FRESH
YARN presents:
Bandwagon
Breeding
By Christine
Palau
Sometimes
I wonder whether motherhood is a biological instinct or merely a trend.
Where the tabloids once boasted surveillance shots of celebrity cellulite,
they now display what might as well be publicity pictures for the religious
right's anti-contraception campaign. Julia, Gwyneth, Britney, and even
my favorite ass-kicking secret agent Jennifer Garner have all jumped on
the bandwagon breeding express.
But when
people I actually know start having kids, that's when I need to bust out
the Xanax because invariably, they think I should be next.
Take my office:
On a monthly basis there is a collection for at least one of the employees
who just had a baby. And with every new birth comes the reinforcement
that I've already been married two years, am almost 33 and (gasp) still
without child -- I haven't even had a miscarriage yet. What they should
really be doing is thanking me for saving them 50 dollars -- the amount
of the damned baby fund.
Instead I
get, "You're dooming the human race," as a co-worker once told
me at the water cooler. Another colleague gave me a set of what looked
like playing cards but was actually "52 Rules for the New Mother."
And every day the women at my office ask me when I will "get a baby."
Yes, they use that term, partly because English is not their first language,
but mostly because they think of it as something that doesn't require
much thought, kind of like getting a drink of water.
These comments,
as traumatizing as they may sound, could at least be chalked up to cultural
differences. I work at a Korean company and have always been the freak
of nature there -- the token white girl whose outlandishness at once disturbs
and charms. The fact that I remain elusive about getting pregnant is probably
more of a novelty to them than anything else.
Now, take
my uber-Catholic family, where everyone is hip to having babies -- hell,
my 18-year-old cousin has already pushed out two. But the most recent
casualty is another cousin, a year older than me, who got married last
week. For a while, she was my most solid excuse.
"Well,
I couldn't possibly have a baby before Holly, that would be rude,"
I would selflessly proclaim.
Then at her
wedding, I shuddered when I spotted her generously swollen breasts. Sure
enough, Holly's mother was proud to share the news of her daughter's "bean
in the belly".
Once the word spread, I could sense that my own mom was getting uncomfortable.
It's bad enough that Holly's wedding outdid mine on several levels (the
ethereal-voiced vocalist belting out Puccini's "O Mio Babbino Caro"
while guests sipped from posh blue-bottled, imported Welsh water was only
the beginning of the trumping), and wedding envy will plague us for the
next few months, now we have to deal with yet another pregnancy in the
family that will not result in her being the grandmother.
My parents
know me well enough to avoid actively badgering me about having kids;
nevertheless, I can sense their disappointment whenever I call not to
give them "the good news". And I'm still not sure how to interpret
my mom, who's never been one "to scrapbook," all of a sudden
compiling my report cards, locks of hair, foot prints, drawings and letters
into a binder for my safe keeping.
Even while
asleep I'm assaulted by guilt. The other night in a dream, my father demanded
I have another wedding because I didn't do it right the first time. In
reality, I couldn't have done it more right: getting married in a Catholic
church, going on the "Engagement Encounter" retreat where my
husband and I spent the weekend getting schooled on the rhythm method,
and worst of all, allowing myself to be berated by a priest for premarital
cohabitation. In my dream however, according to my father's estimation,
the part I got wrong was that I didn't conceive on the wedding night.
I suppose
I can simply address the elephant in the room and tell everyone that I'm
just not ready to be a mother and frankly, don't know if I will be. But
isn't this a private matter? Although it may take a village to raise a
child, shouldn't it only take a woman (and her sperm donor of choice)
to decide to have one?
Fortunately,
my husband is with me on this and won't bully me into bearing little ones.
Despite the fact that his younger brother's girlfriend is going to give
birth soon, and his best friend recently announced his prospective fatherhood,
I doubt my partner-in-crime will fall victim to the, "Well, you are
getting older" spiel.
I have to
be honest though, occasionally I do have baby fever -- the fat cheeks,
sausage arms and gassy gesticulations can send me swooning. But the key
word here is fever and that's exactly what it is, nothing a weekend
of babysitting wouldn't cure.
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