I've been
married for a decade. I have a house in the suburbs. I have two children, a
lawn mower, and a whipper-snipper for the fringes of grass around my
UniStone driveway.
For the second consecutive year, I've renewed our contract with the guys
who clear the snow from the lip of my garage down to the sidewalk .
My life is like a Witness Protection Programme; except, it's a life I chose,
and I'm happy here (especially since signing the snow-clearing contract) .
At my sister's wedding on Sunday I was
chatting with one of her closest friends; she
asked if I had read her article published on The Scrib: "Confessions
of a Baby Hater".
Annie is my age, and has also been married for ten years. She has about
fourteen dogs (OK, she has two or three dogs. But, to those of us with no canine family members more
than one dog equates to exponentially excessive quantities of hair, drool, and
nasty breath), but no children.
I always wondered why. Now, after reading her post, I know why: she never wanted them.
Imagine!
We parents always wonder
why D.I.N.K.s (Double Income No Kids) don't have children. It's
really none of our business; but, as Annie points out in her post, that doesn't
stop people:
When you’re single everyone asks you when you are going to get married (for which the appropriate answer is: when I find a boyfriend, dickwad) and when you are married everyone asks you when you are going to have children. My long standing answer was always “I don’t believe in those things”. Most people don’t know what to do with that answer and generally shut their pie holes thereafter on the subject.
I think, secretly, parents are infinitely curious about childless couples because there are Mommies and Daddies who would have made different choices, but felt trapped. As the "Baby-Hater" points out - the statistics don't support our version of 'happily ever-after':
Entering full-blown adulthood, it started to become evident that most people were following some kind of a “life” roadmap. Get married by 25, buy a house at 27, have the first of 2.3 children shortly thereafter. 50% to get divorced at 35.
Having a failed marriage does not mean one
wishes they never had children. However, I've heard many parents who share
custody and treat their weekend with the kids as an inconvenience.
My point is: there is no right or wrong when it comes to choosing whether to
have children. There are plenty of parents who should never have had
children - just ask their kids. There are also bushels of D.I.N.K.s whose
tenderness, selflessness, empathy and maturity would make them natural mothers
and fathers. The fact that they choose not to
have offspring is no shame; those people improve the planet simply by being
decent human beings.
When I'm with D.I.N.Ks, I become sensitive
about their space and how my kids may be infringing upon it (something I wish
more dog owners would do). If they wanted to have kids, but were unable
to, I don't want my children to trigger unhappy memories. If they, like Annie and
her Husband, made a choice to
remain childless, it may be because they would rather not have little monkeys like mine climbing into their laps, asking for rides on their feet, or sharing their French
fries.
So, at a wedding with Annie - the Baby-Hating blog writer - and her husband, I
felt protective of their privacy. They didn't want children. They certainly didn't
want mine.
My perspective changed once Annie and my 5-year-old daughter hit the dance
floor.
The two of them developed instant chemistry as they let their "Backbone
Slide", and "Ice-Ice Baby"'ed. My daughter romped as Annie
stomped. They grabbed hands and made each other nauseous as they twirled around
the center of the bar.
It was clear the two ladies - 32 years apart - shared a kinship. They are both
confident, sure about their choices, and make no apologies for non-conformity.
Annie doesn't hate kids. She hates annoying kids. On that point, she and I agree - especially since chronic annoyingness in children is usually borne of similar traits in their parents (thankfully, my kids' formalwear managed to disguise that part of
themselves during the wedding). She also hates being frowned at for sculpting a
lifestyle which includes adult time, HBO at 8pm, and dependants who only
need to be fed, walked, brushed, and have their poop fall onto a sidewalk
instead of into a diaper.
Annie left the party at 1:30am. She had to
work the next day.
I left at 11pm. I had to work just to carry the kids to the car.
She gets to party for an extra ninety minutes; I don't have to scoop s*** into
a bag or vacuum my couch. Everybody's happy; especially my daughter who danced the
night away with a baby-hater.