Forgot Password?

Jennifer Margulis

Mothering Outside the Lines

The American Prejudice Against Big Families

October 29th, 2009
Athena, 3; Etani, 8 months; Hesperus, 5

Athena, 3; Etani, 8 months; Hesperus, 5

I understand why people raise their eyebrows at us for being pregnant with our fourth baby.

The vast majority of Americans still only have two children but there is a small subset of the population creating such large families that one Women’s Health writer suggests the craze for more children stems from an addiction to being pregnant. She argues that women become pregnant because they like being treated like rock stars and being in the limelight and she dubs women like me with more than two children “bumpaholics.”

(I don’t know about you but my experience being pregnant in America has not involved red carpet treatment strewn with rose petals and last time I checked having stretch marks, morning sickness, leg cramps, hemorrhoids, insomnia, and a myriad of other pregnancy side effects did not equate to achieving celebrity status, but a rant against the arguments in this unsubstantiated article—which was written by a writer I respect and consider a friend—is off the topic of today’s post).

Etani 3; Hesperus, 7; Athena 5

Etani 3; Hesperus, 6; Athena 5

Though I think the argument that some women are addicted to pregnancy is specious at best, I understand why people feel judgmental about big families. I am very concerned about the environment and fear global warming with an anxiety that manifests itself in the pit of my stomach every day:

My kids: Why can’t we drive Mommy? We don’t want to walk/take the bus/bike today.

Me: Because we homo sapiens are going to pollute ourselves out of existence like the cyanobacteria! The polar ice caps are melting and polar bears are drowning and WE ARE NOT DRIVING NO MATTER WHAT!

A recent study by researchers at Oregon State University suggests that the best way to reduce your carbon footprint is to have fewer children (or no children at all).

I worry about overpopulation.

I worry because I want my children to feel special and loved and cared for, and I want to be the best parent I can be for each of them, and my time feels pretty divided already (especially when everyone’s talking at once at dinner), and I wonder what will happen when I have to turn my attention to caring for a newborn.

I worry because, like so many others, our finances are not nearly as robust (read: we’re broke and money is a big concern) in this down economy as they should be to have a big family and I read things in magazines like “you should have six months of savings no matter what.” We don’t have six days of savings.

My son Etani, who just turned six, asks for another hug at bedtime. He smells warm and salty when I kiss that soft place on his neck a hundred times. “Goodnight Pineapple,” he whispers patting my stomach. “I love you.”

There are lots of legitimate arguments against having even one child. Our new baby isn’t here yet but already I know that our lives will be much richer and more meaningful when he or she is in it.

Etani, 6; Athena, 8; Hesperus, 10

Etani, 6; Athena, 8; Hesperus, 10

Tags: , , ,

[ 19 comments ]

People’s Reactions When I Tell Them I’m Pregnant

October 28th, 2009

boy_looking_surprisedAbout five seconds after we conceived this time, I looked like I was five months along, but we felt shy about telling people we were pregnant until I was almost at the end of my fourth month.

“Was it a surprise?” The principal at my daughter’s school asked.

“Were you planning it?” another mom wanted to know.

“Were you so shocked?!” said a third parent. “Wasn’t it an accident?!”

“My husband and I were joking that you must be turning into Mormons,” another friend said.

“We were wondering if you are becoming religious,” was yet another comment.

I was a little nervous about telling people we were expecting but I didn’t anticipate these reactions. People can get very weird when you’re having a fourth child (or even a third… or a second).

I wrote my friend Holly, who has four children, and told her my feelings were hurt that everyone I knew seemed so surprised and judgmental that we—gulp—actually were wanting and trying for another baby.

Holly’s husband is a stand-up comedian. Her firstborn is in college and she has a baby in diapers. Holly always knows what to do.

“Next time someone says, ‘was this pregnancy planned?!’ tell them, ‘goodness no. I have no idea how it happened! Can you explain it to me?’” Holly suggested.

If you’re having a similar experience telling people you are pregnant, try it. It works every time.CIAPenisScam

Tags: ,

[ 8 comments ]

On Being Pregnant For (Probably) The Last Time

October 26th, 2009

pregnancy, pregnant-579“I’m really trying to enjoy this pregnancy,” I say to my friend Danielle who has three children. “Because I know I’ll never be pregnant again.”

Danielle wags her finger at me. “Never say never,” she says. “You never know!”

I laugh, more at the funny way she raises her eyebrows than at her words.

I’ve always wanted to have four children, even before I met my husband at a party in graduate school where you had to dress in drag (which is why he was wearing a rhinestone-studded black flapper dress and I had on a construction hat, big boots, and a tool belt) when I was 25 years old.

At first James, an only child, thought he wanted “maybe one.” Still, he came around pretty quickly to my plan for a big family. We decided we would have four children before I turned 35 to avoid what our friend Karen was going through—being treated as an “older mom” and subjected to all sorts of testing and worries.

Our first baby was born when I was 29. With hubris that makes me cringe in hindsight, we credited our good parenting for our daughter’s patient and happy personality.

We timed our second so exactly that I knew the day and the hour I conceived (I glanced at the clock on the night table) but we had no idea our “easy” firstborn would turn into a willful toddler and that our second born would hate being a baby and that all the credit we had been giving ourselves for being “good parents” would fly out in the window in the face of having two babies in diapers, two babies nursing, and two babies with totally understandable but difficult to satisfy immediate needs AT THE SAME TIME.

My older daughters are only 19 months apart

My older daughters are only 19 months apart

So we waited until the second baby, who thankfully turned into a very easy-going toddler (the opposite of her sister), was almost three before we had our third. Our son, Etani, was an uncomplaining, kind, and quiet little guy. He was so sweet that he would giggle with happiness just before nursing when he was only a few weeks old.

I remember sobbing with relief after he was born, wondering if I could ever parent him with enough love to deserve to have him, hoping I could be a good enough mother.

Etani was born at home in our bedroom in our little red farmhouse in Greenfield Massachusetts, six years ago today.

The house in Greenfield, Massachusetts, where our son was born, almost three years after his sister

The house in Greenfield, Massachusetts, where our son was born, almost three years after his sister

Though it was all in keeping with the master plan (albeit a few years later than expected), when we started telling people about this pregnancy everyone we knew was surprised.

I’m so far past being under 35 at this point that the likelihood that we would even be able to get pregnant again after this one is slim.

And I know, finally and with certainty, that after this baby is born I will not be pining for another.

Or I think I know.

Ten years of mothering has taught me that Danielle is right about not making absolute statements about what lies ahead in one’s life as a parent. In the meantime, though, I’m doing my best to appreciate the few precious days I have left with another body growing and kicking and hiccuping inside me.

Tags: , , , ,

[ 14 comments ]






     DISCUSSIONS              JOIN NOW or SIGN IN
Want to Change My Life...And Break out of the SAHM Role---Re-Posted posted by allthesekids, Thu, 08 Dec 2011 14:36:13 +0000
How to stay positive when DH is negative? posted by rockportmama, Sun, 04 Dec 2011 21:31:30 +0000
I feel lost and lonely (kinda long and a bit of a rant) posted by DesertFlower, Sun, 04 Dec 2011 19:11:43 +0000
Help me battle the green eyed monster posted by greenmom4, Fri, 25 Nov 2011 14:38:01 +0000
need to know im not the only one :-( posted by totallyhadenuff, Thu, 24 Nov 2011 08:05:23 +0000

Bottom Box