from
the book How to Have a Baby: Overcoming Infertility
by Dr. Aniruddha Malpani, MD and Dr. Anjali Malpani,
MD.
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What
is childfree living ?
How
can you adapt to the decision to live childfree ?
What
is childfree living ?
Choosing not to have children at all
is an option which you can select - to live childfree.
Remember, childfree living is a choice you can make
- choosing not to have children isn't the same as having
childlessness thrust upon you.
You may find that coming to terms with
your childlessness gives you the ability to take control
of your own life again. Infertility often means living
in a state of suspended animation - waiting and waiting
forever through tests and treatments for a baby. If
you choose to live childfree, you can get on with living
again. Plans can be made to explore the endless possibilities
of career, travel, recreation, hobbies and togetherness
as a couple when previously all the uncertainty made
this impossible. When you are chasing the dream of a
baby, it is easy to forget that life has the potential
for many other dreams and fulfillments.
It is crucial, however, for both partners,
should they choose the childfree alternative, to feel
they can happily fill their lives with work and other
interests. If the husband has a successful career but
the wife has little to replace the parenting function,
unhappy consequences are likely.
One of the biggest fears people express
when considering a childfree life is that they will
regret this decision in their older years and end up
being lonely and miserable. In India, children are often
a form of social security for old age. However, remember
that children are not an insurance policy against loneliness
in old age - they can also create problems for their
parents! People also worry that when they die, they
will have nothing to leave behind. The truth is that
children are not the only ones who remember you, nor
are they the only means of establishing everlasting
memory.
How can
you adapt to the decision to live childfree ?
Remember, there can be real advantages
to life without children: more personal freedom, more
time to spend on your own interests, and more emotional
energy to invest in your emotional relationships. Start
enjoying your time with your spouse more - remember
the early heady days of your marriage before you were
striving for a child? Try to recapture those magic moments
again.
A new lifestyle may be difficult to
think about and many people advise that you try to do
many things that interest you to give yourself a chance
to spend some of your pent-up needs - the need to be
needed and the need to do something. It's a matter of
balance. The answer to wanting one thing exclusively
is to be involved in many things - to spread yourself
around. Taking a holiday to mark the end of treatment
and the beginning of a new lifestyle can be very helpful
and allows time to relax and assess the situation.
Acceptance or resolution of infertility
doesn't mean putting all desire to have children into
the past and forgetting about it. Infertility, your
experiences and thoughts will always be a part of you
and will be remembered with mixed emotions, including
sadness, regret and frustration, over the years. Acceptance
is more an acknowledgement that your hopes weren't to
be and that you have to make some readjustments. It
is not something you can do suddenly. You gradually
come to this point, maybe over the course of your infertility
tests and treatments or maybe only when treatment has
finished.
The way in which people cope with childlessness
will depend on many factors, but remember that:
- There is no "right" way of coping
with childlessness. Each person's way of coping will
depend on their own experiences and emotions and has
to suit that individual.
- You have to give yourself time.
- There will be times when it is easier
to manage than at others, and your level of coping
will fluctuate. There are bound to be moments of doubt
and questioning - what if...?
- Denying that it is hurting doesn't
help. The more you express your feelings in words,
tears, writing down your thoughts or whatever, the
easier it will seem.
- You may feel angry because the thought
of childlessness might be so hard to contemplate.
This might be directed toward your partner, yourself,
your doctor. Recognise that this is a start to acknowledging
your feelings.
- Try not to apportion blame - there
is no one to blame
- Others have survived this crises
and gone on to lead happy and contented lives.
Even as you get older, you may still
find that other people treat you as "odd " or different"
because you have no children. You have to accept this
- and learn that you need not conform to others' norms
to lead a happy life.
Creating a new identity without children
is an important part of asserting control over your
infertility. This involves trying to think beyond children
and deciding what you want for yourself. The only effective
way to cope with childlessness is to build up your self-esteem
which may have been battered by the experience of infertility.
Creating a new identity does not mean abandoning your
reasons for wanting a child. Just as those reasons shaped
your infertility experience, so they affect the form
that your resolution takes. For example, you may choose
to spend time with a children's organisation as a volunteer.
Taking an interest in other people's
children on a regular basis may also be helpful. When
you were a child, remember how you longed to see that
special auntie or uncle? Enjoy the children around you
- use your energies for a child that exists.Another
useful outlet for the longing to nurture is to keep
pets. A lovable and furry pet such as a dog or cat are
most popular, because they can give love back, but infertile
couples report pleasure in almost anything alive - from
fish to flowers to gardens.
The passage of time heals - but it can't
be hurried. Time brings a sense of perspective or the
"larger view of life" for those who have had tunnel
vision focused on infertility for a number of years.
Soul searching can be helpful - and
try answering these questions together - honestly.
- Why do you want a child?
- Why would you not want to have a
child?
- Think of the time before you tried
for a baby. What made you happy? What did you do with
your time? What did you look forward to?
- What are your other dreams
and ambitions besides having a child?
Remember, that the value of, and reward
from, a firm resolution are what you make of it. If
you select a child-free life, and then treat it as a
second-rate existence, that's exactly what it will become.
But if you invest it with all your interests, pleasures,
energies and talents, this lifestyle can be creative
fun, delightful and filled with accomplishment. Such
a lifestyle may not be for everybody, but it may be
just right for you!
Next page: Stress
And Infertility
Previous page:
Adoption - Yours by Choice
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