I’ve got an announcement to make that’s going to offend some people. And, to be honest, I’m quite looking forward to seeing their reactions on my social media feed.
No, I’ve not decided to run away to live in a Mongolian yurt and live off the land, or to let my body hair grow wild and free. The thing is, I’m pregnant. With my fifth child.
Yep, my fifth.
I can already predict some of the quips coming my way. Probably similar to the reactions to my fourth pregnancy:
‘Do you have a TV?’
‘Do you know what contraception is?’
‘Are you mad?’
‘How can you support 4 kids?’
Listen to Hello Bump month three: The real cost, and how to tell the boss. Post continues after audio.
‘You just love babies, don’t you.’
Although most of these were accompanied by smiley face emoji’s and probably made the author think they were comedy genius, it’s made me think very long and hard about what these comments told me about the people making them.
It’s just not cool to have a large family anymore.
I get it. When we spot yet another Facebook pregnancy announcement from an already large family, we tend to jump to the assumption that this is a couple who choose to produce kids with wild abandon. They love babies. Cute. But that’s no reason to keep having them. And, for some of us, it’s almost impossible to hold back what we really think in our comments.
Whether we admit it or not, we all have strong opinions on what constitutes responsible parenting. With an Australian average of 1.8 children per family, freely available contraception and legal termination, in 2018, large broods are an anomaly.
Top Comments
I don't care how many kids you have as long as the tax payer doesn't have to support your choice
Hi! Congratulations to you and your family! I think it is fantastic news that you are having a baby - I am sure you are already busy but now you will be even more so!
It strikes me as strange that you feel your news will offend people. I don't see how the number of children a person chooses to have can offend others - that is a very bizarre notion to me . It doesn't affect others in any way so (not to take away from your very exciting news) why would you assume they would care, really? They may be briefly fascinated but that would mot likely be the extent of it.
I have 5 children myself (all of them planned. We are not religious, or crazy) and other than getting plenty of attention everywhere we go, we have never had any negative reactions, nor would we expect to. Most people are in awe of us with their only question being what sort of car do we drive!
And one last thing to remember - you do not need to justify why you are having a fifth child anymore than you would have to justify having a first, second or third. I don't see why an explanation is required about financial stability or hours of work that 'enable you' to have 5 kids. Although perhaps not very common, large families do exist and they are super coo