I clearly remember playing with dolls when I was small, but I don't recall ever daydreaming about real future babies. Any nascent maternal instincts were extinguished, in any case, between the ages of 14 and 18 as I watched my mum die of breast cancer.
She was quite a battle-axe, so it was disabling to see her cry after soiling her bed, and whimper with pain as her vertebrae crumbled when she moved. I did the only thing that a 1980s teenager without mental health resources could do: I held my breath and pretended it wasn't happening. When she died soon after her 39th birthday, I walked away with only one certainty left: that I would also die in my thirties. It wasn't a fear: it felt like an everyday fact.
Despite all the healthcare professionals that came and went, none of them suggested counselling to me. I spent my 20s paralysed with an irrational terror of HIV, to the point that I suffered stress-induced night sweats and was convinced I was dying. I didn't connect this to watching my mum deteriorate: I just thought our family was marked - why wouldn't I be ill? I saw my life as an egg-timer that would run out when my mum's had.
The net result of all this was that I was adamant I would never have children. I was nihilistic, world-weary - I recoiled from the idea of bringing new life into this world. My dad, deranged, hit the nightclubs shortly after my mum's death and quickly married again, determined to shed his miserable past; we were now estranged. Families were disappointing: parents died young or turned their back on you. I didn't care about any consequences of not having children because I wouldn't see old age.
Something shifted in my 30s, though. The aggressive cancer that my mum developed at 34 didn't materialise. The numbness morphed into a premature midlife crisis: where was my life going, if it might extend beyond 40? My job was soul-sapping, I didn't have many friends. The years yawned ahead of me unpunctuated, bereft of new chapters. What was the point? I was gripped with breathless existential panic night and day. If I wasn't dead by 37, I needed to have a child. It would be a focus, a distraction. My navel-gazing had denied my partner of children - what if he eventually realised he wanted them and left me, alone in the world?
I convinced myself that no one did it for selfless reasons, and we decided to try for a baby.
37 was too late for me. I had advanced endometriosis and almost no ovarian reserve. I failed IVF and, given a 5% chance of success, didn't pursue further treatment.
I am now in that place that once terrified me: I am middle-aged and childless. I imagined it a lonely stigmatised wasteland, where parents look on in pity between those fabled moments of life-enhancing joy they have with their children.
What has surprised me is that it's fine. The spiralling panic and the shame of failure disappeared when the window of opportunity closed. I am content. I have the best of men. I look forward to things again. I still fret sometimes that I am only one person away from solitude, but I rein this in, thinking of my single friends. I have no intention of spending my 40s and 50s in a fog of depression.
I don't know if my family would look different if my mum hadn't died. Did the impact of her death really destroy my desire for children, or did I never have a maternal instinct? Do other people have children for reasons like mine, or was I just not meant to have any?
Culture loves to remind us that childlessness is pitiable. If I could achieve anything from telling my story, I would want women to know that it feels all right to be in my shoes. I might be the thing that some women fear becoming, but my life is not the barren landscape that people dread. Whether I genuinely wanted children or not still feels clouded by events, but I don't miss them in my life now.
I do know I am tired of looking backwards. I have carried my mum's death around for years and made it the cause of all my woes. But blaming means never letting go, and I want to move on. So goodnight mum, rest easy. I'm fine as I am, and I know you'd say that too, and fiercely.
Please or to access all these features
Please
or
to access all these features
Guest posts
Guest post: "Watching my mum die in her 30s put me off having children until too late"
17 replies
MumsnetGuestPosts · 17/01/2017 16:54
OP posts:
Please create an account
To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.