By WENDY LOVE
I’m 29, married and financially stable. My work is flexible. I love my in-laws. And I have a husband who would have been happy if I were pregnant the day we said our vows. On top of that, the vast majority of my friends have one or more children, which means I almost feel like the odd one out not being a parent.
So why, then, with all these favourable conditions, am I starting to back away from my prenatal supplements and reconsider our decision to start “trying”?
Simple.
I am being sabotaged.
By my friends who are now parents. And they aren’t even aware of their work.
Unbeknownst to so many of them, I am being constantly derided (albeit it unconsciously) for being an inexperienced, non-parent via innumerable warnings and—dare I say—patronising about how my life will change when I have kids.
That date I went on with my husband? Perfect opportunity to remind me how rare that will be once I have children. See that bikini-clad woman on the beach? “She won’t have a stomach like that after she’s popped one out,” I’m told with a huff. If I happen to mention my early 4am rising I know it’s a mistake: “You better get used to it,” I’m cautioned, “no more sleeping in when you’re up through the night with an infant”. “Need a rest from playing with my children? Ha, just you wait; there’s no resting when you’re a parent.”
I’ll never be alone but will feel alone. I’ll forever and ever have this little person to worry about and my husband and I will no longer be each other’s favourite thing.
Top Comments
The author's friends, though annoying and myopic, are the less extreme version of this strange compulsion parents nowadays seem to have for twisting every passing comment into a pointed statement about parenthood. I will never forget the day that I asked my sister, the parent of a two year old, if she'd seen some movie (I can't remember which one, but it was a comedy), and she absolutely lost it. She yelled at me that SHE IS A MOM. SHE DOESN HAVE TIME TO GO SEE MOVIES. AND EVEN ASKING HER THAT IS DENIGRATING HER ROLE AS A MOTHER.
So, uh, yeah. Us folks without kids... we really have to watch it. There's so much we don't understand.
I try to refrain as much as possible from being one of those mums who constantly tells her friends without kids how it is day to day. I love being a mum and I generally don't have much to complain about.
However I had a friend who was pregnant and she asked me to be honest about how I found the first year so I told her about difficulties I faced with feeding, illnesses, lack of sleep, loneliness etc. She nodded and sympathised but didn't seem to really believe that would be the case for her as she'd read all the books and is a trainee midwife.
She's now had her little girl and is struggling majorly to cope with life. She keeps saying, " why does no one tell you how difficult it really is?".
What's the solution then? Dont we as mums have some small obligation to be honest about the challenges we face so that if or when our friends have children they are realistic about what to expect??