Did you feel the pressure to have a baby before the age of 30?
If you haven’t had a baby by the time you are 30, you may as well give up trying.
Is that the message you got in your late 20s?
I remember it clearly. It was constant. The clock ticking. The fertility time bomb. Don’t leave it too late, the headlines screamed. Columnists devoted inches to statistics showing just how much trouble you would be in if you hadn’t begun to pop them out by the age of 30.
That constant roundabout of media stories reiterating the theme that by the age of 30 it was all over, that fertility of yours (if you even had it in the first place if you were a drinker/smoker/underweight/overweight/ over exerciser/ under exerciser) was about to fall off a cliff.
And that was it.
Chances over.
We heard the heartbreaking stories of women who “left it too late” and we pondered exactly what “too late is.” Many of us knew women who found themselves struggling to fall pregnant, women with whom we held hands and feel a deep ache that their life had not taken a different path.
Several years ago I had a mentor, a woman I deeply respected and cared about who shared with me her battle with IVF at the age of 42. Ten years younger I wanted to take her pain away, while at the same time vowing to listen to her advice and not find myself in the same situation. I vowed to have my babies early. I felt the pressure. I bought into the hype.
I considered myself one of the lucky ones.
The author of the book “Creating a Life”, Sylvia Ann Hewlett found that, in fact, 42 percent of the professional women she interviewed in corporate America in 2002 had no children at age 40, and most said they deeply regretted it. Her book added to the many layers of media scare mongering.