As told to Kathleen Guthrie Woods
“For as long as I can remember, I wanted to be a mother,” Ann writes. “I could picture the children more clearly than I could picture any partner.” Now 49 and divorced, Ann still wonders if there is a way for her to become a mother. Here’s what she has to say.
LWB: Are you childfree by choice, chance, or circumstance?
Ann: I am childfree because my ex-husband and I had three traumatic pregnancy losses—a full-term stillbirth, a termination due to chromosomal abnormalities, and a miscarriage. We were diagnosed with infertility and found ourselves in a vulnerable enough state in our marriage that it didn’t seem right to adopt.
LWB: Where are you on your journey now?
Ann: I am amicably divorced. I am mostly at peace with my childless state, though I still have times when I think of adopting.
LWB: What was the turning point for you?
Ann: The turning point for me—and it took a long, tangled while—was realizing that my marriage and my desire to be a parent were separate. I needed to address the state of my (unhappy) marriage before I could address the idea of becoming a parent. I have never wanted to go into parenthood as a single parent, and this still mostly holds true now that I’m divorced.
LWB: What’s the hardest part for you about not having children?
Ann: The hardest part about not having children is that I feel as if my natural state is to be a mother, and I’m not (except to my dog and very occasionally to my nieces, nephews, and friends’ kids). This is confusing and makes me feel as if I’m denying who I really am. Then I get all worked up about why I don’t have children. My decision to not be a parent has more logical reasoning behind it than maybe it should.
LWB: What’s one thing you want other people (moms, younger women, men, grandmothers, teachers, strangers) to know about your being childfree?
Ann: I used to view people who were childless as kind of limited and selfish. I want the world to understand that being childfree for many of us is not by choice. Even though we live in a world where we have a lot of choices, there are many very legitimate reasons why we remain childless. This does not mean we do not care about children as much as the next person. This does not mean we don’t or can’t understand love. I hate it when people say they didn’t understand what love was until they had children, as if those of us who don’t have children don’t know what love is. I hate hearing about groups such as Moms For or Against…whatever the cause is. Why can’t they be People For or Against…. I hate it when parenting queries are addressed only to parents, as if all the time I have spent around kids doesn’t count. I also hate the doubting part of me that worries that I am limited and selfish by not doing all I can to have kids.
LWB: How do you answer “Do you have kids?”
Ann: Mostly I answer “No.” Sometimes, depending on the context and the company, I answer “None living.”
LWB: What is the best advice you’d offer someone else like you? (or What advice would you like to give to your younger self?)
Ann: The best advice I’d offer someone like me now is not to be too hard on yourself and to find ways to make yourself happy. It is hard to live a different life than you envisioned yourself living. Give yourself time to sort it out. There are many ways to positively influence kids without being their parent. The world needs us all—parents and non-parents.
The advice I would give my younger self is different. I would encourage my younger self to get started on the parenthood quest sooner. My older sister had a life plan: She wanted her first child by 30. I had no such plan. Perhaps if I had, my life would be different now.
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All of this resonates with me, Ann – thank you for sharing your story!! I, too, feel really confused about not being a mother as I always, from a very young age, knew that mothering would be my ‘natural state’, as you say. I have countless photos of me holding babies – even as a small child, I was drawn to babies and desperately wanted to nurture and bring life into the world. I am involved in the lives of ‘other people’s children’ but I find this a mixed blessing – I love it and it hurts, in equal measure.
I also cried when you said that being a mother was your “natural state.” I have struggled so much with this myself, having felt it emotionally as a child, and also physically in my adulthood. I have tried to explain it to so many people, what it feel like to feel like a mother inside, to have a mother’s heart, but to have no child of my own to express it with. People talk about motherless children. I always felt like a childless mother, even though my body never conceived a baby at all. It is the greatest pain and it helps to know that there are others who know what that feels like. Thank you! ♥