Saturday, July 25, 2015

Are you done yet?



People ask me if I want anymore children.  It comes up a lot.  I usually just give the short answer.  “No.”  I don’t find it necessary to go into details or tell them how I really feel.  If you really want to know, if you want to know my true feelings, here is my honest answer.

When I was pregnant with my third, he was going to be our last.  I’ve been told that you know when your family is complete.  It’s a feeling I was supposed to get after he was born.  Three is a good number.  My husband and I never talked about it but it was almost as though we had an unspoken agreement.  After I had my first two, I had a feeling that our family was not complete.  It wasn’t the grieving over no longer being pregnant. It was a completely different set of feelings.  Bottom line, we were not done. I anticipated that I would feel different after my third.  I knew I would miss pregnancy.  I would hold him and cry.  My gut would ache with every phantom kick.  I would long to feel him move within me.  I expected these things.  I also expected I would understand that feeling of being done.  Eleven months have passed and I have yet to feel that.  My head tells me one thing but heart tells me something completely different.

I can list so many reasons why my husband and I should not have anymore children.  They are expensive.  My daughter alone has cost us more than we anticipated between therapies, equipment, and visits to specialists.  They need to be fed and clothed.  I want to give them a good education.  I want to take them on vacation every year.  Every little expense adds up.  It certainly does not help that I enjoy spending money.  We lost a second income when I quit my job at the hospital.  My hours and childcare costs would amount to nothing in the end.  Childcare for three, school hours, and therapies are a tricky balancing act.  I am often times frustrated.  A four year old and three year old has done a number on my ability to stay calm.  They yell, fight, talk back, don’t listen all the time, and are moodier than teenagers.  Why add another child to the mix?  How would I take them out?  My daughter still needs lifted and help walking.  In fact, she can’t just walk next to me at the store.  My middle child is a runner.  If he sees something that interests him, he bolts.  My youngest is going on a year.  Taking all three out can be a huge challenge.  I have learned the ins and outs of it but there is a lot of sweat, swearing under my breath, and raised voices in the process.  I am touched out. My baby is still nursing.  My daughter grabs me as a means to find her balance.  My middle child jumps on me and sticks his long, cold feet up my shorts and makes me jump out of the chair and want to scream.  Someone always wants to cuddle, be held, or nurse.  It’s not a bad thing.  Any mom can relate.  We love our babies but we also need space.  I want to go back to school.  I want to study to become a lactation consultant.  I can’t imagine doing it now, let alone with four.  I’m “older”.  I’m hitting the dreaded term, “advanced maternal age”.  I’m only 33.  I’ll be 34 next month.  In the pregnancy world, that’s older.  I have no issue with women in their late thirties and early forties having babies.  It’s just not something I want to do.  I don’t want to hear “it”.  “It” is the words of concern, disagreement, criticism, unwanted advice, and shame from others.  When I was pregnant with my third, people told me I should be done after him, that I don’t need anymore, I should get my tubes tied, and three is enough.  I can’t imagine how unsupportive people would be if I had another.  That should not matter but I am a sensitive person.  I want support, not criticism.  If I keep telling myself all of the above reason why I should not have another, it should confirm that I am done.  So why doesn’t it?


Since November 2009, my identity has been being pregnant or breastfeeding.  I have had no break in between.  Perhaps, I don’t know how to not be pregnant or nursing because that’s what I have come to know.  After all is said and done, and my last baby closes his eyes after he last nurses I will have my body back.  And then what?  All I have come to know is sharing my body.  As much as I want and need it back, it has become who I am.  Sure I will still be needed in other ways.  It’s just different.  I will adapt.  I will move on. But there is nothing like holding my baby against me, his warm skin on mine, his little hands on stroking my chest, his hums, his flaring toes, his breath on my breast…there is nothing that can compare.  Regardless of having another child, this will end.  At some point, there will be that last time.  Time is cruel.  My body will eventually succumb to age and the possibility of having no more children will be a reality. 

I look back all the reasons that I shouldn’t have another and it looks obvious that I should be done.  The reasons are valid and should confirm that three is the magic number.  But deep inside, I just can’t get rid of the feeling that it is not.  Do I let go?  Do I live wondering, “what if?”  Do I hold on?  Do I keep the tubs of clothes, the bassinet, the bouncy, and the bottles?  Do I mentally plan for another?  Only time will tell.  I have faith that whatever happens, it was meant to be but there is that piece of me that holds hope that the plan involves another child.