in the back of the closet in a fetal
position," said Van Goor, an English professor at Prince George's Community
College. "I was going crazy. I just wanted to talk to other adults. . . . I
started [the group] out of sheer necessity."
The group put up a flier
and in a few months had 50 members. They hired babysitters and created a
baby-sitting co-op. Four decades later, the co-op is virtually unchanged
except for the baby-sitting fee, which has risen from a nickel to $5 an
hour.
Rules allow babies younger than 4 months in the lecture hall
for breast-feeding.
"You feel guilty because you decided to stay at
home, but you do need a break from the drooling and the diapers," said Chris
Hakenkamp, 41, of North Potomac, who has a PhD in stream ecology and two
young children. "The babysitting is key. By having a co-op where other
parents are watching your kids, other parents who really care, you can let
go of some of your guilt."
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