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Is your baby boring, do you wish you'd been a young mum?

95 replies

MrsDoolittle · 31/10/2004 16:33

This is an article thats seemed to have created much discussion in the observer this week.
I'm 31 with 6 month old dd and I would love to have more. I'm just wondering how anyone else feels about this?....

Why I wish I'd been a young mum

Viv Groskop had her first child at 30. As debate rages about whether babies are boring, she says she should have started 10 years earlier - and backs stay-at-home mums

Sunday October 24, 2004
The Observer

Are babies just not that interesting? Anna Pasternak, author and mother of a one-year-old, argued in the Daily Mail last week that being with her baby made her feel like a stay-at-home slave. She felt 'trapped, and, frankly, bored'. On a phone-in the next day on the Jeremy Vine Show on Radio 2 she went further. Babies do nothing but eat and excrete for five months - how tedious is that?
The switchboard was jammed with irate women saying how exciting their babies were. Others congratulated her, making reference to their PhDs. For them, mummy talk was the preserve of the brain-dead. The Mail ran a follow-up feature with mothers' comments - was Pasternak a baby-bore whistleblower? A selfish monster? Or truth-telling heroine? This was turning into Middle England's favourite sport: a cat fight.

Listening to the debate on the radio in the kitchen as I fed my 11-month-old son his lunch, at one point I was so annoyed I burst into tears. 'Don't worry, Will, no one thinks you are boring,' I assured my little boy at one point, covering his ears and clasping him to my maternal bosom. 'Where is your baby?' I screamed at Pasternak's voice (completely unfairly as I also work part-time).

But on went her rant about how trivial other mothers were, how dull their nappy conversations. I cheered when one caller chided Pasternak: 'Can I ask you a question? Do you ever draw breath?'

Most of all, though, I was intrigued by the number of women who agreed with her wholeheartedly - in print and on the radio. For every caller as appalled as I was by the egotism of a woman who could call her own flesh and blood boring, there was another who breathed a sigh of relief. Thank God someone is speaking out, they cried. Babies don't do anything. Any woman with a brain cannot stomach motherhood for more than a few hours and should head for the nearest nursery. At last someone is brave enough to tell the truth.

But whose truth is this? Eight women were interviewed in the Mail 's follow-up article. All except one had their babies, like Pasternak, after the age of 35. Only two thought Pasternak's comments were unreservedly selfish. The rest identified with her to some extent and commended her honesty. They described being a mother as 'terribly difficult', 'agonising', 'unpredictable'.

Several of the radio callers who thought babies were boring mentioned their ages or made references to their careers that also put them in the over-35 bracket.

It has become very fashionable lately to talk about the 'awful truth' about having a baby. But the last taboo is not that babies are boring or that motherhood is a trial. It is admitting that it is simply unnatural to leave having a baby until you are in your thirties, especially until the latter half.

The longer you wait the more selfish you become, the more used to your own life, your own money, your own company. The more likely you are to think motherhood is 'boring'. The awful truth is not that motherhood is horrific. It is that according to Mother Nature after the age of 35 you are just too old to be having your first baby.

I felt this instinctively as soon as I became pregnant at the age of 29. At 30 I gave birth and it hit me that I should have done this 10 years before. The average age a woman has her first child has risen from 26 to 29 in the past 10 years. I thought I was the norm. But as I met other first-time mothers I suddenly felt young. Most were older, many by a decade. The more middle-class and the more successful in their careers, the more likely they were to be older, of course.

With the passing months I felt physically more decrepit - and I was lucky with both an easy pregnancy and labour. What must the women who were five or 10 years older have been feeling like, I wondered? (I don't think it counts as much for subsequent children, by the way - it's the shock of that first one.) I began to fantasise about being a teenage mother. If I had known I would love babies as much as I do, I would have given myself a chance to have loads more, spaced farther apart. I felt incredibly relieved that I had not waited any longer than I had. I was not on such a professional treadmill or so obsessed with my personal fulfilment that I found it a sacrifice suddenly to devote myself to someone else.

Of course, I told myself, it would have been impossible because I wouldn't have the freedom that I have in my work as a writer, I wouldn't have met my husband, I wouldn't have my life set up. But why do we assume that all these factors are fixed points? Aren't all those things cultural factors that we have chosen? And if they aren't working for women - and they're finding their babies boring and motherhood unfulfilling - why are they continuing to accept things as they are? Why, if women want a life as well as a baby, is nothing set up so that women have no choice but to wait until they're too old to really enjoy it?

The advantages of being an older mother have been drummed into us for years. You will be more financially secure. You will have fulfilled a lot of your ambitions in life. You will be established in your career and in a better position to negotiate with employers about flexible working hours. The baby will be planned, wanted.

No one talks about the downside of waiting. You will be knackered. For every extra year spent being an independent adult pleasing yourself, you will find it that bit harder to get used to the fact that now someone else is in charge. You probably won't be able to contemplate a slower, possibly more meaningful, pace. You might even be so used to working and 'using your brain' that - like most men, unimaginative fools that they are - you can't even see how special tiny babies are. If you work, you will feel guilty. If you don't, you will feel bored.

The 'later first pregnancy' was presented as the perfect answer to the women and work dilemma. Now the cracks are showing. It is a solution that permits women into the world of work and education on male terms - only if they delay having a child for as long as possible and then pretend they don't really have one. We have come so far down this road that it is culturally unacceptable - and professionally impossible - for women to have children earlier.

Worst of all, the shortcomings of this solution are surfacing at the same time as new evidence from psychologists that - surprise, surprise - babies actually need their mothers more or less full-time. This research is frighteningly politically incorrect in its conclusions. As popularised by books such as Oliver James's They F* You Up , the theory goes that for the first two years children require a full-time parent or carer who is a super-enthusiastic cheerleader.

That person pretty much has to be their mother, at least in the early weeks or months. If they are in the company of an adult who doesn't find them interesting enough because they've got too used to the cut and thrust of professional life, it's a disaster.

This situation is completely at odds with the lie we are still swallowing that everything will be fine as long as women delay childbirth. Society perpetuates the male attitude that paid work is all that is truly worthwhile in life. The voices of full-time mothers, energised younger mothers and, most of all, fulfilled and happy mothers of all descriptions (whether they work or not) are rarely heard. Would looking after a baby and spending time at home be so 'boring' if maternal values weren't regarded as laughable and a bit sad?

In Pasternak's defence, I think all she was really trying to say was that she thought she would enjoy being a full-time mum but she didn't - because she missed work too much. But I wonder if she would have enjoyed her baby more if her selfish streak had had a few less years to develop.

Still, we can console ourselves with the thought that she'll never be bored again. She said on the radio that she definitely won't be having any more children.

OP posts:
Slinky · 02/11/2004 08:19

"and the really why...."

should read "and the reason why...."

welshmum · 02/11/2004 08:30

I don't think babies actually know if we find them boring or not. As long as they're fed,watered, warm and clean and you're smiling and loving them they're happy as larry. Do you really think they're lying there thinking ' Oh no I can tell mummy's a bit bored, I resent it bitterly and I'm going to be permanently scarred by it'
If we're telling them they're dull when they can pick up on the concept that of course is a different matter.
How boring I found dd depended completely on how much sleep I'd had. My total fascination with her curiously began when she started sleeping through. I can still find her less than scintillating if she's woken me up at 0430....curious that.

aloha · 02/11/2004 09:08

I think Bloss is right in that babies and small children are fascinating and boring. Also, that you can be bored and - surprise! - still love your child with a passion beyond anything you've felt before and gladly lay down your life for them. Those feelings aren't incompatible. It's also possible to have dozens of different feelings about your children in a single day - including irritation, anger, despair, joy, elation....and boredom. I do think it's called being human. I sometimes find pushing a swing so unbelievably dull that I read the paper at the same time as doing it. I think also when one says that having a baby is fun because you hang out with lots of other mothers and get out a lot, well, doesn't that suggest that the baby itself can be slightly dull company sometimes, hence the need for like-minded adult interaction. I know I found my small baby much more interesting the more I did generally - shopping, a gallery, lunch with a friend - I think the whole idea of mummies and babies closeted together in seclusion at home is, if you like 'unnatural' in that this is not how humans have ever lived. It's more 'normal' to share childcare, to live in communities and for mothers not to be isolated from other adults or from their communities and work. Ie it's totally natural and human to want a break! I actually think Anna Pasternak's surreally bizarre idea that she couldn't leave the house for five months in order to give her baby 'a secure start' may be at the root of her terminal boredom.
I also agree that just because you find taking care of small babies dull that is no reason not to have children, and it's rather rude to say so. Some people adore babies but lose interest in older children, other people are fantastic parents to teenagers.

aloha · 02/11/2004 09:09

BTW I'm thoroughly bored with being pregnant. Does that mean I'm also unfit for parenthood?

wobblyknicks · 02/11/2004 09:11

I don't think there's anything wrong with being bored as a mother - but AP seems like a boring person anyway and shouldn't be shouting her mouth off about babies when she only had one for the sake of it and didn't try to make her life more interesting (staying in 24/7 ffs!)

SpringChicken · 02/11/2004 09:13

Haven't read all of this thread but just thought i would post my personal thoughts before doing so.

I am a young parent with a DD who is nearly 4 months old, i stay at home with her all day, every day and am the main person responsible for her - although DP is around, he is at work all week.

I can honestly say i do not find her in the slightest bit boring - i love every little hair on her head and i find myself mesmerized by her when she's asleep - i love watching the little faces she pulls, i love it when she thinks her dummy is in her mouth when it isn't and starts to suck making funny noises.

Maybe it is because she is my first that i feel this way and don't find her boring but i hope i feel the same with any other children DP and I have in the future

bloss · 02/11/2004 10:22

Message withdrawn

mummylove · 02/11/2004 12:20

SpringChicken - I felt just like you and still do!

I noticed my opinion have irritated some people so sorry for that but thats what I think, it may not be true and I hope it is not true for the babies sake.

I will say though that I have never experienced boredom whilst swinging my dd on a swing as I am interactimg with her the whole time so my attention would be on her not on how im feeling. I love it all and thats why I am a sahm because i enjoy spending all of my time with her. But as we know we are all different so for mums who find babies boring they would feel comfortable to go back to work and place baby in a nursery - that way they would not be bored with the quality time they then spend with the baby.

Please understand that I am not saying you are a bad mother if you find babies boring but if you should find yourself bored with a baby then you should look into how you could make it more interesting. Anyone would be bored if they stayed in all day and just went food shopping, baby or no baby.

And my comment "i wonder why some people have babies at all" is more aimed at people who have plan to have a baby whilst fidning them boring in the first place. Also if you spoke about how boring your day was or how bored you are infront of your baby then all that negative talk would effect them... you could say it in a happy tone maybe?

MarmaladeSun · 02/11/2004 12:49

Mummylove; I agree wholeheartedly about the interacting thing whilst pushing on a swing (or playing poohsticks/dropping pebbles down a drain or otherwise repetitive activity). Yes, if I was standing back and observing instead of joining in I can see that it would be excrutiatingly dull, but as I have a very childlike personality (as opposed to childISH lol) I empathise with little ones and see the world from their point of view, and I find it endlessly fascinating. But being different is what makes us all interesting, and it's a good job not everyone is like me or there would be nothing done in the world!!! I'd spend every minute of every day playing with my kids if I could .

subs · 02/11/2004 13:06

i wonder if it worth retsating an earlier point (not mine) that its not the babies that are (potentially) boring but the repetition of chores that tend to be associated with being a sahm?

i just wanted to clarify what i wrote ages ago - for my own peace of mind, as has been on my mind since i wrote it - i have always loves babies/children and was thrilled to find myslef unexp. preg. as i have nannied etc before, i expected to feel the same serenity in my soul with my baby as i had when looking after others and when i didnt always, and sometimes thought about the things i could no longer do, i felt really wierd and sad and happy all at the same time (ie was thrilled to have babe and jopyous and loved her and ....).

but actually, i was stuck in a v tricky and crap relationship and this was, in fact, the prob. since that is over i feel that serenity i craved before and have never been happier. ironically, coming to terms with doing this totally alone has been liberating and calming.

my point is maybe there are other factors which pile in - after all, all the other things that effect us dont go away just cos we have had a baby

and i doubt very much parents/ women who search the net for parenting help and support - ie - us/you lot - are not wonderful caring parents who want the best for their babies

all best

mummylove · 02/11/2004 13:14

Subs - chores are boring i agree but i had to do them before baby anyway but the extra chores do bump it up.

i have to admit im a bit naughty and dont get to to clean as much as i would like as im always busy with dd!

ill get a cleaner when im rich

Pagan · 02/11/2004 20:35

I've just skirted through many of the previous posts so apologies if I repeat. I alway go with the statement that 'Life is a journey, not a destination' As much as it is forced down our throats, we cannot plan our lives as those in the media think we should. You just have to accept what is thrown at you at the time and get on with it. I would have loved to have had kids earlier but circumstances (twit of an ex) dictated that I didn't. I had a fab career and didn't give a jot about giving it up to be a SAHM, so it really depends on the person you are and everyone is different. And whilst days can be boring who is to say that some days in work were never boring. Pants to that, we must all have clock watched at some point, desperate for 5pm to come round. The difference at work is that you can chat to colleagues.

aloha · 02/11/2004 20:59

Hope the career change goes well, Bloss. Lots of teachers on Mumsnet!

Chandra · 02/11/2004 21:13

mmm... I don't think I would have liked to have children younger (DS was born when I was 32), I would have miss so many interesting things. No, if I had to make the choice again, I would wait again.

bloss · 02/11/2004 21:21

Message withdrawn

MarmaladeSun · 03/11/2004 09:34

Bloss...actually yes! I have interacted and played Poohsticks with my kids for that length of time, (no wonder I have a pile of ironing to the ceiling!) lol. I am only too aware when my kids want me to join in and when they want me to just be there, and those times are fine too. I love to just observe as well as play. I've had plenty of practise; I have five of 'em

bloss · 03/11/2004 11:28

Message withdrawn

MarmaladeSun · 03/11/2004 12:03

LMAO Bloss....yes I guess some do!

fio2 · 03/11/2004 12:07

well i was 22 when I had my first and I have always found babies boring, sorry

loved my own but they not exactly exciting!

MrsDoolittle · 05/11/2004 11:21

Well I think this has been a fascinating thread. There are loads of opinions here that never would have crossed my mind. This is the great thing about Mumsnet. I guess because I tend to be friendly with like-minded people (who isn't) I would never otherwise get the opportunity to follow such diverse views on the subject.
I have found it very interesting. As I said in the beginning, I was 30 when dd was born and I fell so completely in love with her I couldn't understand how anyone could find babies boring. However, some brilliant articulate posts have helped to understand how someone might find their baby boring but that doesn't mean that they find their children boring.
Which brings me to another point. I love my baby as a baby. I have a very limited experience of toddlers and I have always found them difficult to communicate with. If I struggle with dd as a toddler, does that mean I am a hopeless mother?
I believe not because as this thread has illustrated every Mother has something different to offer her child in different ways. Ultimately, the most important point being we are doing what we believe is the best for our children because we love them.
Unfortunately, I don't think Anna Pasternak was able to persuade me that she did love her son.

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