The sign confused a lot of folks.
At first glance, it resembled a Gadsden flag: a coiled rattlesnake – often associated with distrust of government and the defense of individual liberty – on a bright yellow field.
Only the snake wasn’t arranged like a sprung spring … it writhed in the shape of a womb.
My husband had painted the sign a short time after the Supreme Court rescinded the understanding that women were considered equal under the Constitution and deserving of autonomy.
He called it a gift and posted it in front of our house next to a sign I had painted two years earlier, (kNOw Justice, kNOw Peace).
The signs had lived at the edge of our driveway for about three years withstanding all kinds of weather, including the furtive complaints to town elders about its potential to violate ordinances concerning political signage.
Elders, to their credit, who would tell them they didn’t have to agree to understand the difference between the enforcement of general guidelines for electioneering during a cyclical “silly season,” and what is required for the preservation of protected speech.
It enticed people to honk their horns in solidarity … or rage … at all hours of the day and night.
Until, in the wee hours of the new Trumpian term, the sign disappeared.
I presumed it had been carried off by one (or more) of the previously affronted. It was impossible to know for sure, since our neighbors’ American Flag, blowing in the wind that night, obstructed the field of vision of their Ring camera, which had reliably shown the edge of our yard, and often revealed the unsavory truth about which of our “neighbors” gave middle fingers to the signs and which of our damaged packages had been perfectly fine until they had been literally kicked to the curb by the delivery driver.
Not that it mattered.
When the world didn’t stop on its axis at the idea of women’s private health decisions being criminalized, how could I be surprised by an overheard offhand comment: “I wouldn’t want to be married to the woman who makes him live with a uterus sign.”
In place of umbrage, I felt something akin to agreement.
“The feeling, I can assure you, is mutual.”
Not that it mattered what he thought.
I wasn’t married to him.
Still, it made me realize how nice it is to live with a man who isn’t squeamish about his partner being just that - a partner. He is a man who believes that feminism simply means women are human beings deserving of self-determination.
He brought that same philosophy to parenting; we didn’t always see eye to eye but we hashed out disagreements with love and civility.
We didn’t always put up a united front, but we could always talk it out and if nothing else, agree to disagree.
Which, according to a new Gallup Poll, the gender gap between important rights like abortion is increasing by its widest margin yet.
I can’t imagine a world in which our children don’t see their partners as deserving of basic healthcare. I do hope they will be better, wiser, and more compassionate because they had parents who were true partners.
Happy Father’s Day to the true partners among us.