Let’s talk about the selfish side of not having children. I
hesitate to do that because then people will think I didn’t want them. I don’t want to reinforce the false stereotype that all people without
children are selfish and immature. They're not. But maybe I fantasized my offspring would be
like the dolls I played with as a kid. My dolls sat quietly on a shelf or in a
box until I wanted to play with them. The rest of the time I was free to ride
my bike, read until my eyes hurt, or eat cookies without anybody grabbing for a
bite. I may be confusing children with dogs in that last bit, but you know what
I mean. No need to share my food, my stuff or my time unless I wanted to.
When I was a child, Mom
took care of everything while I just had to do my homework and a few easy
chores. Once they were done, I was free to do anything I wanted.
As an adult, especially one without a husband, I have my
work and more time-consuming chores, but I am still free when they’re done. I
spent years with a live-in stepson. I know what it’s like to have to think
about the child’s needs in everything you do. Salad for dinner? He won’t eat
it. Want to rent a movie? It has to be PG. Let’s go away for the weekend? What
about the boy? I didn’t mind most of the time. I was happy to live some
semblance of motherhood.
But I do understand why the childless-by-choice crowd choose
to be “childfree.” Kids don’t sit quietly in a box. They cry, complain, get
sick, need help, need love, need to be fed, cleaned and taken to the orthodontist.
You can’t do whatever you want when you’re a parent, at least not until the
kids grow up. Then you can buy an RV and tour the country, start a new career
or write a novel.
Speaking of which, November is National Novel
Writing Month, known as NaNoWriMo. During this month, writers pledge to
write a 50,000-word novel in 30 days. That’s a lot of writing. To devote that
kind of time and concentration would be very difficult with children
around. I have signed up before but
haven’t followed through. This year, I have signed up for NaNonFiWriMo or National Nonfiction Writing Month. I plan to do some marathon writing for the book I'm working on.
There are other month-long challenges, a poem a day, a blog
a day, a short story every day. They’re great for producing a lot of work in a
short time, but I don’t think I could do any of them and keep up with my regular
work if I had kids around.
We spend a lot of time here grieving our lack of children. The grief is real and it never completely goes away,
but look at the other side of it. What are we free to do because we don’t have
children? Even if you’re still trying to figure out if and how you’ll become a
parent, what can you do right now
that you couldn’t if you were a mom or a dad? Let’s talk about it in the
comments.