On Mother’s Day, my heart goes out to all the mothers who live in our industrialized world.

During pregnancy, we mothers are the home for the new generation. Inside us, new beings miraculously develop from a single cell to a newborn baby. This internal, intensely private home is influenced by all the things around us from our world, things that make their way into our bodies through the air, water, and our food.

Bonnie Brown, Jennifer Brown, Lillian Rodriguez - 3 generations of women.
Bonnie Brown, J.J. Brown, Lillian Rodriguez – 3 generations of women.

We mothers are vigilant about what drugs we take or don’t, what food we eat or avoid. But many of the things that make their way into our bodies are out of our control in the moment of our greatest need, and by this I mean the chemicals that surround us from industrialization.

Just as the birds needed, and still need, protection from chemicals in the environment that weakened their eggs shells in the era when Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring in 1962, we mothers need protections now as well. Our tiny egg has no real shell to see, but within it, the DNA that carries the instructions for the new life to come is as vulnerable and fragile, dependent on us to safeguard it from harms.

As a mother and a geneticist, I’m deeply concerned with the chemicals around us that act as mutagens to create health problems in the next generation.

Mother and baby in gas masks, 1941, England.
Mother and baby in gas masks, 1941, England.

In my novel, Brindle 24: The Last Day in the Life of a Town, one character, Charlotte, is a mother living in a chemically contaminated rural area of New York. She is pregnant with her second child. Through her eyes, I travel the path of a mother who wants to protect herself and her unborn child from toxins all around her.

When industrialization comes to the area we live in and affects our air and water, not all of us can move – and those who stay are as connected to their environment as the unborn child is to the mother during pregnancy. To help children understand chemicals in our environment, I wrote a coloring storybook, Stream & Shale,for children and families.

I hope that all mothers will have safe pregnancies with access to pure water and healthy, uncontaminated food. And I applaud the many women who speak out about safeguarding our health. Thank you to Rachel Carson for her books, and to a hero in our own time, Sandra Steingraber for her book Living Downstream and for her activism.

Mothers everywhere, I wish you a healthy and happy Mother’s Day.


You can find Brindle 24, the Last Day in the Life of a Town, in print and ebook editions where most books are sold, including these sources:  Bookshop.org   /   Amazon   /   Kindle   /   Barnes & Noble   /   Applebooks


Discover more from J.J.Brown Author

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

2 responses to “Mothers in an Industrial World”

  1. J.J. Brown Author Avatar

    More about genes, pregnancy and motherhood in my 2025 book, When the Baby Is Not OK: Hopes & Genes, a memoir available most places books are sold.

  2. Michael Coleman (@NebulaLights) Avatar

    Happy Mother’s Day Jennifer. What surprised you most about motherhood? What advice would you give to a new mother?

Leave a Reply to Michael Coleman (@NebulaLights)Cancel reply

Discover more from J.J.Brown Author

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from J.J.Brown Author

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading