In this essay I draw on encounters where I negotiated the public role of feminist educational researcher and the private role of mother. I attempt to connect them to broader structural issues affecting education and women’s paid and unpaid labor, specifically, in a global neoliberal reform context. I do this by sharing encounters from two contexts in which I negotiated these public / private roles–Argentina and the United States–as a means of a) critically reflecting on my positionality in multiple education contexts including K-12 schools and academia; b) illustrating that the personal is political in ways that reflect broader structural politics; c) foreshadowing the ways qualitative educational research can be deeply connected to macro-level—and transnational—social, political, and economic trends related to education, labor, and policy; and, d) bringing gender into conversations about the impact of neoliberalism on educational work.