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Child-Free by Choice

Posted: 04/23/2012 1:18 pm

Once in a while, I question our choice to remain child-free.

It's not that I don't love our pets (two pit bulls, one shepherd mix and five cats -- all rescues) and enjoy the rich, full lives we've built for ourselves, but there's always going to be a small part of me that asks, What if? No matter how happy anyone is with their choices, I believe it's human nature to wonder about the path not taken.

If my husband Fletch and I reproduced, I have to wonder -- what would our kid be like? We always assumed that our progeny would have my twisted sense of humour and his twisted world view and would thus end up a supervillain, or at the very least, wouldn't get into a decent college because of a piss-poor attitude and problem with authority figures.

After we were married, we were broke. Flat broke. Not only did we not have health insurance, we could barely keep a roof over our heads, let alone have the kind of coin to throw around on onesies and Pampers. More importantly, our lives were completely chaotic and we weren't about to subject another human being to our shitty choices.

By the time we had our finances back on track, we both felt too old to bring kids into the mix. (What if I spent the past 20 years on birth control only to find out it didn't matter because I couldn't have kids anyway? I'd be apoplectic!) And I'd be lying if I said a houseful of Barbie shoes holds any appeal.

Yet when I hang out with my friend Wendy's daughters, I'm always smitten, likely because they're almost exactly like me. (Despite Wendy's best efforts.)

The last time the girls were here, her youngest took a long, contemplative look around my backyard and then said all matter-of-factly, "Jen, when you die, I want your house." Wendy was mortified, but in my opinion, you can't get a better compliment than that.

Would we be the kind of parents who treat our kid like a status symbol, especially given that we now live in the super class-conscious North Shore suburbs depicted in John Hughes movies? Would I be the mother who'd run the family into financial ruin to make sure my girl had more Louis Vuitton bags than any of her classmates so she'd have a positive self-image? I suspect I might.

I bet I'd work hard to expose my child to culture early and often so she wouldn't be the asshat afraid to go out to dinner when her Indian roommate craves tandoori chicken. And if maybe she'd been more places and tried more things than the rest of her peer group? I'd probably be OK with that, too.

All my questions are answered the day I meet Margo.

But before I get to Margo, allow me to set the scene. In Inferno, Dante depicts an allegorical journey through the nine circles of Hell. If Dante penned his epic poem today, he'd include the tenth circle of Hell -- the Whole Foods in Deerfield, Illinois.

Nowhere has the motto "abandon all hope, ye who enter here" been more appropriate. From the parking lot dotted with third-row seating Suburbans covered in pro-environment bumper stickers to the pacifists who will cut you for the last jar of almond butter, it's entering an arena where irony ceases to exist.

Regardless, I want some damn kale salad. While I'm standing at the counter, a well-heeled mother and her even better-heeled child of five or six cut in front of me. The kid's clearly just come from ballet practice, however her dance outfit is topped in a pair of D&G jeans. She's also wearing Hunter Wellington boots. I know they're pricey because I tried on a pair and ultimately didn't buy them. (More because of my tubby calves than cost, but that's not the point.)

The child tugs on her mother's arm, then whispers something in her ear. Then the mom says to the deli clerk, "Margo wants to know what kind of sushi you have today."

Suddenly all the resentment I feel towards this kid and her $300 jeans melts away. How badass is it that a little girl is so adventurous that she's not afraid of a little raw fish? I went three decades before I ever tasted so much as a California roll.

Margo tugs on her mom's sleeve again.

"Margo wants to know if the rice is extra fresh."

Um, OK, not only does Margo appreciate tasty sushi, but she also has an eye towards quality. Maybe Margo will become a chef. Her finely honed palate is going to set the culinary world on fire!

"Margo wants to know if the rice is extra-sticky. The last time it was almost too sticky."

So Margo thinks she's Iron Chef.

"Margo needs a taste first."

Margo needs to learn how to say "please."

"Margo enjoyed the Escolar you carried last week. Margo wants to know if there's any more in the back."

Margo goes to Montessori school, doesn't she?

"Margo wants wasabi but she doesn't like the wasabi you have on display now. Margo wants to know if there's other wasabi that's like wasabi, only less wasabi-like."

And now I'm done.

At this point I'd like to shake both mother and child, shouting,"MARGO IS SIX! MARGO KNOWS NOTHING! MARGO EATS PASTE!"

Also? Margo's the exact reason that I shouldn't -- and won't -- have children.

But I will have kale salad.

So there's that.

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09:29 PM on 05/03/2012
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't parenting the toughest job in the world? Don't get me wrong, it is probably the most rewarding, but just like I'm not made to work in a post office because I can't stand for long periods of time, the parenting job is not a good fit for me either.
You wouldn't encourage someone to become a pilot if she or he wasn't good at math and hated flying, would you? Then why on earth would you encourage someone to be a parent?
06:22 PM on 04/25/2012
Ok, not to be a downer, but what happens when you're old? What happens when you're in the nursing home, and your pets are long gone, and you've no children or grandchildren to visit you? You'll be like Grandpa Simpson, only without the rest of the Simpsons.
10:42 AM on 04/26/2012
Visit any nursing home and you'll find all sorts of people whose children and grandchildren never visit them...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NoraHuffposter
Liberal socialist
03:20 PM on 04/26/2012
I'm certain that it would be less distressing than having children and grandchildren who hardly (if ever) visit. Having children for guaranteed companionship in old age is quite depressing.
05:03 PM on 04/24/2012
I always wanted kids. Never found "Mr. Right", never was in a good place financially to support a kid properly on my own. How could I provide child when I was living paycheck to paycheck? So I held off... then I hit 40. I knew that if I hit 40 w/o having kids, I was never going to. Health risks (both to self & child) raise considerably after 40. I didn't want to be chasing a toddler at 45. I didn't want to be figuring out how to pay the $$$ prices of education as I'm retiring. IF I get to retire, the way Social Security etc is going. My dad told me I was too fat to attract men (even back when I was just size 14), then he decided I was a lesbian, so I never got any "when are you getting married & having kids" pressure from him. My mom occasionally asked me if I was dating but I think deep down she's always known I never wanted to get in a relationship like my parents (my father was controlling, manipulative, paranoid, & mentally abusive), so she's never given me pressure either. People who ask "when are you having children?" need to MIND THEIR OWN BUSINESS. Those of us who don't have kids are not always doing it by choice. Some of us dearly want(ed) children but circumstances in life just never made it possible. Being reminded of it can be heartbreaking.
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Bridgette Angelos
a mom
08:25 PM on 04/24/2012
Melime, Your post hurt my heart. For what it's worth I think you're terrific and I hope the heartbreak lessens. Love to be your first F & F.........
11:40 AM on 04/25/2012
you chose to hold off. when people ask questions they are just making small talk that anyone in a communnity would do (look out for others) and you cant blame others for how it makes you feel about your own choices.
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suddenfun
Subvert the dominant paradigm
09:37 AM on 04/24/2012
I think there is a great deal of right wing programming that pushes women of poverty and low education to have children. These types often fit the mold of "low-effort" thinking that serves the right wing agenda. They require people like this to reproduce to provide more them the undereducated voters that will vote against their own interest and are easily manipulated by the GOP propaganda. This is at the root of right wing opposition to abortion and support of religion. Nothing is better for manipulating people who don't want to look too deeply into things than religion. The leaders of the GOP are all rich and their women will always have access to whatever they need. Right wing leadership panders to religion because it serves this aim. They certainly do not act or legislate in "christian" manner and their love of money before concern for their fellow man in dire circumstances is not in line with anything "religious." Programming feeble people to bear children is their only hope to continue their kind.
09:24 PM on 05/03/2012
And what's funny is that Jen Lancaster is Republican. From her web site:
"May - August, 1990- Jen spends the summer living in Boston. She briefly becomes a Democrat. It is a dark, dark period in her life. Upon returning to campus, she changes her major to Political Science and joins the club for young Republicans." http://www.jennsylvania.com/jennsylvania/about.html
09:19 AM on 04/24/2012
It's probably one of the most difficult decisions in the world, to have or have not. And it's nobody's business - we condemn Jen for not having children and doing what so many people do, shift their love to their pets. But hasn't she made a well thought out decision, financially, emotionally and realistically? She did what was right for her. Many don't think that far into it, probably because if we did, there wouldn't be any children. Is the time ever right to take on this lifetime commitment? Some of us jump into it, embrace the idea and do the best we can. We may struggle at times but the rewards can be endless. As for Margo, well, she's a spunky, demanding little connoisseur in the making. Margo may grow up to be the one who also will make her own choices and is just getting a head start. I make it a practice to always smile and say an encouraging word when I see a little girl who is willful. Heaven forbid this assertiveness is squashed, maybe mom could concentrate a little on good manners though.
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z3ncat
personal beliefs are NOT equal to facts
10:19 PM on 04/24/2012
I differentiate between the decision whether or not to become a parent IN GENERAL and the specific individual decisions (whether or not to have children at a particular point in one's life, whether or not to carry a specific pregnancy to term, whether or not to raise an individual child or surrender them for adoption).

I think the vast majority of people either take it for granted that at some point in their future they WILL be a parent or know for certain that they will not. I've never wanted children. It was never a difficult decision for me - in fact, it's one of the biggest certainties in my life. It's always been a deal-breaker in my relationships, and even now, as happy as I am with my partner of almost 10 years, I've made it clear that should he change his mind about wanting children, the relationship is over with no hard feelings (on my part, anyway). Whereas most of my currently childless friends either take it as a given that at some point they will stop being childless, and the few who don't are, like me, childfree.
10:56 AM on 04/25/2012
We know what they say about opinions. Many don't understand the decision to remain child free, but there comes a time, like when your children are grown, that the thought of chasing a 3 year old around the house to put their sneakers on so you can just run to the grocery store, that a child free life is a no brainer. Been there, done that, don't want to do it again. I totally support your assertiveness in your relationship, especially if you feel that strongly about it. It would be unwise to force yourself into that type of commitment or be pressured into having a child you don't want. Besides, you get the best of both worlds, visit your friends who have children, watch mom going crazy, have a laugh and go home to your peaceful, tidy home.
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Bridgette Angelos
a mom
09:16 AM on 04/24/2012
I have 3 grown daughters ages 35,28 and 25 and my oldest has known since highschool that she will never have a child and her husband of 7 years fully supports that. She has never once waivered from her position. My middle daughter is gay and really has no desire to have a child and my youngest said she would rather eat a spider. Suffering from a new disease that has attacked me in the last year..Grandma Lust, I will have to contend with stalking my friends grandchildren till there is a cure for this.
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cinemaven
Follow me on Twitter :)
05:59 PM on 04/24/2012
I've got the worst case of Grandma lust... my oldest son is 24 and newly wed but he and my new daughter have adamantly explained they will not be procreating. I believe them. All my friends have new grandbabies and I'm fairy godmother to one of them which helps but I'm hoping my baby (19) wants kids when he settles down.
I was 20 when I married and 27 when I had my oldest and now I understand my mom's whining for us to settle down and grow up *lol*.. it was just code for Make Me a Grandma!
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Bridgette Angelos
a mom
08:18 PM on 04/24/2012
cinemaven, I just couldn't believe the feelings that came over me with that lust....I've never cared because my daughters choices were theirs to make and mine to support so when the grandma lust hit it caught me completely off guard. I seriously cannot wait till it passes. Besides I'm not sure the people at work really like me stalking everything in a stroller......So glad to know I'm not alone.
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WhyBeadNormal
I live by the Golden Rule...
08:27 AM on 04/25/2012
@cinemaven......I feel you! I also have that Grandma lust but I don't think it's going to happen anytime soon. All my high-school FB friends have grandbabies and I want one! My kids are 29, 26 and 19. The two older ones are not even close to being settled enough to have kids so I guess I'll have to wait for the youngest who is still in college. Of course I don't put pressure on them or tell them how I feel....but I secretly long for them to have children. Their lives are different than ours and all of mine are driven and very focused. I hope one day they put "have children" in their five year plan so I can enjoy Grandmahood while I'm still young enough to keep up with them....LOL! :)
09:02 AM on 04/24/2012
I made a decision back in 1970 that I didn't want children, and would not marry anyone who did. I married my college sweetheart in Sept. 1973, and we are still happily married DINKS!

Over the years, I've had many comments from people telling me and my husband that we were "selfish", or that my husband "must be not any sort of a man", or that I "would regret not having somebody to take care of me in my old age", and so on. I was actually asked "When are you going to quit and have children?" in a job interview.

I have NEVER regretted my decision.

No, we're not mean or selfish, and we spend time with many neighbors children, my many nieces and nephews, and friends' kids.

Now, I know what exactly to answer whenever I'm asked "Why don't you have children?":

IF IT IS ANY OF YOUR BUSINESS, YOU'D ALREADY KNOW THE ANSWER TO THAT QUESTION.
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suddenfun
Subvert the dominant paradigm
09:23 AM on 04/24/2012
It is a totally rational decision on many levels. For one thing overpopulation is at root of many of our most serious problems. Beyond that the options one is left with for their own doings and goings are virtually endless without kids. You can choose to do anything you wish in life for it's entirety. These pursuits can include many things that are unselfish.

One issue I do have as a childless person is the undue attention and consideration that is places on traditional families. For one I think untraditional families are as valid as any and often better due to the more progressive thinking that has to be present. Those are traits of tolerance and understanding that I think are positive values.

I get frosted at the pandering by pols to all we have to do "for the children" and "families."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jkooba
myliberalbias_blogspot
11:56 AM on 04/24/2012
wow, I can not believe the nerve of people. Choosing not to have children is a perfectly acceptable choice. I made that decision when my brother had his first child, then promptly had social services take her away and give custody to my poor parents due to his drug use. I feel like I already raised a child: his child. However, I met my husband and started to rethink my choice. He is just like me though. He didnt want to have a child, but he now thinks he may want to have a child with me. We both know this, it won't be happening anytime soon.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pappadave
Sane and rational...and Conservative!
08:57 AM on 04/24/2012
Perhaps it would be best to instill in your children a positive self-image because of something THEY actually accomplished instead of whose child they were and how much money was spent on them. Hmmmm?
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willowtree3
Adopt a shelter animal.
08:46 AM on 04/24/2012
Being a woman doesn't equal being a good mother. If more women knew that, we
wouldn't have so many "messed up" people running around.

We condemn China because they don't allow choice but we also have turned the
word "choice" into a dirty word that means death. Keep it, abort it, give it up for adoption
are all choices. Not having a child at all is also a choice.
11:47 AM on 04/25/2012
according to michelle obama and western culture all mothers are good mothers.
07:51 AM on 04/24/2012
I think there are Darwinian forces at work here. Barrenness as a desire is rare - but those people who do feel that way probably carry something that makes it good they don't have children. This woman should not have children. It would weaken the next generation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
suddenfun
Subvert the dominant paradigm
09:27 AM on 04/24/2012
It is a heckuva lot better than all the people who shouldn't have children that do. I think you are wrong but you pose an interesting question but that is all. I could just as well say that people who don't have children know themselves well enough to make a proper responsible choice and that someone like that would also handle other responsibility like that of a child, just as well.
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DessieRandom
ಠ_ಠ
01:59 PM on 04/24/2012
"but those people who do feel that way probably carry something that makes it good they don't have children"

I think you're for the most part wrong.

It's my experience that those who would probably be the best parents are the ones wait or don't have children at all.

You wanna look at what's weakening the next generation? Look at those who have kids that they don't really want and can't take care of.
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livingbettertherapy
Counselor, Therapist, Strategic Intervention
03:53 AM on 04/24/2012
I celebrate your choice...if it is not made due to fear...
02:39 AM on 04/24/2012
Every time I go to the grocery or shopping or eat out and hear someone's little bundle of joy screaming its bloody head off, I think to myself, "Thank G-d I'm sterile!!!"
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z3ncat
personal beliefs are NOT equal to facts
10:23 PM on 04/24/2012
How I envy you.

I wish it were physically possible for my tubes to tie themselves (since due to being under 35 and childless I can't find anyone willing to tie them for me) because, as much as I love my nephews, after several hours of watching and listening to the three of them shriek, shout, climb on each other and everything, and wrestle with their parents and their uncles I'm pretty sure my tubes would do so if they could.
cdianek
An antibiotic-resistant micro-bio
12:33 AM on 04/24/2012
Here I've been, all twitchy with the waiting for Jen's new book to come out, and she turns up here!

Though it's thankfully not demonstrated too terribly much here, the decision to not have children tends to set women (and just the women) in yet another spot where her reproductive choices are public purview.

Go to any article on the internet about abortion, contraception, food stamps, children being murdered or being in accidents, and you'll find people howling that women who can't or don't want to take care of children shouldn't be having them, preferably by stopping having sex. Then you wander up on an article about a woman choosing to not have children, and you'd think she was the devil itself.

In fact, the acknowledgement that parenting is not something you want to do, should do, or are suted to do is one of the most self-aware decisions people can make, especially in a climate permeated with the above scenario. I say good on Jen and Fletch.

Can't wait for Jeneration X!
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DessieRandom
ಠ_ಠ
04:39 AM on 04/24/2012
F&F.

You're right about one thing, and I noticed it too.

The very same people who comment on articles related to abortion saying "she should've kept her legs closed" are here saying just how much they think being childfree "stinks" and how everyone should have kids.

It's ridiculous.
05:39 AM on 04/24/2012
i thnk we just all have to assume that those people just don't make sense, lol.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pappadave
Sane and rational...and Conservative!
09:04 AM on 04/24/2012
I know of NO one who condemns women who choose not to bear children. What we condemn, is risking pregnancy, getting pregnant and then "fixing the problem" by killing the unborn child so you can remain childless.
12:29 AM on 04/24/2012
Some of these comments amaze me. No one should have to appologize or explain why they have or do not have children.
No one EVER asks Oh, why did you have kids?
Wouldn't it be interesting just once when the lady you just met at a party says, "My Sally just started ballet." You could say, "You decided to have children?! Why in the world?"
(I have 3 children by the way, if it matter to anyone. The two youngest are still at home, and that home is with their father.)
And yes, I have been questioned about THAT too!
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Ystorm
dumb people make me angry.
08:46 AM on 04/24/2012
I don't care if they have them or not. I think that if a woman doesn't want kids then she can get her tubes tied. That would solve the abortion problem, at least in my mind. And the women that I know that have had more than one abortion are so self centered, so selfish, and so awful that I am glad they don't have kids. They shouldn't have them. They would merely raise the kids to end up as themselves and frankly, we don't need more people like that.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
cinemaven
Follow me on Twitter :)
06:07 PM on 04/24/2012
Have any of the made-up women you know who've had multiple abortions explained the ramifications to a womans body of having your tubes tied?

I would like there to be less people in the world who think it's ok to impose their morals on others but I don't think they should be forced not to breed... that would just be wrong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
z3ncat
personal beliefs are NOT equal to facts
10:39 PM on 04/24/2012
So are you an elf? Perhaps a wizard? Maybe a vampire?

Because you must be a creation of folklore or fiction in order to personally know MULTIPLE women who would much rather make the deliberate choice to spend hundreds of dollars on an invasive, increasingly-difficult-to-access, incredibly stigmatized medical procedure than make the choice to use contraception.

Also, YOU try being a childless woman under the age of 35 and obtaining sterilization. Hell, I had a coworker who both had multiple children and was in her mid-thirties who had a doctor refuse her sterilization - because 'what if something happened to one of her children?'. (Because apparently kids are like books, or dresses, or a favorite chair; if something happens to one you just get another one to replace it.)
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PresReagan
Wake up America !
08:50 AM on 04/24/2012
Surprise
wetcoastm
Free Speech As Dictated By Our Sponsors
11:40 PM on 04/23/2012
I am currently being held in bondage by my kids and loving it and I also really liked your article. Very funny - and I also enjoy kale salads usually with tuna and black beans.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
cinemaven
Follow me on Twitter :)
06:10 PM on 04/24/2012
*lol* One woman's bondage is another woman's wednesday
I loved being a mom and my hubby loved being a dad and both our kids turned out very well despite one all out screaming session in a grocery store that might have turned a woman or two off procreating.
I have some wonderful child free by choice friends and family members so this article really made me laugh.