Chicago Tribune
Copyright 2005 Chicago Tribune
Date: Wednesday, January 19, 2005
Edition: Chicago Final
Section: Woman News Page: 1 Zone: C
Source: By T. Shawn Taylor, Tribune staff reporter.
Illustration: PHOTO
When a marriage can't make room for daddy
Edward, a Chicago attorney, had always dreamed of being a father. When
he met a woman he wanted to marry, the topic of having a child together
came up.
"She said, well, we'll talk about that," said Edward, who
requested that neither his last name nor his ex-wife's full name be
published. "That was confirmation in my mind that she was interested
in having a child."
But two years after they married, it became clear that his wife--who
had two children from previous marriages--wasn't interested in having
any more. Their relationship crumbled, and they divorced after 3 1/2
years of marriage.
For them, like thousands of married couples, the decision to have a
child or not became a pivotal issue. The recent breakup of superstar
couple Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt, reportedly due in part to her
unwillingness to start a family, illustrates that even the most fairy-tale
marriages can fizzle when the child question goes unsettled.
"The decision about having babies or not or how many is a point
where values may diverge," said Audrey Gaynor, a divorce attorney
who has her own family law practice in Chicago. "While they may
have been a great couple . . . they may find they're not very compatible."
For many wannabe dads, compromise is out of the question. The same
goes for some women, who can be just as steely in sticking by "no."
"When you pull something taut, it's going to snap, and ultimately
it is a woman's body," said Debbie Mandel, a New York-based stress
management expert and author of "Turn On Your Inner Light: Fitness
for Body, Mind and Soul" (Busy Bee Group) who has counseled couples
in similar crisis over whether to start a family.
Aniston's celebrity brought her more than her share of belly-watching,
with the public's interest heightened by her hunk of a husband and a
Hollywood baby boom that includes top-earning actress Julia Roberts
among its new moms. Roberts gave birth to twins before Christmas.
Similarly, in the business world, there has been much ado over a growing
trend among high-powered career women to "opt out" of work
to raise children.
"That is putting pressure on women who don't want to have children,"
Mandel said. "Other women are giving up everything [so] they are
made to feel selfish."
Trust issues
For husbands, trust can become a factor. "The man thinks the woman
may be planning to leave him," Mandel said. "Men who are committed
in a relationship generally want to have children. When you don't, they
see it as a flag."
Edward, the lawyer, said he felt "deceived" by his ex-wife.
He feels she went back on her promise.
"I kind of felt like I'd been taken advantage of," he said,
adding that if she had tried to get pregnant but discovered that she
could not conceive, "that would've been completely different."
"This is the woman I love," he said. "She should want
nothing more than to have children with me, and vice versa."
The person who wants children in the relationship also might feel rejected
by the mate who doesn't want children, psychologists say.
His ex-wife "had two prior marriages she wasn't happy in and left
with the kids," Edward said. "And yet, that was OK to have
children with those guys. What about me?"
But for a lot of women who reject motherhood, it isn't about the guy
at all. Some are not willing to undergo the physical changes of pregnancy.
For others, it's about making a conscious choice to live child-free.
Jennifer Shawne, 31, of San Francisco, who
has been married since age 24, readily admits she does not want the
responsibility of raising a child. Shawne also cited economic reasons,
explaining that in an expensive city, that extra room for baby could
tack on another $1,000 to the rent.
Shawne said her husband, who preferred not
to be named, supports her decision. But everyone else isn't so kind.
"If someone says they don't want to have
children, the societal response is, `Oh, you'll change your mind. Time
is running out for you.'" she said. "For people who have kids,
their time is running out in a different way. They're going to lose
out on things that people who don't have kids are going to enjoy their
whole lives."
Shawne was inspired to write a book for like-minded
women to counter public criticism. The book, called "Baby Not on
Board: A Celebratory Guide to Life Without Kids" (Chronicle) is
due out this fall.
"You can always change your mind about
having kids, but you can't change your mind once you've had them,"
Shawne said. "So it has always made more sense to me to hold off."
For women, especially those approaching 40, delaying motherhood may
have consequences, such as trouble conceiving, riskier pregnancies and
difficult deliveries.
Avoiding regrets
That is why Phyllis Tobin, a New York-based psychoanalyst and author
of "Motherhood Optional: A Psychological Journey" (Jason Aronson
Inc.) said she encourages women who are ambivalent about children to
address their feelings early so they won't have regrets later.
"I would like to think that more women can say no," said
Tobin, who calls women who do "courageous." "But I believe
that women should take seriously the question `Do [I] want children?'
Most women will answer `yes.' But you have to make a conscious choice."
She added that whatever they decide, it is equally important that women
share their attitudes about having children with their mate, especially
before they walk down the aisle. But if a couple disagree once they
are married, each person is entitled to their feelings and should follow
their heart, she said. "If the relationship is going to be too
ungratifying . . . then it's legitimate" to break up, Tobin said.
As long as the presumption remains that it is wonderful and natural
to want children, women who reject motherhood will continue to be put
on the defensive, said Gaynor, the divorce lawyer.
Captions: PHOTO (color): Disagreement over whether to have children--a
reputed reason for the Jennifer Aniston-Brad Pitt breakup--can prove
fatal to marriages. AP photo.
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