No Good Deed Goes Unpunished
This year, Americans are expected to spend around $33.5 billion on Mother’s Day, as per a survey by the National Retail Federation and Prosper Insights & Analytics. This figure is the second-highest in the 21 years since the survey began, slightly behind last year’s $35.7 billion. Not surprisingly, the most popular gifts are flowers (74%), followed by outings such as dinner or brunch (59%).
How did Mother’s Day come to be a major holiday?
The Birth of Mother’s Day
In the mid-19th century, Ann Marie Reeves Jarvis, initiated Mother’s Day work clubs to educate local women on childcare practices. Following the Civil War, she organized “Mothers’ Friendship Day” gatherings, aiming to promote reconciliation among mothers and former Union and Confederate soldiers.
Inspired by her mother’s compassion, Anna Jarvis envisioned a day to honor mothers’ selflessness and sacrifices. On May 10, 1908, she organized the first Mother’s Day services in Grafton, West Virginia, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Anna distributed her mother’s favorite flower, white carnations, to attending mothers. Her motto for Mother’s Day was “For the Best Mother who Ever Lived—Your Mother.” This is why Mother’s Day is in the singular — it’s always been about your mom!
As Mother’s Day gained momentum across the nation, Anna advocated for its recognition as a national holiday. Her persistent lobbying efforts and letter-writing campaigns resulted in President Woodrow Wilson declaring Mother’s Day a national holiday in 1914.
Undoing Mother’s Day
By 1920, Anna Jarvis was upset by the commercialization of Mother’s Day. She criticized florists, candy makers, and greeting card companies, calling them “charlatans, bandits, pirates, racketeers, kidnappers, and termites” for exploiting the holiday. In 1922, she supported a boycott against florists who raised the prices of white carnations every May. The next year, she protested at a retail confectioner convention, decrying the industry’s profit-driven approach to the day
Jarvis, outraged by the commercial exploitation of Mother’s Day, embarked on a mission to rescind the holiday she had fought so hard to establish. She tried petition drives, lawsuits and letter writing. Despite her efforts, Jarvis’s campaign to rescind Mother’s Day was ultimately unsuccessful.
Her later years were marked by financial struggles due to the costly legal battles she fought to reclaim the holiday’s true meaning. Jarvis, who herself never had any children, passed away in 1948, disillusioned and penniless in mental asylum.
Anna Jarvis’s story is a powerful reminder of what Mother’s Day is truly about – celebrating the selfless love of all mothers, whether they’re biological, adoptive, foster, or simply fill the role of a mother figure in a child’s life!
Happy reading,
Suzanne Daniels
- Newsbeat: current healthcare news, including Ozempic use, sick leave post-pandemic and reporting anticompetitive practices.
- Baby,Baby:baby weighted sleepwear pulled, medical costs of having a baby, and the complexity of baby gear manuals.
- Mom Matters:mother takes on antibiotic resistance, mom’s life changed by a bike and mom got a jail cell instead of mental health caret.
- Change of Pace: including my personal favorite, How Lizzie Borden Got Away With Murder!.
Newsbeat
HealthDay
One in 8 U.S. Adults Have Now Used Blockbuster Meds Like Ozempic
KFF Health News
Paid Sick Leave Sticks After Many Pandemic Protections Vanish
Healthcare Dive
Antitrust agencies are relying on consumers to report anticompetitive behavior. That trust might be misplaced.
Baby,Baby
NPR
Amazon, Target and other retailers pull weighted infant sleepwear over safety fears
KFF Health News
Their First Baby Came With Medical Debt. These Illinois Parents Won’t Have Another.
KFF Health News
Oh, Dear! Baby Gear! Why Are the Manuals So Unclear?
Mom Matters
Los Angeles Times
A mother’s loss launches a global effort to fight antibiotic resistance
New York Times
My Mother Got on a Bike. It Changed Her Life.
TIME
My Mother Needed Mental Health Treatment. She Got a Jail Cell
Change of Pace
Smithsonian Magazine
Locks of Beethoven’s Hair Are Unraveling the Mysteries of His Deafness and Illnesses
Saturday Evening Post
How Bicycles Changed Women’s Fashion and Feminism
Smithsonian Magazine
How Lizzie Borden Got Away With Murder
Enjoy the weekend!
Best,
Suzanne
Suzanne Daniels, Ph.D.
AEPC President
P.O. Box 1416
Birmingham, MI 48012
Office: (248) 792-2187
Email: [email protected]