Welcome to Brain, Child!

Mission Statement
When we sat down to introduce our new magazine,
we realized it would be easy to slide into the tradition of comparing
a creation of the mind to the creation of a child. "Ah,"
we might intone, "our baby was conceived in passion and
spent many long months in careful gestation. Towards the end,
there were many sleepless nights. The labor was rough. But," we'd
sigh, "when they placed that first precious issue into our
hands, we saw that it was all worth it . . ."
On second thought . . . no. Motherhood is more than a cute metaphor. And a magazine is nothing like a child. A magazine doesn't try
to put bits of American cheese in the VCR. A magazine doesn't
make that beautiful sleeping child face. A magazine doesn't worry
you with a high fever. A magazine doesn't neck on your couch.
Like our real children, however, Brain, Child is a creation
we're proud of. Here's why:
Brain, Child treats
motherhood as a subject worthy of literature. And in the best
tradition of literature, it celebrates the diversity of mothers
and their styles. Our essays and features address readers as
thinking individuals, not just medicine- dispensing, food-fixing,
boo-boo-kissing mommies. We think of it this way: When our mothers
wanted to hash over the important stuff with their girlfriends,
they'd say to us, "Honey, the grown-ups are talking."
Brain, Child is like that: the place where grown-ups are
talking.
Brain, Child cuts past a lot of the bull to get to the voices that are truest
-- not experts, but women who are or have been there. We gave
Brain, Child the subtitle "The Magazine for Thinking
Mothers," but it could just as easily have been "Motherhood
The Way It Really Is." Our writers bring a down-to-earth
perspective to traditional and not-so-traditional parenting subjects.
And they're willing to address the big questions -- our evolving
identities as mothers, for instance, or what we're teaching the
next generation.
Brain, Child is a community, although we're wary of the term. (It's not, for
instance, the kind of community where everyone sits around and
sings friendship songs while secretly hating each other. Or the
kind of community where women with nothing else in common compete
in the baby-with-the-earliest-tooth or teen-with-the-tidiest-hair
contest.) You know that friend you call when you're upset and
just the sound of her voice calms you? You know those friends
you go out to dinner with and stay long after dessert, talking
and laughing, until the waiter kicks you out? It's that kind
of community.
We aim to be down-to-earth, literary, commonsensical,
neither too establishment nor too crunchy, funny, poignant, honest,
respectful, irreverent, relevant, intelligent. We don't have
any particular agenda, except to support thought and debate on
topics of interest to mothers.
Each issue of Brain, Child is packed
with personal essays, in-depth features, a debate, a parody,
fiction, and words from you: our community, our readers. Visit
our table of contents to see what we mean.
-Stephanie and Jennifer