First things first: Happy Mother’s Day to all of the mothers out there. I think I can speak for all of us here in #nerdland when I say that we send our very best to you. Especially to you, Sybrina Fulton.
This year, I have to think it’s just about impossible for anyone to consider the meaning of Mother’s Day without thinking of Fulton, the mother of the late Trayvon Martin. She has endured a special hell this year, one shared surely by too many other mothers whose names we don’t know. (Fulton’s Mother’s Day PSA for the Second Chance program, released earlier this week, is incredibly moving. Keep a tissue nearby.)
For too many mothers today, for so many reasons, Mother’s Day is a melancholy occasion. Listening to Tupac Shakur’s mother (who also surely grieves today) speak at the beginning of the song above about how glad she was she didn’t give birth in prison, I can’t also help but think of Marissa Alexander, the Jacksonville mother of three who in 2010 — less than two weeks after giving birth — sought to stop yet another attack by her abusive husband by firing a warning shot into her kitchen wall. Earlier this week, she was sentenced to 20 years in prison.
Continuing on a theme from last week, Melissa will take a look at the Alexander case, and the tens of thousands of other incarcerated mothers in our prison system. Our special guest will be Tina Reynolds, co-founder and co-chair at WORTH, as well as an adjunct professor at York College. She gave birth to a child while incarcerated, and he was nine months old when she was released.








