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Whiny Wednesday

January 22, 2014

Whiny_WednesdayYou may have the Colby wildfire on the news and you may have seen the photo of the smoke cloud visible from space. If you could see underneath that cloud, you’d see me, sitting here with itchy eyes, a stuffed nose, and layer of soot on every flat surface in my house.

I’m very grateful I’m not in any danger from the fire itself, but I’m whining about the air that I’m breathing this week.

It is Whiny Wednesday. What’s got the corners of your frown turning down this week?

Filed Under: Current Affairs, Whiny Wednesdays Tagged With: colby fire, smoke, whiny wednesday

It Got Me Thinking…About Womb Transplants

January 17, 2014

By Kathleen Guthrie Woods

Whiny_WednesdayNine womb-less women in Sweden received transplants from relatives in hopes that they will be able to give birth to their own children.

Premise for a sci-fi blockbuster movie? Nope. True story. You can read the article here.

I read the article with mixed feelings. I felt so sad for the recipients, having a sense of what they’d been through to get to this point. I thought about the ethics and wondered if, maybe, their lack of wombs isn’t part of Nature’s plan for population control (yes, I know that’s not a nice thought, but it’s honest). I wondered who would put themselves through this crazy experimental procedure, then I thought about all of the women I know who would drink, inject, or believe anything in hopes of having their miracle babies. I wondered if I had been in their shoes, if I had the means and opportunity, would I have signed up?

Would you?

Maybe this will be the answer to so many women’s desires to have children, and I hope for the best possible outcome. At the same time, I fear what kind of new baby-making industry (and related scams) might result from success.

I hope women—and their partners—read the fine print and weigh the possible win with the possible side effects and risks: blood clots, high blood pressure, diabetes, some types of cancer, transplant rejection. I also found the closing line of the article chilling: “…there are no guarantees (that the women will have babies)…what is certain is that they are making a contribution to science.”

Both my husband and I had to have surgery in the last six months. We are lucky to be healthy, but I have to tell you, recovery was a bitch. Elective surgery? No way. Possibly sacrifice my health to contribute to science? Um, no. But to maybe have a baby? Maybe.

What do you think?

 

Kathleen Guthrie Woods is a Northern California–based freelance writer. She is mostly at peace with her childfree status.

 

Filed Under: Childless Not By Choice, Current Affairs, Guest Bloggers, Health, Infertility and Loss, It Got Me Thinking..., Lucky Dip Tagged With: health, Infertility, pregnancy, reproductive medicine, surgery, womb transplant

It Got Me Thinking…About Resolving Stuff

January 3, 2014

ResolutionsBy Kathleen Guthrie Woods 

As I get ready to embrace a fresh start this January—as I assemble my goals, state my intentions, dream, and plan for the months ahead—I’ve been thinking about how I might resolve some of my issues stemming from my journey to childfreeness, perhaps dissolve the last remnants of grief, and solve the mystery of what a beautiful Plan B might look like for me. Here are some of the tasks on my list:

  • Reconnect with my soul by walking a labyrinth. (Find one near you here.)
  • Talk to women at every level of the childfree path and share their stories on LWB. (More on this later.)
  • Visit various networking groups (for women business owners, crafters, or writers) until I find my local tribe.
  • Read Jody Day’s Rocking the Life Unexpected. (Watch Lisa’s recent interview with the amazing Jody here.)
  • Take a class in something that tickles my imagination, challenges my brain, and entertains my spirit—and has nothing to do with kids. (I’m exploring healthy cooking for two, French conversation, Taiko drums, and agility training with my two four-legged “kids.”)

There’s room on my list for other ideas, so I’d love to hear what you are planning for 2014.

Happy new year!

 

Freelance writer Kathleen Guthrie Woods feels humbled and privileged to be part of Life Without Baby’s community of extraordinary women. 

Filed Under: Childfree by Choice, Current Affairs, Fun Stuff, Guest Bloggers, It Got Me Thinking... Tagged With: 2014, childless not by choice, fb, life without baby, making resolutions, New year, new years resolutions

It Got Me Thinking…About Pure Joy

December 27, 2013

Girl ThinkingBy Kathleen Guthrie Woods 

This video has absolutely nothing to do with being childfree. Or infertility, miscarriages, lost dreams, Plan B. It just made me smile for two minutes and 49 seconds, and I thought I’d share.

Watch it here.

A bit of background: The song is widely known as the “Cups” song from the movie Pitch Perfect (and if you love all those shows about a cappella singing groups, you’ll love the movie). 1,500 students and staff from a school in Quebec got together to perform this to set a new world record.

As I get ready to say “See ya!” to 2013 and “Welcome!” to 2014, I think we can all use a shot of pure joy, so here’s my contribution to the cause. (Share yours in the Comments.)

Have a safe and happy new year, dear sisters!

It’s not too late to grab your copy of Life Without Baby Holiday Companion, offering inspiration and encouragement for getting through the holidays. The book is available here on our site and on Amazon—and now just $4.95.

Filed Under: Childless Not By Choice, Current Affairs, Fun Stuff, Guest Bloggers, It Got Me Thinking... Tagged With: 2014, childfree, Cups, fb, joy, new years

Merry Christmas

December 25, 2013

christmasDear Friends,

Although this part of the week is traditionally held open for Whiny Wednesday, in the spirit of the season, I wanted to turn it around and simply wish a Merry Christmas to those of you who celebrate and warm holiday wishes to those who don’t.

May this season bring you peace, love, and companionship. And may (most of) your Christmas wishes come true.

Warmest wishes to you.

~Lisa

Filed Under: Current Affairs, Fun Stuff Tagged With: Christmas, fb, holidays, Merry Christmas

Fear Not!

December 23, 2013

angelBy Nicole Hasenpflug         

My childhood Sunday school class had many boys, but only two girls: one petite, doe-eyed child…and me.  It was no surprise when, for the few years we were Christmas-pageant-aged, the other girl was chosen to portray Mary…every single time.  Too tall and awkward to be the mother of Jesus, I was the angel—also every single time.  I really wanted to have a turn at being Mary, but I did my best as the angel anyway.  I had the lines down from the first year, starting with, “Fear not! For behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy…”

On my bad days—and at this time of year there are a few—I’m sometimes bitter about the fact that I never even made the cut to play a mother in a church pageant.  “Mary” grew up to be a wonderful person and the mother of three adorable boys.  I don’t get to do that.  Always the messenger, never the mom.

On other days I think about my opening line: “Fear not.”  I chose my path as a teacher when I was still young enough for the tinsel halo, and I am now in my eighteenth year of teaching, in a school with many students in poverty and other tough situations. I spend a surprising amount of time saying, “Fear not,” or some variation, and then working to find ways to back what I’ve said and provide a bit of comfort, when often there is no easy fix.

I’ll never be a Mary, and I’m certainly not an angel, but delivering good news (and, once in a while, tidings of great joy) is a role I can grow into.

Nicole Hasenpflug has many adolescent musicians in her life—just not (usually) in her house.  She shares her home with her amazing husband and their two bunnies.

Filed Under: Childless Not By Choice, Children, Current Affairs, Guest Bloggers, Infertility and Loss Tagged With: childfree-not-by-choice, childless, Christmas, fb, Mary as a mother, teacher

A Cup of Tea with Jody Day

December 16, 2013

Jody DayOver the Thanksgiving weekend I got to sit down and have a cup of tea and a chat with another woman who’s walked a similar path to me and survived.

Unlike most cozy chats with a friend, this one was captured on video and now I get to share it with you.

Some of you will know Jody Day as the founder of Gateway Women in the UK and author of the new book: Rocking the Life Unexpected: 12 Weeks to Your Plan B for a Meaningful and Fulfiling Life Without Children. I sat down to talk with Jody about her book and her personal journey that led to its development.

If you’re not familiar with Jody, you’re in for a treat. So grab yourself a cuppa and settle in with us.

Here are the links mentioned in the video:

Jody’s site: Gateway Women

Rocking the Life Unexpected: 12 Weeks to Your Plan B for a Meaningful and Fulfiling Life Without Children

Reignite Process Workshop

Pinterest Gallery of Role Models

Filed Under: Childless Not By Choice, Current Affairs, Infertility and Loss Tagged With: fb, Gateway Women, interview with Jody Day., Jody Day, Life Without Baby video, video

What Inspires Me in the Childless Glooms of Winter

December 9, 2013

winterBy Paula Coston

A big, warm hello to all my American sisters living their lives, like me, without baby.

I’m Paula, I live in the Cotswolds in the UK, and I’ve long since failed to have a child. For some reason, in my case, I’d have preferred a boy. And in this long, sad haul into winter through our English poet John Keats’ “season of mists and mellow fruitfulness”, I find myself, with a dull ache, flinching at the maternal images that loom up at me through the rolling fog of the figurative English language, which of course we use all the time in speech and writing. Not helped by the fact that I took Latin at school—so the undercover meanings even of the roots of words can suddenly, without warning, twist and turn the knife.

Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness. “Fruitfulness”: there’s one word that does it to me. Then there are the non-literal uses of words like conceive, conception, concept; barren, fertile; seminal, and the verb to disseminate; as used by scientists, impregnated, and to impregnate; to nurse, to nurture; to cradle, to baby; to incubate; to bear, to carry; to mother someone, or to baby them; to brood, and of course to breed; expecting, to expect; to engender, to reproduce, to generate; generation; brainchild; to labour, and labour pains; and those failure words and phrases: abortive, to miscarry, and miscarriage, as in a miscarriage of justice. Even words like bundle and package can get to me. When I’m feeling weak and vulnerable and someone utters some item from this list, it’s like a silent detonation somewhere deep.

I feel pitiful confessing this, but do you know what the worst explosion can be, given my desire for a boy child? The innocent word “sun” from someone’s lips, reaching me as the word “son”, often taking me unawares.

But then, as we non-mothers know, the imagery of motherhood is everywhere, not just in language.

Images from the heart-breaking stories of the mothers of Argentina, and their protest movement, the Madres de Plaza Mayo, have haunted me ever since I heard about them. Their tragedies arose out of the coup d’état by the military junta that deposed President Isabel Peron in 1976. Full of suspicion and mistrust, the new government was determined to eradicate—by kidnap, interrogation, and torture—not just members of what it considered subversive organisations, but their friends, family, and sympathisers: “anyone who opposes the Argentine way of life.” The covert tactics used were horrific.

First, over the years some five hundred mothers-to-be were taken from their homes or off the streets and kept alive long enough to give birth in a labour that was sometimes deliberately induced in their captivity; their babies were then taken away at once and given to families of high-ranking military officers and their associates, thereafter being brought up with no knowledge of their true identities and origins. Of course, few of these mothers ever saw them again.

Next, more than thirty thousand people were “disappeared”, many into some 350 concentration camps and detention centres, the majority never to be seen again. One such story is the tale of ‘Taty’ Uranga Almeida, whose son Alejandro left the family home one day, saying he’d only be a minute, and never came back.

The potency of this story of stolen motherhoods lies also, though, in what those mothers did. Forbidden from speaking out, and banned from participating in official protests, these amazing women began to gather in the vast Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires to console each other over their shared losses and to compare notes, and hit on an inspired means of eloquence. They linked arms, at first in groups of two or three, and began to circuit the square in counterclockwise circles, as if promenading: there was no law against that. Gradually, their numbers grew from some thirteen women to hundreds, and their supporters, meeting and walking in the square every Thursday.

This was breaking new ground for women in Latin America in those days. Traditionally, motherhood had been seen in Argentina as a private realm: “public” women were assumed to be prostitutes, or mad; non-mothers—even anti-mothers. Now, though, they had found a new role, and a new, untrodden sphere: the role of mourning mothers, demonstrating an aspect of “good” motherhood within a public space.

But then the crackdowns started. These mothers began to disappear as well. Many were detained and tortured, never to be seen again; significant numbers were killed and thrown out of planes into the sea—another image of motherhood deprived and lost that I can’t get out of my head. And yet the movement, and other such movements, thrived and survived. There is still a maternal organisation, known now as the Association of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo.

Their sufferings put my lack of motherhood in perspective, shame me, even. But the images they have bestowed on me also now have almost the power of legend, at least for me. They speak not only of the stolen motherhoods that I feel we share, but of the fact that there are always means of articulating that theft or lack, outside whatever is the “norm”. Because there’s one final thing they did which has really stayed with me. They sewed the names of the children they’d lost on to white baby blankets and diapers and shawls and tied them round their heads as scarves, so that as they walked they didn’t even need to speak. And so, once more, we’re back to the power of the written word.

At last childless women are finding more ways, in our society, to have a voice in writing. Here in the UK, Jody Day has started Gateway Women, a fantastic online community for women childless by circumstance. The site is growing exponentially, the publicity for us women snowballing; and she’s just brought out a book, Rocking the Life Unexpected: 12 weeks to your Plan B for a Meaningful and Fulfilling Life without Children. And in the United States of course, you have this fantastic community site.

And now, after a long wait, I’ve finally got interest from a publisher in my novel about a woman coping with the slow realisation, over decades, of her own childlessness!!! If the English language can sometimes sabotage us, then at least in print, we can try to sabotage it back.

dec 9

The eloquence of embroidered headscarves.

The Madres of the Plaza Mayo.

 

Paula Coston has her own blog about singlehood, childlessness and her puzzling desire for a boy child at www.boywoman.wordpress.com. Her novel, ‘On the Far Side, there’s a Boy’, comes out next April. 

Filed Under: Childless Not By Choice, Current Affairs, Guest Bloggers Tagged With: childless not by choice, fb, Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, tale of 'Taty' Uranga Almeida

Whiny Wednesday: Thanksgiving Edition

November 27, 2013

Whiny_WednesdayI’m always hesitant to replace Whiny Wednesday, as it’s such a popular outlet for angst (see last week’s post as an example of the value of a place to vent, and laugh.)

But tradition here is to mix things up a bit on the day before Thanksgiving and make Whiny Wednesday more like Gratitude Wednesday.

So, in honor of Thanksgiving, what are you grateful for this week?

Filed Under: Current Affairs, Whiny Wednesdays Tagged With: fb, gratitude, Gratitude Wednesday, thanksgiving, whiny wednesday

It Got Me Thinking…About Prepping the Feast

November 22, 2013

Girl ThinkingBy Kathleen Guthrie Woods 

There’s something about preparing a meal together that opens people up. You catch up on each other’s day, you share memories, you think about the person who first taught you how to level a measuring cup, test a strand of spaghetti, or chop onions without chopping off a finger. All those little moments come together in an emotional vortex when you’re sharing counter space with generations of loved ones and preparing a feast for a holiday meal.

I love the presents, decorations, music, and traditions of the holiday season as much as anyone, but what I miss the most as a childfree woman is the kitchen fun. As a family of two (and as a family of one until my early 40s), we don’t need six side dishes, two gravies, and a trio of pies. Even if we’re invited to join other family members or friends, I may be asked to bring an item, but I probably won’t be invited to spend the day in the kitchen.

Some women complain about the hours, if not days, spent shopping and preparing for an elaborate meal that will be gulfed down during halftime. I’m not one of them. I’d love to be included. I’d love to—even if it was just for that one day—feel like I was part of a big family again.

 

Just in time for the not always happy holidays, Lisa Manterfield and Kathleen Guthrie Woods have released Life Without Baby Holiday Companion, a collection of classic blog posts that offer inspiration and encouragement for getting through the season when you’re childfree. Order your copy here.

Filed Under: Childless Not By Choice, Current Affairs, Family and Friends, Guest Bloggers, Infertility and Loss, It Got Me Thinking... Tagged With: childfree, childless not by choice, fb, holidays without children, Infertility, prepping for the holidays

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