‘When are you having kids?’
‘Don’t leave it too late!’
‘Being a mother is the best thing you’ll ever do.’
‘A puppy is a step to children!’
‘It will make your marriage so much stronger.’
I have been married for two years and these are some of the things I have been hearing for at least twenty months.
To be honest I don’t know how my ovaries and their function became public fodder as soon as I said ‘I do’. Last time I checked it was 2016, and this time next year there might be a Madame President (and not just on a TV show).
I am 29. TWENTY NINE people! MY OVARIES ARE FINE!
I am normally very polite and say things like ‘one day’ or ‘I’m sure we will think about it soon’ to the people I don’t know well. Then I turn around to my friends and have a good old slag off session about how pissed off it makes me.
But I haven’t ever considered why it makes me so pissed off until now.
I am pretty content with my life. My husband and I just got a puppy, I am well educated and have great career prospects and to be honest right now the idea of having children is downright scary.
I read all the articles mothers write, the good and the bad, but one thing I know is that being a parent is probably the most serious decision you can make.
Having a child isn’t a whimsical decision.
It isn’t a go to the hairdresser and ask for something a bit different and you walk out with a pixie cut with a steak of pink (that grows out thank goodness!). It isn’t a career change like going from being a corporate lawyer to building wells in Uganda for the UN (because at most those decisions only last a couple of years). Indeed, it isn’t even as big as the decision to walk down the aisle and say I do (because let’s face it the stats say that 50% of marriages fail).