Hi there. I know it. You've all heard enough from me. If you are one of my Facebook friends you know that I am a super WHINY complainy sometimes-joyous new parent. In fact, even though I promised myself I would never become one of "them", even most of my photos now are of my sweet Utah. ( One of the reasons new mamas stop posting photos of themselves is because they never look photo-worthy anymore. At least I don't)... But yes, my sweet son, pictured below, ALWAYS does. Sorry about that. If you are not my FB friend then perhaps you've read my last few posts about my horrendous postpartum anxiety and PTSD and if not, go ahead, read them, and know that you will never have THAT bad. Sadly I am (WAS) a worse case scenario in real life. ANYHOW.
I honestly didn't know if I ever would had kids. One thing is for sure, I definitely KNEW I DID NOT NEED to in order to live a "full life" as so many of our grandparents and parents like to tell us. I knew and I STILL KNOW that that is hogwash. There are a million people and communities in our world who could use the extra love, free time, optimism, happiness and intelligence of child-free people. There are countless ways to volunteer, to create art, to write stories and communicate, and to work your butt off that rival the efforts of having kids and the rewards that doing so brings. I think of my hero, Terry Tempest Williams. I can't get over that people will tell you that you will be "missing out" on the greatest thing in life because IT SIMPLY IS NOT TRUE. This world is great in so many ways, and having children is just one of them.
I ended up taking the plunge because I am an experience-junkie. I didn't want to not know what it was all about. I guess that means that I traded off the experience of not knowing, which, indeed, is an experience of its own. And now I will never be a childfree 55 year old. I suppose I thought I sort of could guess what that would be like since I had been childfree so many years (38), but I could not imagine what being a mom would be like and I was plain curious like a cat. And I also thought I would be pretty good at it (so far ... NOT). I wanted to one day watch my future 30 year old son drive up to his parent's house on the night before Thanksgiving and to walk out into the cold and greet him and give him a giant hug and tell him how much I love him and miss him. I wanted at least some kind of mother-child relationship in my future. I wanted to know what that is.
And now I want to do something good for the world. I want to help those who are on the fence like I once was know a few REAL TRUTHS about having a baby. For some reason I was one of those people who everyone told me how "wonderful" and surprisingly "easy" it was. I'm not making that up. Multiple couples told me that if they'd "KNOWN HOW EASY IT WAS THEY WOULD HAVE STARTED WAY EARLIER"????????? Um excuse me WHAT???? Now that I can see clearly and am a mama myself I cannot believe these people told me these things! My sister actually doesn't even believe that anyone ever told me this but I SWEAR IT HAPPENED. When I finally made my decision to try as hard as I could to get pregnant, their unbelievably cheery words echoed in my mind! "It's easier than before we had kids!" ... "people are huge whimps, it's really so awesome!" I also heard "you've lived for yourself long enough, get on with it." And other odd and rude pressure-y statements considering my OLD AGE and all (mad face). Don't get me wrong, I am so grateful that I now have my amazing son, but truth be told, if I'd known the REAL truth, he probably wouldn't be here. So maybe it was God/ the Universe/ Great mama spirit/ mother nature's way of tricking me, I'm not sure. But yeah, basically, I got punk'd. In the end I am sure I will be even beyond grateful for the strange and synchronistic coercing of the Universe, but MAN were those people either extremely lucky or LYING OUT THEIR ASSES.
Since having a baby I now realize about ten thousand things that there was no way I could have understood before. Some of them are great and some of them are not great at all. There is just NO possible WAY to know until you have done it. I can't tell you how many times I read awful things and thought "that won't be me" and how wrong I turned out to be. How much it is EXACTLY ME now. It must be biology's way of getting a pregnant person to cope with the circumstances, by offering hope and justice through thoughts of "that won't be me". And in the end (post having a child)... sadly IT IS YOU and more. I mean I am sure there are a few rare gems who become new moms who can look just as glamorous and be just as happy if not happier and continue some amazing career and still play in their band and start working out 4 weeks postpartum, but I could not make it happen. I am not a gloss-over-my-life always-look-pretty kind of gal. I can't help it. I am bluntly and abundantly honest. I am honest to a point of fault. I can not tell a lie. Let me tell you this, you can trust me when I tell you the things you should or shouldn't know about yourself and your possible future(s) whilst deciding on whether to ever have kids.
Here are some KEY things to consider.
1. How do you function on little sleep? DAYS IN A ROW.
Some people are decent with this. I am not one of them. My brother, who has three kids, is one of them. My husband even, is good at functioning on little sleep (albeit he is 7 years my younger which makes a big difference on the amount of sleep you can work with). Are you 25 or 35? Cause age matters about this. And let me tell you, there is a GIANT CHANCE that you will be more exhausted and living on less sleep than you ever thought possible.
I knew this, going in. And I have been obsessed with getting 7-8 hours of sleep for years now, as when I get less my days are awful, my mood is awful, and I can not enjoy anything about life. Somehow I thought the stars and the universe would smile upon me and grant me a wonderful sleep-thru-the-night from day one baby. Yeah freaking right. Oh, but I do have friends who it has happened to, HOWEVER, DO NOT COUNT ON IT. I barely made it through newbornhood and all. I just barely, by the fur of my fingernails, made it through. Like... picture me 15 feet from the entrance of a state mental health facility in real life. Of course my own hormonal and PTSD induced insomnia made matters 30 times worse but...
Prepare for 4-9 hours of sleep over 72 hour periods. For WEEKS. Possibly YEARS. I have lucked out (since he was 6 months old) and now six nights out of seven my guy sleeps eleven hours in a row from 11pm to 10am. We are lucky lucky ducks. Yes, we wanted a late riser so we made that happen.
If, due to lack of sleep, you cannot function to the point of insanity, extreme irrationality, scary and sometimes suicidal mood swings, rage, hallucinations... YOU SHOULD NOT HAVE KIDS.
If not sleeping just puts you in a bad mood.... GO AHEAD AND HAVE KIDS.
2. Are you ever bored?
Are you one of those people with a million things to do every day besides work? The kind of person who even when you are jobless you can't seem to find enough time? Someone who likes to read as many books as you can, make art or music and create things, learn about all sorts of subject matter, go out with friends, travel... etc?
Um...... Having a child is unadvisable for these types. Extremely un. TAKE CAUTION. I am one of these peoples. I have, in the past, wished I could live FIVE lives sometimes there are so many things I want to do in my ONE life. I wish there were 37 hours in each day! I used to resent school, work, anything that took my free time away from me. Before having a baby I couldn't IMAGINE why a baby would really take all that much time. I just kept thinking, even while pregnant, "it's just a BABY. It can't use up ALL OF YOUR TIME. What are people complaining about so much?!!! Can't they just set it in a swing or a playpen and get on with their day!?"
All I can think of to say to my old, COMPLETELY IGNORANT SELF, sorry hun-bun, you just could not have known the amount of dependency and pure neediness of a baby. You were such an idealist/ idiot. And yet now I can barely remember how I could have been so ignorant. Didn't I think clearly? It's a helpless baby! Of course it needs your every second! Of course you will not have time to yourself for a few years! (I've been broken). And honestly you do get a couple hours here and there once he or she is like four months old.
If, by chance, you DO get bored often or even on occasion... Go ahead, have a kid. You will never be bored again.
3. How do you function under crazy amounts of stress? Do you buck up or do you back out?
Me, myself, I'm a back-outer. Yep. Like I would QUIT a job or just walk away from things that required too much of me. Sometimes a job would start out perfect but after a year the place would increase my responsibilities times twenty but not offer any more pay. Yeah right. So I would quit. Because responsibility was never my middle name anyways. And I would get right back to my happy old self by saying "Dismiss whatever insults your soul", my favorite quote by Walt Whitman. This quote got me out of bad jobs, yucky relationships, a few bills, and even friendships-gone-bad. I could always get my old happy back quite easily by just backing out and pretending it had never existed. I know... "GROW UP" some people must be thinking of me. But that was my WHOLE PLAN. TO NEVER HAVE TO GROW UP.
And besides...News flash Walt Whitman. A BABY SCREAM-CRYING for anywhere from 10 minutes to 4 hours ABSOLUTELY INSULTS A MOTHER'S SOUL. And yet, dismissing your baby is NOT an option. So there went my life motto.
So. In other words, if you aren't a back-outer and can rise to the stressful occasions, handling them with a smile and a sense of humor then YES YOU SHOULD HAVE KIDS.
If you run from anxiety and stress towards the beautiful sunset with your arms raised up in freedom from the relief of escaping the horror and responsibility that wanted to consume you... YOU SHOULD NOT HAVE KIDS.
4. Do you enjoy driving and riding around in a car?
Do you like to just chill in your car with the stereo on? Driving around FOR HOURS AT A TIME or parking in shady places and just surfing the net on your smartphone while nothing productive happens (besides a baby's nap)? Then yes YOU SHOULD HAVE KIDS.
Would sitting in a car OUTSIDE of Target/ Trader Joe's/ Lowe's when you'd rather be shopping INSIDE drive you bananas to where you would consider offering a stranger money to carsit? I RECOMMEND deeply considering your choice to have kids.
5. Do you love babies?
Have you always loved babies? Did you love playing with baby dolls? Do you love kids? YES YOU SHOULD HAVE KIDS.
Did baby dolls bug you? Do you always wonder what people mean when they say newborns are cute? I am (was) one of these types. I put my baby doll in the oven and turned it on when I was 4 or 5. Baby Laura, I remember her name. I just thought it would be fun. I didn't mean to be cruel and wasn't trying to be evil, I just knew it was a doll and wanted to see what would happen (I don't think I fully understood ovens yet)....
If you have never been a fan of babies or playing house then you should still weigh ALL OF THE previous qualities in yourself heavily before deciding to have children. Although I am now bafflingly obsessed with babies I did not used to give a hoot. I feel like part of the reason I turned into a baby stalker is that I am in utter AWE of their power. Like tiny kings with no rhyme or reason riding around in gilded carseat chariots. Perhaps it's more of a fascination with these tiny kings/queens. They can take down Beyonce and Jay-Z for goodness sake. They can obliterate a lifetime of hard work with a few months of crying. There is a reason some people are maternal and others aren't.
6. Do people with kids bug you?
That's right. They used to bug me. A lot. Their OBSESSION with their kids. I wondered how a kid could grow up healthily with a parent so LOST in their obsession with their own kid? I felt like people were losing themselves as well as all boundaries for their kids.
And now I'm one of them.
If (most) people with kids drive you nuts, Facebook statuses included, consider not having any in order to save face and dignity (a highly likely chance that you will TURN INTO THE PERSON you don't like).
If you are cheerfully adoring of all your friend's with kids' photos and comments and conversation then childbear away!
7. Lastly. How much do you enjoy food? Good, leisurely, beautiful food?
If you are one of the types who doesn't mind throwing a Hot-Pocket in the microwave, then kids might be easier for you. And even if you are more on the organic side but a cold meal of yesterday's lentils with a stale edge of homemade bread and a handful of cherry tomatoes could be a daily staple then you might handle this kid thing in stride too.
Sadly I (and my husband especially) loved to make long, extravagant yummy dinners with like ten kinds of veggies chopped up and sides of cooked grains and some kind of sauteed tofu or baked fish. He would make homemade salsas, sauces, and line up the condiments (sriracha, cajun spice, butter, etc) and we would plate up and sit down for an awesome new flick. Those days are gone. For now at least.
If you highly value your relaxing evening meal with a glass of wine (ahhhh my Downton Abbey days ahhhh), you may want to carefully consider your strengths and weaknesses when deciding to have kids.
Now. For the classic and Abbey-esque paradox/ hypocrisy. All things considered. I am in love with my child. What began as beyond-difficult-turned-identity-crisis and suddenly became beautiful. I am in love with life again. And even if you are like me, a person who, if I had met my old self I would have highly discouraged EVER having a baby, chances are it could become a joy and a renewal and a true love of yours, this parenting thing. I mean c'mon, I failed EVERY SINGLE ONE of my own 7 questions! But remember this for those of you who do fail those questions. It's not just hard work that ends up being worth it. It is sometimes horribly, disfiguringly difficult and hard work. Hard like sad hard. Hard like the kind of hard if someone you loved died. Hard like the worst day at work ever times ten. Hard like not fun in the slightest. Hard like you might go crazy. Hard like a boulder you will never be able to move.
But... that being said... I do have a feeling that anything that pushes you to go through something so difficult will be worth it in ways that I am not yet able to understand or express. And that hard work NEVER leads to nothing, provided you are an intelligent enough parent to truly work in a conscious way to be the best you can be as a parent and to simultaneously be the best you can be to yourself. To actually NOT leave yourself out of the equation.
And if, indeed, you never want kids and know this to be a truth inside of you, then more power to you. Luckily more and more people are coming to terms with this! (Not that you need MY dumb reassurance...) I say embrace your forties, fifties, sixties and beyond being a childfree AMAZING woman/ or man and know that the world NEEDS people like you desperately. And so do other people's children. You are the fun ones, the carefree wise ones, the artists, the dreamers who never quit, the ambitious, the adventurers. You will be taken care of. You will be just as loved, those who say you won't don't have the creativity or imagination to know how good friends and nieces and nephew can actually be. In fact, you are a treasure to the world, we need you.

10 comments:
Thank you for writing this. I got a puppy a year ago, and although I loved him so, I felt something akin to PPD on account of all the new responsibility and stress of caring for another living being. It had never occurred to me that I might have these feelings... I realized then that there would be a good chance I'd feel the same way if I ever had a baby, only it would be 100X more terrible. So, even though I have always loved kids, I am seriously considering never having any, because I just don't think I could handle the darkness that might descend upon me. Though I of course never felt as bad as you did (it was just a dog, after all), I recognized some of the post-partum thoughts and feelings you wrote about in your previous posts, not only from my experience from my puppy, but also from some prescient channel that lets me glimpse an en-childrened version of myself. I think it would be smart for me not to choose that path... Thanks again for your wise words -- you are doing a world of good by sharing them.
P.S. My dog and I are now doing great!
Adie, I fucking love this post so much! If I wasn't too dead tired from my kid-free life I'd leave the longest comment in the world right now. Five lives? I could use nine ;) LOVE your honesty and funny bone and awesomeness!
To illustrate how much I relate to this post, I will tell you a little story: I was in some doctor's office when my daughter was about two and the nurse asked me how many more children I wanted to have. In my mind's eye, that woman had turned into a scary, three-eyed alien from a very different planet than I could ever imagine! "Are you talking to me? Are you talking to ME?!" ANOTHER pregnancy, trauma, medical stupid-heads, birth, trauma, emotional wreckage and overhaul?! (Putting it mildly.)
And I'm one of those doll-lovers and child-nurturers from oh, probably the age of two who didn't have a child until I was 35.
BUT...having read this, I realized I really have to reach way back there to remember all of that. I remember feeling it and I never forgot long enough to do it again, but my best-beloved is grown with her own first born, now, and when I get sentimental about being a mother (and grandmother,) it's good. Like really Good. It was my experience to have and I choose having my daughter over never having had that experience, but I would still never do it again.
You have always been so refreshingly thoughtful, honest, and brave... Brave in the sense that you are willing to say the things that people are not willing to say, and you are willing to set aside your pride in favor of humility and in favor of doing what is best for humankind. I know that, because of this, you will be (and I think probably more so than you know already are) an amazing mother. I am comforted to know that a piece of our world's future is in your hands, and I feel less guilty now about being far away from my parents, because it's making me think that maybe they're stoked to be having elaborate meals again, and doing the things that they love to do. You, too, will have free time again one day. In the meantime, try not to be so hard on yourself. You've created a beautiful little man.
teeheehee, I am nodding along with you. Those are all realities of a newborn regardless of having PPD or not. I had no idea how HARD it would be. No idea at all. And it is difficult for me not to share with expectant first time mamas...that there is so much more to parenting beyond baby smells and smiles and cuddles. Like the non-stop need. My eldest is 9 years old now, and i promise you, it does get better. It gets different. In fact, I guess I finally miss a little of how he needed me. And yes, I'm hanging on to the still slight chubbiness of my 5 year old; felt a little lost when she lost her first baby tooth - because that's it, no more babies for me. Anyhow, I love your writing. Keep on.x
No more babies for me, because I can't do pregnancy and newborn days again. I'm sad that I don't have the stamina and patience, but I'm happy that I realise that I just can't do that again. It took so much for me to hang in there, so much deep breathing during those first months....
I think people said those things to you because you have so many interests and are never bored? I was/am the same way and I heard this a lot. RUDE! But I was told I'd make a dynamic mom but you can't do it all because....yeah. I feel I have always wanted a baby but then, whoa, all those years I felt great and not missing having a child and embraced being childfree. I guess I was on the fence and didn't realize it. It wasn't until I turned 40 that I said, okay, I want this. Had my baby at 41. I love this post, you grab topics that no one wants to talk about or write about and you do so with a graceful honesty and that helps us!!!!!
Thank you all of you. For reading, understanding, and being rad in general. I appreciate it so much.
Penny- Oh how i relate to that!
Teeny- I know... it is so hard to keep my mouth shut about the dark parts when people say they are pregnant!
I normally am a silent blog follower, but this post...! I gotta say thank you for being so honest... it's the first time in my life I feel like I've heard the real truth from a mother. I too, am an "on the fence"-er and it's refreshing to hear it straight... and your "rebuttal" post is just as good. Thanks for being real!
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