[I found this image in the ads, delivered to our physical mailbox — it’s an artist’s rendition of the the Shekhinah.]
Dear diary,
In the last entry, I told you about my “Baby’s Book,” which we found when helping my mother move to her new abode. It’s hard for me to read those earliest records without wondering what my mother was thinking when she had me. What did she desire in a child; what did she expect from motherhood? What was she hoping an infant would do for her life?
Why do mothers have children? (I focus on moms and ignore dads because my own father remained aloof from our family: although he was present physically and even supportive in the sense that he’d occasionally glance over to see what the wife-&-kids were doing and then give the “thumbs up” sign, we children were mostly my mother’s pet project.) I’m interested in the tendencies and thoughts of all mothers; I’d like to know if there’s a generally shared view; and I’m curious how much my own mother resembles others.
I could ask my mother directly: “Did you want children; and, if so, why?” Then I could ask a million follow-ups. But the idea of personally questioning her strikes me as something that would be doomed to fail, because my mother is an expert at lying to herself about herself: when it comes to introspection and Life Truths, she’s a tangled mass of terrified evasions. Plus, she’s not even present at present – I’m alone here, up on the mountain, in the small hours of the morning, meditating. So let me begin to wonder around . . .
Did my mom truly want to have children? Yes: she dutifully absorbed the ideal from TV-culture, which depicted a happy family in a nice home with two cars in the garage and a chicken in the pot. She saw this scene and said: I fancy that. She desired to paste herself into that dream. So she wedded a local zero, and they brought forth Yours Truly.
My birth was in 1977 – see David Lynch’s film from that year: my mother is Mary X, and I am the Eraserhead baby.
Yes, mom found a mate and produced me. Bryan Ray, her firstborn. Was I the ideal child? Decidedly not. The type of babe that my mother expected was one who would look up and smile and babble in a way that could be interpreted as meaning “Mama! Savior! So loving and generous thou art! Thou hast given my life its neat little place in thy dream-vision, and for this I adore thee!” But, instead, I was a mewling and puking mess – I wailed in my cradle and gnashed my gums and roared and shook my head and gave her no rest, as I kept screaming:
My bowels, my bowels! I am pained at my very heart; my heart maketh a noise in me; I cannot hold my peace, because thou hast heard, O my soul, the sound of alarm . . . Destruction upon destruction is cried; for the whole land is spoiled. I beheld the earth, and, lo, it was without form, and void; and the heavens, and they had no light . . . and, lo, there was no man, and all the birds were fled. For thus saith GOD: “The whole land shall be desolate . . . the earth shall mourn, and the heavens above be black: because I have spoken it, I have purposed it, and will not repent, neither will I turn back from it.” (Jeremiah 4:19-28)
This was not the type of thing that my mom wanted to hear from her precious infant. So, although it’s true to say that my mother did indeed desire children, it’s also true, at the very least, to say that she had second thoughts about this creature that she had unleashed.
If this all sounds too melodramatic, I assure you: My report here is strictly accurate.
In 1970 the American columnist Ann Landers asked, in a controversial survey, the following question: “If you could redo your life, would you choose to be a parent again?” More than ten thousand letters by parents were sent to the editors; 70 percent of them answered, “No.”
That’s from a footnote that I found in a book called Regretting Motherhood by Orna Donath. I sought out this title to help me better understand my mom. For she has been a larger part of my life than usual, as of late, which has caused my bemusement about her to reach a fever pitch: I just spent every single weekend from Spring to Fall of last year working closely with her – helping her clean out the family house, downsize and move out – yet this time together did not result (as I fondly hoped it would) in a strengthened bond or greater warmth between us: no, on the contrary, she remained as cold and prim as ever. Up to this point, I had always assumed that her demeanor was a judgment against my moral deficiency – the fact that I’ve never “honored” my mother enough, in the sense of the 5th Commandment of the Decalogue (Exodus 20:12) – but after thus dedicating ALL my free time to her, over this recent season, and outdoing myself in the process (never have I worked so hard or felt so much stress), and then observing that my actions failed to effect the slightest softening of her reserve, I conclude that her bearing is not a reaction to my own behavior but rather an aversion to the state of motherhood itself. In other words, what I presumed had been a complex tangle of personal censures was only a distaste for her position. Although this is obviously not the brightest possible finding, it was a relief to realize that there’s nothing more that I need to do – no action of mine, whether good or bad, could ever alter her comportment: she will always be unforthcoming, as she simply and naturally abhors the role of mother.
So, like I said, this led me to check out Donath’s book, Regretting Motherhood. I’m sure that my mom has never heard of it, and she might even recoil from that titular concept; but I’m convinced that it illuminates her attitude in a crucial way. Reading it was so cathartic to me that now I want to share some key excerpts. In the course of her study, the author interviewed oodles and oodles of mothers; the engaging part of the book is that it gives direct quotations from these women. Donath provides the name of each interviewee while giving her number of children and their ages, between each quote; but I’ll skip listing the participants and instead present their answers in succession, so as to feel the accumulating force of their concurrence.
QUESTION:
If you could go back in time with the knowledge and experience you have today, would you become a mother / have children?
(The author notes about the mothers that “All of them answered in the negative . . . their retorts were definitive, and many women replied before I had finished asking the question.”)
ANSWERS:
If I could go back today, I’m sure I would not bring children into the world. It is completely clear to me.
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I wouldn’t have children, period, without question. . . . I always say, I made three fatal errors in my life: one was choosing my former partner; the second was having children with him; and the third was having children at all.
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I’d totally forgo having children. [The interviewer then asks, “All three of them?”] Yes. It hurts me very much to say that, and they’ll never hear that from me. . . . But I’d forgo having them, totally. Really. Without batting an eyelid.
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It is crystal clear to me that if I had known what I know today . . . I wouldn’t have had him. Clear and simple. . . . Not a single day goes by that I do not say, “I’m lucky to have only one.” And this is after I say to myself, “It is a pity I have one at all.” . . . I would rather be without.
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I definitely wouldn’t have children . . . I wouldn’t choose this path.
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Can I say to you now, looking back, that it’s worth thirty years of suffering? [Gestures to accentuate vehement negation] Absolutely, definitely, certainly—no. NO. Would I do it again? Never.
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In hindsight, I wouldn’t even have one child.
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I can’t stand it, being a mother. Can’t stand this role. . . . I can say with certainty that, if I knew then what I know now . . . I wouldn’t have a child. Wouldn’t have one.
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Even today . . . if a little leprechaun came and asked me, “Should I make them go away like nothing happened?” I would say yes without hesitating.
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If I could redo life, would I choose to be a mother again? No way. . . . For what!? It is a real waste of time. Total.
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I wouldn’t have children.
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If I had had the insights and the experience I have today, I wouldn’t have created even a quarter of a child. The thing that is most painful to me is that I can’t go back in time.
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If someone had shown me the future—I wouldn’t do it. I wouldn’t have children. I absolutely wouldn’t. . . . I would erase that part of my life if I could. . . . I say to myself: I wish I could wake up and they’d be gone. . . . I know it’s not a nice thing to say but . . . I really regret the way my life has turned out. [Long pause . . .] I really would like to go back and change things.
Again, those were a sampling of answers to the question about whether one would choose again to be a mother and have children, if one could live one’s life over.
And the following statements were made when the author and interviewer Donath asked her participants if they have found any advantages in motherhood:
I haven’t found any yet. I promise to update you if I do.
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The truth is I can’t see any advantage to motherhood. Really nothing. I don’t understand what people mean when they talk about advantages. Personally? No. It’s just an unbearable burden for me. . . . Today it is completely, completely clear to me that . . . if I didn’t have children, my life would be much better. I have no doubt about it.
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For one day of happiness, for one moment of enjoyment, you have to suffer for so many years! And sometimes the suffering doesn’t end. There it is, the feeling of unending suffering. So what is it good for?
The quote below is in reply to the question “If the hard work of motherhood is seen as an investment that bears fruit, does this fruit make motherhood worth it?”
What does “worth it” mean? . . . I don’t see the sense in the comparison. It’s like saying, “A child’s smile is worth everything.” It’s bullshit. It’s not true at all. One has nothing to do with the other—what’s the connection? It’s like taking a knife and cutting a person and then smiling at them. Is it worth the smile? There is no connection. Why should you suffer for it? What is this masochism? . . . I don’t see any reason to suffer for a child’s smile. You can get a smile from a child in the street—you don’t have to go through pregnancy and birth and nightmares and all the rest of it. I don’t connect to that nonsense.
This next quote needs no setup – I just think it’s interesting:
When I see babies, I get anxious. . . . it’s not that I don’t think they are cute, but I feel scared. It reminds me of my trauma . . . I am afraid that it may be contagious and that I will have another baby.
That might strike one as humorous: as if pregnancy can be caught like the common cold; but look how the mother explains what she means:
I read posts in a forum called “Women who do not want children” in order to find comfort and validate my feelings. Because I am very scared. What scares me? When I wanted children, it was not a rational decision, but rather an emotional and uterus-driven experience. I am afraid it will happen again. I am afraid that my uterus will wake up, and suddenly the thought of having another baby will seem nice, and I am scared because I know I will not be able to be sensible, so I try to remember how hard and bad it is. I am afraid to forget. I am happy that the trauma remains; it protects me from having another child.
Finally, I find these last few quotations to be the most unnerving; because the women are discussing the notion of having multiple children despite regretting motherhood:
I didn’t have a problem getting pregnant again, because I said to myself, I have already fallen into this pit, so . . . Once you have one, it’s like having three, or seven. It really doesn’t matter. Once you are a mother—that’s it. . . . I am already here, and nothing can change how I feel.
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Both my boys want another sibling. If one day I have another child, it will only be for them, because they are pressuring me . . . The fact that they don’t have another sibling is not good for them, but it is very good for me. If one day I crack under the pressure—it will only be because of that.
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I had two children one after the other because I told myself: Whatever will be will be. It was an accident with both children. I thought to myself that it was a good thing that they were only a few years apart—I could get procreation out of the way and get back to what really interests me.
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It was clear that I had to have another child, because I had to. Because you can’t have only one child. After two and a half years, I told myself: Okay, let’s get this over with.
And here’s one extra quote that I found intriguing because it articulates certain mothers’ views of others who remain childless:
We believed that if we didn’t have children, our lives would be incomplete; we would not be able to be a part of society. This is the way we saw people who were infertile and did not want to adopt children: wasted and redundant lives. Of course we felt sorry for them, but in the depths of our hearts we also envied them for their freedom and their ability to live without the burden of motherhood, without relinquishments and sacrifices.
I only wonder how much of the negativity attributed to motherhood is due more truly to the inhumanity of Mammon: perhaps these women are more against the struggle of poverty than they are against motherhood per se – however, because the latter leads to the former, they speak of their regret as being centered upon having babies. It could be that the evils of the system are too abstract to lash out at; it’s easier to blame concrete phenomena like kids, even though the hardships of childrearing are often rather symptoms than the disease. The real disease is a set of societal rules that humans created and can likewise cure: our economy could be calibrated to support and subsidize children and childcare the way it currently supports and subsidizes oil and banks. Is it farfetched to think that its members would be less regretful, if the institution of motherhood were deemed “too big to fail”?