In nine weeks I will be gearing up to walk down the aisle to marry my boyfriend of six and a half years. Marriage comes with several confronting circumstances, but there has been one that I didn’t see coming.
You might think I’m talking about the hundreds of forms you have to complete to change your name, or the fact you have committed to spending the rest of your life with one person, but in comparison those things seem easy.
I’m talking about the age-old question that people think is fine to ask as soon as you tie the knot. “When are you going to have kids?”
Now some people might think it’s a harmless question and some also think that marriage means kids but I’m here to argue against that. In doing so I need to point out the elephant in the room. Infertility.
Mamamia Out Loud discuss how to answer that dreaded question.
It’s growing at an alarming rate. I discuss it with my friends, I discuss it with my mum, I discuss it with my fiancé.
Is it the fact that women want careers before they settle down? Is it what we eat? Is it the lack of exercise? Is it the binge drinking when we are younger? I don’t know the answers.
What I do know however is that infertility is becoming more common and we need a bigger platform to discuss it.
Eight years ago I was diagnosed with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, I have had six laparoscopic surgeries to treat the pain and drill my ovaries. I will tell you, there is nothing that can explain how you feel when you are told at the prime of your child bearing years you might not be able to ever conceive.
Top Comments
Any form of this question really hurts, here is my write up on it as I needed to get it out and get some closure
http://www.parasuniversal.c...
Whilst I respect the difficult health situation you face, could I suggest an alternative perspective? All women have a certain timeframe in which to procreate and many women, without any diagnosed medical condition, struggle to do so. Therefore, every woman must be mindful of trying as soon as they can to have children. Not only due to the biological ageing of eggs,as you mention but because there are no guarantees, the older you get.
The other angle to consider strongly is that if you are able to have kids, you may lament having them late in life because you may feel you robbed yourself, and them, of time together at the other end. My girlfriends and I were part of the 'put off kids as long as possible' brigade and had children in our very late 30's and even early 40's. Not one of us didn't experience problems, several weren't able to have the size family they wanted and all of us wish we'd started sooner because we worry about when we'll leave our kids, if we'll be able to help them and whether we will get to meet and enjoy our grandchildren. For what? A few extra years in our 'careers', house renovations, some extra dollars, overseas travel, all of which could have happened anyway?
Life circumstances are all well and good but biology hasn't changed. Women should have children as soon as they possibly can, to best guarantee their chances of having them at all. It isn't just about what we need, it is about what our children need and they need their parents in their lives for as long as possible. IVF has given us the false idea that our biology has changed, which it hasn't and success rates are not anywhere near what we think they are.