Listen to this story being read by Laura Jackel, here.
In my twenties, I was told I would never have children.
And I did not care.
If I am honest, truly honest, I was relieved.
By the time the doctor delivered his diagnosis, without making eye contact and whilst typing notes into a computer, I’d had more surgeries than I could count and was so ravaged by endometriosis I was consuming pain killers daily.
My body had been poked, prodded, injected, cut open and scraped out. There was no specialist I hadn’t seen and no procedure I hadn’t tried. My body no longer felt like it belonged to me. It wasn’t something I worshipped but something I suffered.
Watch: Being the mother of a son is like someone breaking up with you really slowly. Post continues below.
The idea that my body could do something as miraculous as create a life was inconceivable to me. I was so tired. I took the news as it was delivered. Without emotion. Without care.
My husband, on the other hand, was devastated. He too was tired. He loved me but he was tired of me. And I didn’t blame him. When our marriage ended, he expressed regret. He cried as he packed his belongings. He spoke of simply needing time. Of still being there for me. Six months later, he announced his new girlfriend was pregnant.
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