Wednesday Martin

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Wednesday Martin

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Wednesday Martin, Ph.D., is a social researcher and the author of Stepmonster: a New Look at Why Real Stepmothers Think, Feel, and Act the Way We Do (2009). She is a regular contributor to Psychology Today (www.psychologytoday.com/blog/stepmonster) and blogs for the Huffington Post and on her own web site (www.wednesdaymartin.com). She has appeared as a stepparenting expert on NPR, the BBC Newshour, Fox News and NBC Weekend Today, and was a regular contributor to the New York Post’s parenting page. Stepmonster is a finalist in the parenting category of this year’s “Books for a Better Life” award.

A stepmother for nearly a decade, Wednesday lives in New York City with her husband and two sons. Her stepdaughters are young adults.
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The Virgin Mary Didn't Have a Hymen

As the holiday season descends upon us all, let’s tackle something UNTRUE about female sexuality that’s especially timely. It’s the myth of the hymen, that overdetermined bit of membrane that earned the Virgin Mary her moniker.


The hymen is having a moment right now, and not just because of the immaculate conception. Rapper T.I. recently said that he escorts his teenage daughter to the gynecologist

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Published on December 11, 2019 10:12
Average rating: 3.31 · 21,855 ratings · 2,599 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
Primates of Park Avenue

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Untrue: Why Nearly Everythi...

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The Button

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Quotes by Wednesday Martin  (?)
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“Access to your husband's money might feel good. But the comparative study of human society and our primate relatives shows that such access can't buy you the power you get by being the one who earns it. And knowing this, or even having an inkling of it, just sensing the disequilibrium, the abyss that separates your version of power from your man's, could keep a thinking woman up at night.”
Wednesday Martin, Primates of Park Avenue

“One of the biggest shifts in the last decade of anthropology, one of the discoveries in the field that has changed everything, is the realization that we evolved as cooperative breeders. Bringing up kids in a nuclear family is a novelty, a blip on the screen of human family life. We never did child rearing alone, isolated and shut off from others, or with just one other person, the child’s father. It is arduous and anomalous and it’s not the way it “should” be. Indeed, for as long as we have been, we have relied on other females—kin and the kindly disposed—to help us raise our offspring. Mostly we lived as Nisa did—in rangy, multifamily bands that looked out for one another, took care of one another, and raised one another’s children. You still see it in parts of the Caribbean today, where any adult in a small town can tell any kid to toe the line, and does, and the kids listen. Or in Hawaii, where kids and parents alike depend on hanai relationships—aunties and uncles, indispensible honorary relations who take a real interest in an unrelated child’s well-being and education. No, it wasn’t fire or hunting or the heterosexual dyad that gave us a leg up, anthropologists now largely concur; it was our female Homo ancestors holding and handling and caring for and even nursing the babies of other females. That is in large part why Homo sapiens flourished and flourish still, while other early hominins and prehominins bit the dust. This shared history of interdependence, of tending and caring, might explain the unique capacity women have for deep friendship with other women. We have counted on one another for child care, sanity, and survival literally forever. The loss of your child weighs heavily on me in this web of connectedness, because he or she is a little bit my own.”
Wednesday Martin, Primates of Park Avenue

“You don't get your prebaby body back, ever, because you cannot go back to being a person who hasn't had a baby. Because you had a baby.”
Wednesday Martin, Primates of Park Avenue

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Victoria Simcox Hi Wednesday thanks for friending me, hope you have a blessed holiday season. Victoria ")www.themagicwarble.com


Wednesday Martin Thanks for reading Shellie. And I can't thank you enough for pulling me into the world of goodreads. I'm intrigued by your bookshelf!


Shellie (Layers of Thought) Welcome Wednesday! I loved your book Stepmonster.


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