The Family Is My Priority: How Motherhood Frames Participation in Physical Activity in a Group of Mothers Living in a Low Socioeconomic Status Area
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Mothering Comes before Exercise
“Because the family is the first and then you. Especially when you have baby then always the family is number one. You know you can’t just take care of yourself you need to know what the family likes” Fatima
“I just walk around the supermarket we go up and down the aisles and I make sure I’m there for about 40 min an hour so I’m getting a walk and he’s getting an outing, you know … it entertains him, builds his social skills, sees other babies and children, other mums and dad so it’s good for him as well.” Sumi
“I try and work my exercise around so it doesn’t have an impact on the house or on my husband. I can imagine it is difficult because I would like to go to the gym yeah I would like to go and join a health you know club and do some sort of swimming you know but it is what it is” Kirti
“he [her husband] also bought me a wii fit board a few years ago but again we haven’t got the space for me, but I was using that and I was finding that really helpful…I was doing a lot of running using the um wii fit cause I just had the strap on my arm so that was really helpful but we just don’t have the space to put that out just at the moment” Shabnam
“I mean he would [look after his daughter] but he would only give me half an hour so if I wanted to go it would be like OK come back by seven o’clock and it’s already six o’clock and if I take the time to drive there change …he says I’ve got other things to do in the house cooking and cleaning and tidying up. He doesn’t think that I should have time to myself kind of” Meenakshi
“just prohibitive … I just think what they offer for cost is far too much, it’s far too much for us to, for us to contemplate” Alison
“before I got married I was going for kick boxing……I was happy there and sometimes I was also running and I was working and sometimes I had to run for five kilometres so I was also running, now I’m not doing anything……I think it’s because I’ve got children, that’s why I don’t have time and don’t have I can’t go out and do exercise because it’s just changing my life……” Naseem
“I miss being fit, I miss being active I miss my usual fitness” Lilly
3.2. Mothers Are a Special Case
“I’ve been in so much pain…I can’t do exercise, physically can’t. Walking is the only thing I can do” Jade
“Oh my goodness I do the housework. I think that’s enough exercise. And that keeps me fit as well” Nori
“A lot of women don’t exercise at this time…The confidence in myself because now I don’t have a lot of confidence. You know when your body change you don’t have this confidence in yourself” Fatima
“You’ve got be careful, you mustn’t do that, you can cause yourself an injury…I suppose at the end of the day I listened to like the negativity like the negative comments” Shabnam
“I haven’t thought about that [exercise] yet…and then exercise probably in a few years’ time when the children are a bit older then it will follow along” Christine
“I think we do it more because we’ve got young kids we need to be running around and be healthy more for that. If that makes any sense so that we’ve got stronger bodies be able to you know take the kids to the park go for walks and be active with them. As opposed to do you know what I want to lose weight and look good and want to get toned” Kirti
3.3. Alone or Together
“initially three of us joined together so we got discount. It was much cheaper because three of us joined. But individual fees is much higher, compared to others…we are continuing together, we go together… I don’t think I would go alone …it’s like motivation kind of let’s go don’t be lazy let’s go together” Aahna
“Motivation is a problem sometimes but then I keep motivating myself ah. There are Facebook groups of like healthy eating and exercises group. I’ve joined that and I keep reading that when I feel depressed or when I feel demotivated I keep reading that and then I get motivated to exercise. People are so busy and they are exercising then I can do it.” Rozina
“we’ve already said we’ll all get bikes and stuff, go out bike riding, and walking and just do lots of you know just open it up for him you know, give him a chance, get him a bike, go out bike riding, get him a kite, go kite flying” Sumi
3.4. Facilities Fail Mothers
“And so they do have stuff but it’s dotted all around like far away from where I can get. Not a practical option at all” Vicki
“I’m finding is everything is very focused on newer mums not me with her who is now three” Alison
“I’d also like to just try something that’s regular up the road that’s not going to cost me anything and see if I can stick to that. Start smaller … and hopefully actually stick to a proper kind of routine with exercise because that’s never been part of my daily routine” Vicki
“Too much everything wants you to sign up to direct debits for this that and the other um you know committing yourselves weekly or monthly and we just can’t do that at the moment you know” Alison
“this girl can it’s for mother and daughter and the daughter is a teenager but my daughter is seven years old so I didn’t really go deeper” Christine
“somebody who can guide me, talk to me, answer questions motivate me you know, same might be with other mums as well or other people” Kirti
“I’m saying you know they should have something groups which are people with like-minded in a sense, mums to go out to have a session” Lilly
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Interviewee (Number of Interviews) | Age | Ethnicity | No of Children | Living with Partner |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sumi (2) | 39 | Indian British | 1 | yes |
Fatima (3) | 25 | North African | 1 | yes |
Naseem (3) | 40 | Pakistani Danish | 3 | yes |
Vicki (2) | 32 | White South African | 1 | yes |
Radhika (2) | 31 | Indian | 1 | yes |
Aahna (1) | 29 | Indian | 1 | yes |
Eva (2) | 31 | White Eastern European | 1 | yes |
Christine (2) | 42 | Filipino | 2 | yes |
Jade (3) | 37 | Indian British | 2 | yes |
Rozina (1) | 32 | Indian | 1 | yes |
Shabnam (3) | 44 | Pakistani British | 2 | yes |
Eisha (3) | 24 | North African | 1 | yes |
Nori (3) | 29 | Pakistani British | 3 | yes |
Kirti (3) | 37 | Indian British | 3 | yes |
Lilly (1) | 34 | Sri Lankan British | 1 | yes |
Meenakshi (3) | 32 | Indian British | 1 | yes |
Rachel (3) | 41 | White British | 1 | no |
Jaswinder (2) | 29 | Indian British | 1 | yes |
Alison (3) | 43 | White British | 1 | yes |
Yasmine (1) | 43 | Pakistani British | 1 | yes |
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Wittels, P.; Kay, T.; Mansfield, L. The Family Is My Priority: How Motherhood Frames Participation in Physical Activity in a Group of Mothers Living in a Low Socioeconomic Status Area. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 1071. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031071
Wittels P, Kay T, Mansfield L. The Family Is My Priority: How Motherhood Frames Participation in Physical Activity in a Group of Mothers Living in a Low Socioeconomic Status Area. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(3):1071. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031071
Chicago/Turabian StyleWittels, Paula, Tess Kay, and Louise Mansfield. 2022. "The Family Is My Priority: How Motherhood Frames Participation in Physical Activity in a Group of Mothers Living in a Low Socioeconomic Status Area" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 3: 1071. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031071