Dear Dr Barry Walters,
Yesterday in an interview with the West Australian you said – amongst other things – that older mothers (older being over 40 it seems) are selfish and burden their offspring with financial despair. In the Weekend Australian magazine you wrote in to say, “To plan pregnancy above the age of about 39 is entirely self-centred.”
Do you know what I’m really, really tired of? I’m tired of people assuming that every single woman who has a baby past the age of 35 has done so deliberately. Either as part of her life plan (I know, once I’m 38 I’ll spend $30,000 on IVF and push my relationship with my partner to breaking point in a bid to have a baby that may never eventuate! GOOD TIMES!) or that perhaps we are so blind to the world around us we’ve walked in the door one night, put down our Chanel briefcase, scratched our head and muttered to our partners, “Oops! Honey, I forgot to have kids! D’oh!”
Why do so many ‘experts’ fail to acknowledge that many women find themselves in this stressful and heartbreaking situation of trying to have kids later in life due to circumstance?
For some of us – who may have started trying to get ‘knocked up’ in our late 20s – we have endured years of fertility treatments and operations. For many women there has simply been no medical explanation for our inability to conceive and so we have kept trying. Remind me again what’s wrong with that?
For others — in fact for so many women I know — it’s been a case of not meeting the right person in time. Let’s remember it takes two to do the horizontal tango. I guess I could have had a baby with that abusive dickhead I dated in my 20s. Would that have been better?