by AISHA TIMOL
Two years ago I was diagnosed with “Premature Ovarian Failure”, which put me through early menopause. I was 33 and always wanted to have a family – at some point.
I would love to be writing this story as some sort of freak case but the fact is one in a hundred women will go through menopause before the age of 40.
This little-known fact is heart-breaking for anyone who waits until their 30s to start having children and ends up being part of that one per cent.
I grew up in the 1980s and 90s – a time when girls were actively encouraged to delay starting families in their early 20s, turning away from what their mothers and grandmothers had done, to pursue education, a career and travel.
I was part of a generation where girls were told could be anything they wanted to be – and I still believe this part of the Government’s message and campaign remains true. I recall seeing posters in my classroom featuring girls working in traditionally male roles and teachers telling me that as a straight ‘A’ student I had so much potential and that the world was my oyster.
My generation were told we could have it all. And we – my friends and I – all firmly believed it. We all thought that having a family could wait til our 30s or 40s even. I remember secretly harbouring fears in my early 20s that a pregnancy would be viewed as a failing somehow. Dutifully, I went on to university to get my degree, launched my career, travelled the world, invested in property and followed a path that was both expected of me and that I’d grown to want. Menopause was never on my radar.