"For me, having a child is a really great responsibility because you've got something there that is depending on you for information and love until a certain age when it goes to school"
About this Quote
Kate Bush’s phrasing dodges the glow of sentimental parenthood and goes straight to the unnerving mechanics of it: a child as a daily, total dependency, fed not just food and safety but “information and love.” That pairing matters. “Love” is expected; “information” is the sneakily radical term that exposes parenting as authorship. You’re not only comforting a small person, you’re writing their first draft of reality - what’s normal, what’s dangerous, what’s possible, what words mean, what bodies do, what feelings are allowed.
Bush also frames the experience in time, almost like a countdown: “until a certain age when it goes to school.” School arrives as both relief and surrender, the first major outsourcing of your influence. The subtext is a quiet anxiety about that handoff: the private universe you’ve built at home is about to be contested by institutions, peers, and culture. “Depending on you” isn’t romantic; it’s pressure, responsibility as a kind of gravity.
Coming from Bush, an artist famously protective of her privacy and process, the quote reads like self-portrait as much as parenting advice. She’s someone who treats imagination and knowledge as serious, formative forces. So she’s not performing motherhood as identity; she’s acknowledging it as stewardship. It’s a musician’s way of saying: before the world gets its turn, you’re the first voice in their ear.
Bush also frames the experience in time, almost like a countdown: “until a certain age when it goes to school.” School arrives as both relief and surrender, the first major outsourcing of your influence. The subtext is a quiet anxiety about that handoff: the private universe you’ve built at home is about to be contested by institutions, peers, and culture. “Depending on you” isn’t romantic; it’s pressure, responsibility as a kind of gravity.
Coming from Bush, an artist famously protective of her privacy and process, the quote reads like self-portrait as much as parenting advice. She’s someone who treats imagination and knowledge as serious, formative forces. So she’s not performing motherhood as identity; she’s acknowledging it as stewardship. It’s a musician’s way of saying: before the world gets its turn, you’re the first voice in their ear.
Quote Details
| Topic | Parenting |
|---|
More Quotes by Kate
Add to List



