Jody Day, a British woman
who founded Gateway-Women.com an online community for childless women, recently
published a book called Rocking the Life Unexpected: 12 Weeks to Your Plan B for a Meaningful and Fulfiling Life Without Children. In it, she tells
about how she struggled with infertility and other issues that prevented her
from having children. They also prevented her from enjoying the life she had
because she was so busy thinking about the life she did not have. In her book, Day talks
about the “shadow life.” She was simultaneously living the life she had living a shadow life in which she was a mother.
“At no point in that
time (a 15-year stretch no less) did I fully and completely embrace the life I
was actually living, that of a childless woman. I was always in transition to the
next stage when my real life would begin.”
My friends, we only get
one life. As my father likes to say, “It is what it is.” And it could be much
worse. Ask anyone who is paralyzed or suffering from a fatal illness or who has lost a limb. Ask anyone whose spouse or child has died. Every day that we can
get out of bed on our own and choose what we want to do is a good day and
should not be wasted.
We risk poisoning our
relationships not only with our mates but with everyone else around us if we
see only that they have kids and we don’t. Try to see beyond that. Why do we
love these people? How would we feel if we lost them?
Examine your lives.
Acknowledge what you are probably not going to do. One of the childless women I interviewed for my book said she looked at having children like a lot of other things she
had never done and probably never would. She would not be a published author, would not live in Paris, would not be a concert pianist, would not be rich,
tall or thin. But she loved the life she had.
If there’s something you
really feel you must do, then do it. If it means finding another mate or
adopting a child instead of giving birth, just do it. But if you are not
willing or able to take these steps, look at what else you can do. You probably
have more choices than most because you are not tied down with children. The "childfree" crowd sees that as a good thing.
Make a list of everything
that you CAN do, that you get to do, that God gave you the opportunity to do. Now
use that list to design your own Plan B.
In future posts, we’ll
talk about rituals to let go of childless grief and places to find support from
people who understand. Meanwhile if you haven’t read Rocking the Life Unexpected: 12 Weeks to Your Plan B for a Meaningful and Fulfiling Life Without Children, do yourself a favor and read it. Jody will take you through the
steps toward starting to not only survive but enjoy the life you have.
Copyright 2014 Sue Fagalde Lick
Copyright 2014 Sue Fagalde Lick
2 comments:
Sue, I love Jody's site, even though I became a mom at age 45 I follow both this site and hers and will always support this. So many people do not "get" it, and judge both me and you. I know it's easy to say who cares what other people think but some people make themselves impossible to ignore, and you can't tell them to shut up (like my MIL! lol). Anyway, I should buy Jody's book for my younger sister, I already have your book. Thank you so much for finding the time to blog.
Thank you, Anonymous. You should have had my mother-in-law. She always said she already had so many grandchildren (and ex-daughters-in-law) that she didn't need any more from me. If people judge, that's their problem. Thanks for buying my book, and yes, buy Jody's book for your sister.
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