Sorry, have composed an epic :
I'm a creative sort so have always actively dreaded the whole 'career' and 'proper job' thing. I've wanted kids my whole life - used to imagine being a mummy and what I'd do with my kids when I was a little kid myself! I think I would have a mental breakdown if I couldn't ever have kids - I don't really want to live without being a Mum. Not being melodramatic, it's just how strongly I feel about it.
However, developed health probs aged 21 and although advanced far in academia (Masters, etc.), the health issues have meant I've never had a proper job. Was with a total git from ages 26-33 who kept telling me how much he wanted kids but 'not yet'. During a massive row the day before my 33rd b-day he admitted he hated children and would 'never' become a father - when asked why he'd lied, he said it was cos he he knew no woman would stay with him if he told the truth and that discussing our future kids made me happy, so what was the harm? GRRRRR (Apologies to fellow BESHes at Gin Palace who've heard all this ). Of course, I was outta there.
Am now 36, with gorgeous 27 yr old DP. We'd just turned 34 and 25 (same star sign) when we got together and he said that although he wanted kids before 30, he would like to wait until he turned 27 to try. I was okay with that - although he pushed the date back for TTC from Xmas last yr to this summer due to worries over potential redundancies at his work (recession fears). Luckily, there were none and this is our 2nd m of TTC. We are both fit and healthy and I hope that plus his youth help us get pg.
Every single one of my friends over 30 is desperate for a child and hasn't had them because of men lying to them, putting them off and stringing them along (I only have 2 friends with DC and both of them are married to men they met at uni and they made them wait for 10 yrs, so...). I feel that whilst Feminism revolutionised most women's lives, society put no onus on men to change correspondingly. Hence we see women working f-t and still doing all the housework and childcare. In the past, when women weren't expected to have a career and, instead, were expected to settle down young and have a family, at least there was the pressure and expectation on men to also settle down young (or younger than they do now) and get that family started too. Now, they expect to be big kids forever and society normalises this and even rewards it. Business is still basically run as though only young men work, and women are still expected to sacrifice promotion, etc., if they want a family too, whereas nothing much changes or has changed for men with families.
Thank Gawd, then, for younger men like my DP, who've been affected by Feminism positively and don't feel the need to be macho and overachieving, etc., and don't expect to be no. 1 all the time. But we need a massive seachange to get rid of the bullshit notion that women are somehow responsible for men's behaviour (ie, our more bolshy modern women personas are putting men off, wearing skimpy clothes is an invitation to rape, etc., etc.), whilst stopping letting them off for being, well, rubbish. I see in RL, and on here, women being almost pathetically grateful when their husband does a bit of hoovering or begrudgingly watches their kids whilst she has a haircut, and she does everything else, when the couple work the same hours! We need to expect and demand from them the same standards we would hold ourselves and other women to - if you thank a man for making an effort that you would find paltry and inadequate in a female friend or sister then you're patronising him, being your own worst enemy and setting a bad example for your DC.
Above all, though, we need as many - if not more - articles in the media about men bucking their ideas up and understanding just how heinous it is to string women along.. and how devastating the outcome for women could be. Pregnancy and Motherhood seem almost fetishised as exclusively female preoccupations in our society and as such, there is a need in the media and in our collective mindsets for getting men more involved, interested, reassured - and eager and willing in the whole baby and parenthood thing.